Underrated Guitar Solos
Underrated Guitar Solos
Author
Discussion

cherryowen

Original Poster:

12,195 posts

221 months

Prompted by this that popped up on my YT feed earlier:-



I thought it was a good list; I've read good things about Terry Kath, Mike Schenker, and Alex Lifeson and have always loved Knopfler's work on Telegraph Road.

However, I would add these:-

Gary Moore's work on this



(Scott Gorham is great as well, but Moore's solo break mid-tune is still incredible)

And Steve Lukather's outro solo on Running With The Night (not sure if this even made it onto the record)

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/b4P7ZTuxysM?feature...

Oh, and Steve Rothery on this - channeling his inner EVH (go to 2:22)

https://youtu.be/fQBQ-A8VATg

The floor is open..................







ATG

22,301 posts

289 months

Telegraph Road, particularly on Alchemy, is extraordinary. I'm a little surprised it's described as underrated, though. I thought it was well recognised.

slopes

40,703 posts

204 months

Yesterday (07:17)
quotequote all
Said it before, say it again, Mike Campbell's solo on Running Down a Dream is my favourite

But also equally underrated but i will get flamed for this one
Jonny Buckland's solo on Paradise by Coldplay

Both towards the end of the song and not over indulgent and both guitarists only really do a solo if it adds to the overall song

Lotobear

8,066 posts

145 months

Yesterday (08:34)
quotequote all
Allan Holdsworth, Soft Machine Hazard Profile Pt1. Worth listening to the whole thing but his solo starts around 2:50 in

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zSZBAcQ-5M&li...

jesusbuiltmycar

4,886 posts

271 months

Yesterday (10:26)
quotequote all
Dave Navarro's solo on Three Days by Jane's Addiction


Ronstein

1,546 posts

54 months

Yesterday (10:43)
quotequote all
For under-rated, Allan Holdsworth is right up there. Most people have never heard of him, but almost any great guitarist will name him as the best. The only guitarist Zappa showed any appreciation for. His work with many bands was exceptional (especially with Bill Bruford in Bruford and UK), but he never stayed long because he never wanted to just keep playing the same things.SAdly died with no money at the age of 70. He was also (according to his brother-in-law, who I used to work with) a thoroughly miserable git if he wasn't playing music.

https://youtu.be/RUmMBmRP8Oo?si=5Kj9ppxYdJQyzU_W

Lotobear

8,066 posts

145 months

Yesterday (11:15)
quotequote all
Ronstein said:
For under-rated, Allan Holdsworth is right up there. Most people have never heard of him, but almost any great guitarist will name him as the best. The only guitarist Zappa showed any appreciation for. His work with many bands was exceptional (especially with Bill Bruford in Bruford and UK), but he never stayed long because he never wanted to just keep playing the same things.SAdly died with no money at the age of 70. He was also (according to his brother-in-law, who I used to work with) a thoroughly miserable git if he wasn't playing music.

https://youtu.be/RUmMBmRP8Oo?si=5Kj9ppxYdJQyzU_W
A very humble Yorkshire man who naturally also loved beer (and was also a keen home brewer).

Had the pleasure of seeing him at Newcastle Cluny not long before his death - his band featured Chad Wackerman and Jimmy Johnson. Also, and showing my age here, saw him with Soft Machine and Gong many, many years ago.

He also had a brief stint with Level 42

Robertb

2,784 posts

255 months

Yesterday (17:06)
quotequote all
I was surprised to hear an amazing solo in a Backstreet Boys song the other day.... Larger than Life. Can't imagine many have ever noticed it.

Also always liked the solo in Ellis Bextor's Murder on the Dance Floor, which again would largely pass un-noticed.

I don't think Brian May's two solos in The Show Must Go On get anything like the recognition they should.


cherryowen

Original Poster:

12,195 posts

221 months

Yesterday (22:07)
quotequote all
Lotobear said:
Allan Holdsworth, Soft Machine Hazard Profile Pt1. Worth listening to the whole thing but his solo starts around 2:50 in

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zSZBAcQ-5M&li...
Listening to that ^ now as I type.

I watched a Rick Beato vid a couple of years ago where he demonstrated that AH would deliberately play impossible lines across two instead of three strings just because that's how his guitar brain worked.

An astonishing talent was Holdsworth.



timster

376 posts

177 months

Yesterday (23:12)
quotequote all
Jason Becker, a lil ain't enough by Dave Lee Roth, not so much the solo but just the guitar work over the whole song.

https://youtu.be/ktVlWuamzR8?si=nxAa-5TQjBD1QctR

PomBstard

7,438 posts

259 months

Yesterday (23:53)
quotequote all
I don’t have the musical knowledge to understand what makes something good or why that should be, but in the spirit of ignorance, I’d put forward the guitar work in “Angel” by Massive Attack…



…starts around the 1:50 mark but the build up gives the solo its own oomph, and the solo changes the whole feel of the track.

In my non-musical opinion…

slopes

40,703 posts

204 months

timster said:
Jason Becker, a lil ain't enough by Dave Lee Roth, not so much the solo but just the guitar work over the whole song.

https://youtu.be/ktVlWuamzR8?si=nxAa-5TQjBD1QctR
Just a shame he got ALS, he would have been huge if not for that.

DLR treated him like s**t though, took the piss out of him on tour stating he had to get a different guitarist in as the original guitarist couldn't cut it and for that reason, DLR will always be a scumbag to me.

timster

376 posts

177 months

slopes said:
Just a shame he got ALS, he would have been huge if not for that.

DLR treated him like s**t though, took the piss out of him on tour stating he had to get a different guitarist in as the original guitarist couldn't cut it and for that reason, DLR will always be a scumbag to me.
I did'nt know that. the only issue I read about was that JB struggled to finish the album because of his condition. Agrred though he would have been huge.

carguy45

726 posts

181 months

I rarely hear it mentioned but the long Dean De Leo solo at the end of 'Silvergun Superman' by Stone Temple Pilots (3:24 on) has always been a personal favourite of mine. It's melodic, but also plays off against the bass nicely and I like the way it decomposes (along with the rest of the song), literally falling apart structurally at the end - which is a nod to the song meaning, about a toxic relationship falling apart.



Also the solo in 'Soma' by Smashing Pumpkins (4:22). I listened to it many times as a teen and thought it was James Iha playing it, given he was the lead guitarist in the band, but was surprised to eventually find out it was Billy Corgan who played it. Apparently a pretty decent guitarist himself.



And a bit left field, but I only found out recently that Glenn Campbell - country singer, of Rhinestone Cowboy and Wichita Lineman fame - was a pretty exceptional guitarist too. I think he started out as a session guitarist.



Edited by carguy45 on Wednesday 3rd September 09:39