Archive for December, 2007

Top 50 Songs of 2007

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

econd to actually registering as sex offenders—which would be excessive, really—there’s no better way to express the depths of our perversity than by publishing our annual singles poll. We get pervier every year. Do we like misguided Japanese rap? Oh, yes, very much so. It’s been on our desktop since March. Have you ever interrupted the drillwork of an orthodontist to find out what song was playing on the radio? I have (it was Enya). We probably all have. We like fleeting treats. Because sometimes fleeting treats turn into essential vitamins. Sure, sometimes they don’t, but we’re slutty enough to have an epiphany we might regret later. That’s half the fun. We don’t subscribe to “poptomism” and we don’t fear the “apopcalypse.” Shut the fuck up. Our jam is on.

50. Weeping Willows - The Burden
[MySpace][Video]
49. Ciara - Like a Boy
[MySpace][Video]
48. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Down Boy
[MySpace][Video]
47. Pleasure ft. Brett Anderson - Back to You
[MySpace][Video]
46. Devin the Dude feat. Andre 3000 and Snoop Dogg - What a Job
[MySpace][Video]
45. Christophe Willem - Double Je
[MySpace][Video]
44. M.I.A. - Paper Planes
[MySpace][Video]
43. Dominik Eulberg - Die Alpenstrandläufer von Spiekeroog
[MySpace][Video]
42. My Teenage Stride - Chock's Rally
[MySpace][Video]
41. Janelle Monae - Violet Stars Happy Hunting!
[MySpace][Video]

40. Kylie Minogue - 2 Hearts
[MySpace][Video]
39. Lil Mama - Lip Gloss
[MySpace][Video]
38. R. Kelly - I'm a Flirt (Remix)
[MySpace][Video]
37. Paramore - That's What You Get
[MySpace][Video]
36. Twilight Sad - Cold Days from the Birdhouse
[MySpace][Video]
35. Roisin Murphy - Overpowered
[MySpace][Video]
34. Rihanna - Umbrella
[MySpace][Video]
33. 50 Cent - I Get Money
[MySpace][Video]
32. Pink Reason - Down on Me
[MySpace][Video]
31. Kanye West feat. Dwele - Flashing Lights
[MySpace][Video]

30. The Field - Everyday
[MySpace][Video]
29. Vampire Weekend - Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa
[MySpace][Video]
28. Jason Aldean - Johnny Cash
[MySpace][Video]
27. Animal Collective - Peacebone
[MySpace][Video]
26. Miranda Lambert - Famous in a Small Town
[MySpace][Video]
25. Patrick Wolf - Accident & Emergency
[MySpace][Video]
24. Battles - Atlas
[MySpace][Video]
23. Linda Sundblad - Lose You
[MySpace][Video]
22. St. Vincent - Now Now
[MySpace][Video]
21. My Chemical Romance - Teenagers
[MySpace][Video]

20. Against Me! ft. Tegan Quin - Borne on the FM Waves of the Heart
[MySpace][Video]
19. Björk - Earth Intruders
[MySpace][Video]
18. Lil’ Wayne - Dying
[MySpace][Video]
17. Kathy Diamond - All Woman
[MySpace][Video]
16. Dan Deacon - The Crystal Cat
[MySpace][Video]
15. Gui Boratto - Beautiful Life
[MySpace][Video]
14. Digitalism - Pogo
[MySpace][Video]
13. Kanye West - Can’t Tell Me Nothin’
[MySpace][Video]
12. Spoon - Yr Cherry Bomb
[MySpace][Video]
11. Avril Lavigne - Girlfriend
[MySpace][Video]

10. LCD Soundsystem - Someone Great

James Murphy used to be a yelping disco-punk rogue, a hyper-ironic hipster-baiting hipster, a sleazy techno scamp, a rapscallion with cowbells, a joker in a packed disco or party. He didn’t really have Daft Punk playing at his house, the wink-wink rascal! Who knew, back then, that this merry prankster had feelings too? Who knew that, as impressive as his debut was, he was capable of incorporating gurgling grooves and pulses within a song about the death of a loved one, and far from coming off as trite or superficial, could sink the collective heart of a party while it shuffled to the beat?
[Ally Brown]

09. Lil' Wayne - Upgrade U

Does anyone even remember Beyonce doing this song? Like, on her album, the one you can buy at Amazon or one of the 157 record stores left in America? Lil’ Wayne cares not for your puny retail. He’s going to not borrow, but steal those tossed-off handclaps and frizzy horn squibs. Just toss in another image stew of “tangerine” “tambourine” and “a bitch with some lips like Angelin’” and simmer under West Indies/Frank White flow. Serve to waiting Internet hordes. But don’t try to give the man himself a dish—it’s Halloween, he’s eating stars.
[Evan McGarvey]

08. Grinderman - No Pussy Blues

Turns out it's easy to escape all those scurrilous accusations about losing your fire. You just grow a provocative beard, insist upon equally hirsute contributions from your bandmates and proceed to grumble about some frigid broad. With typewriters! And crazy-distorted violas! The delight of the song, of course, stems from Nick's desperate, leering screed; framing every recordable male action as a cynical ploy to get some ... well ... action. It's unambiguous, sleazy and amusingly insulting to everyone involved. Precisely the kind of lust-fueled delinquency that Cave delivers so well. Thrill with disgust--or simply giggle at his embittered crotch.
[Peter Parrish]

07. The National - Fake Empire

There’s not much going on in the opening track to The Boxer: Sufjan Stevens soft-pedals a few, glowing piano chords; Matt Beninger sidles up to the microphone and commences with the whiskey-breathed murmuring. “Stay out super-late tonight/Picking apples, making pie/Put a little something in the lemonade and take it with us,” he offers in the opening stanzas, perhaps the coziest invitation of the year. Then, he punctures the air with the rueful and enigmatic observation, “We’re half-awake in a fake empire.” For an album as muted as The Boxer, this is the equivalent to “We’re off to the races.” But the song—indeed, the whole album—feels lit from within, spreading slow warmth like a sip from a mug of spiked cocoa.
[Jayson Greene]

06. Radiohead - House of Cards

“House of Cards” is about infidelity, and Radiohead enacts its moral chronology to perfection. The groove is unquestionably the sultriest of the band’s not-exactly-sultry career, and less-attentive listeners very well may put it on to get it on. Thom Yorke, he of the beautifully sexless tenor, actually seduces at the start (“I don’t want to be your friend / I just want to be your lover”), just as the physical allure of a fling is its initial draw. Soon enough, At all, it becomes less about desire than surrender (“forget about your house of cards”), which in turn exposes the surfeit of “denial” that brings a person to such a point. Sound familiar? If you’ve lived and loved, I’m guessing “your ears should be burning.”
[Josh Love]

05. M.I.A. - Jimmy

Considering how carefully orchestrated her every step is, I always thought praising M.I.A. for her “contradictions” gave her too much credit. But finally, one that makes sense: “Jimmy” is the single that’s most likely to convert the haters and yet it plays closest to the hater stereotype of Maya as having no actual talent, a reverse Robin Hood who steals from the poor and gives to the rich. But the truth is, your knowledge of Bollywood mp3 music is probably based on what you learned on that outtakes episode of “The Simpsons” and if M.I.A. had to completely steal this wholesale in order to reveal its discoballin’ headrush to the rest of us, so be it.
[Ian Cohen]

04. Justice - D.A.N.C.E.

As French demolition duo Justice’s earbleed-house leviathan annihilates once-verdant electronic pastures, its wranglers, Messrs Augé and de Rosnay, groove away to the blithely innocent sounds of early Michael Jackson. A brief respite from scorched earth synthesizers and atomic blast beats, Justice’s “D.A.N.C.E.” was a big sloppy mash-note to cheeky pop songs, and the most joyously mindless Euro-crossover since Junior Senior’s “Move Your Feet.” This sojourn only makes tracks like the pulverizing “Waters of Nazareth” even filthier; these brutes are so magnificently tasteless they chirrup King of Pop-derived chants like “You are such a P.Y.T.!” while preparing for their next assault.
[Jonathan Bradley]

03. Los Campesinos! - You! Me! Dancing!

Enough has been said about the rollicking, euphoric ten-note riff that flows through the heart of this song, so let's have a minute to appreciate the starry-eyed wonder (for once the phrase is justified) of "It's you! It's me! And it's dancing!" Daring for a guy who can't bring himself to confess he can't dance, but that's because he's just figured out what every wallflower does, eventually—he was wrong! He finally feels like it might be a good idea to get out there and dance, drink, love—and that's because it is a good idea!
[Ian Mathers]

02. UGK ft. OutKast - International Players’ Anthem

Tales of love, blatant misogyny, abused child support payments, marriage, strippers, pimping, and, most importantly, their repercussions, appear often in rap singles, but how often are they on the same track? Furthermore, posse cuts typically stand out because of the range of personalities involved, but when is the beat tailored to each one, let alone in correlation to the arc of the story? And when do you hear the sweetest, most soulful voice in many moons and horns so clean they sound bleached over a drum track that could have played over the speaker system at a strip club?

The answer is never, and that’s why this song is so incredible, because there’s nothing else like it.
[Tal Rosenberg]

01. LCD Soundsystem - All My Friends

No longer content just to ape his idols (although he did that very well indeed), James Murphy has finally written a bona fide classic of his own. Propulsive, melodic, pathos-laden—“All My Friends” shows that after a few years of being everyone’s favorite hipster, proudly wearing his influences on his sleeve, Murphy just may be tiring of the scene he has so ably parodied and defined all at once, at least if the lyric here is meant to be autobiographical; there is, after all, more to life than all of this. By recruiting John Cale (looking back with anger at a life of being the coolest person in the room) and Franz Ferdinand (enjoying the last of their 15 minutes while they can) to cover, Murphy proves the song itself can and does thrive outside of his own interpretation. This is a generation-defining moment for both Murphy and his audience; I half-expect it to be plundered for a beer commercial.

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The Billboard Hot 100

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

50. PJ Harvey - White Chalk
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

49. Paramore - Riot!
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

48. Monkey Swallows the Universe - The Casket Letters
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

47. 65daysofstatic - The Destruction of Small Ideas
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

46. The Avett Brothers - Emotionalism
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

45. Strategy - Future Rock
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

44. Colleen - Les Ondes Silencieuses
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

43. Basteroid - Upset Ducks
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

42. Calle 13 - Residente O Visitante
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

41. Andy Palacio & The Garfuna Collective - Wátina
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

40. Pantha Du Prince - This Bliss
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

39. UGK - Underground Kings
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

38. Tinariwen - Aman Iman: Water is Life
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

37. Devin The Dude - Waitin' to Inhale
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

36. Marnie Stern - In Advance Of The Broken Arm
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

35. Patrick Wolf - The Magic Position
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

34. Dungen - Tio Bitar
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

33. Stars Of The Lid - And The Refinement Of Their Decline
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

32. Low - Drums and Guns
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

31. Menomena - Friend and Foe
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

30. El-P - I'll Sleep When You're Dead
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

29. Electrelane - No Shouts No Calls
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

28. A Sunny Day In Glasgow - Scribble Mural Comic Journal
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

27. Of Montreal - Oh Hissing Fauna, Are You The Destroyer?
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

26. Kathy Diamond - Miss Diamond to You
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

25. Battles - Mirrored
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

24. Studio - West Coast
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

23. !!! - Myth Takes
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

22. Deepchord Presents Echospace - The Coldest Season
[Stylus Review]

21. Caribou - Andorra
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

20. Dalek - Abandoned Language
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

19. Liars - Liars
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

18. Justice - Cross
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

17. Grinderman - Grinderman
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

16. The Besnard Lakes - Are the Dark Horse
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

15. The Twilight Sad - Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

14. Iron & Wine - The Shepherd's Dog
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

13. Gui Boratto - Chromophobia
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

12. Phosphorescent - Pride
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

11. Arcade Fire - Neon Bible
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

10. Radiohead - In Rainbows

Radiohead's seventh album gestated longest and when it emerged it did so with accessibility top of the list of priorities, in two senses; you didn't need to leave the house to get it and you didn't need to recalibrate your brain to get it, even after the red herring beat that opens "15 Step". Of course Radiohead have already recalibrated brains so much that there was little left that they could do other than become a band again, playing mp3 music together. Some of it even rocked, although the overriding tone is definitely somber quietude. Not a phenomenon; just a good record.
[Nick Southall]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

09. The Field - From Here We Go Sublime

This is my favorite album of the year but I may not be qualified to describe it. Here's what I know. It is a minimal techno record from Sweden; Sweden is a country in Europe; when this record burbles at me through its Elysian haze I want to dance but can't move; it's a little worried about loss but 4/4 reassures everyone and that's why they call it common time. I know less about minimal techno than I do about Sweden but when "Silent" bops its muffled way through me I know some of God's thoughts, and the rest are details.
[Theon Weber]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

08. M.I.A. - Kala

Kala’s biggest thrill is that it is built without borders; globe-trotting from Liberia and Jamaica to Brazil and Baltimore for a grab-bag of tribal, almost jarringly disjointed, array of sounds and beats. Regardless if her skills as an MC are up to snuff or her reliance on male producers (here Switch, DJ Blaqstarr, Timbaland, and Diplo lend a hand) is in question, songs like the Bollywood scorcher “Jimmy” and the frenetic voodoo of “Bird Flu” are examples of hip-hop and pop at their freshest and most dangerous precipice. Polarizing as she may be, by cutting and pasting Clash samples (”Paper Planes”) or Oxfam philosophies (”World Town”) into giddy collages of melody and third-world representation, Kala is a major step in crowning M.I.A. both earth’s reigning diva (move over Bjork) and its 21st century conscious.
[Kevin Elliott]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

07. Spoon - Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga

Spoon makes rock mp3 music the same way Robert De Niro acts: by building significance through the accumulation of small, effective gestures. Every sideways flick of the eyes hints at the world of hurt beneath a De Niro take, and every minutely registered air disturbance on a Spoon record heightens the drama. Like De Niro, lead singer Britt Daniel exudes a wounded, brooding masculinity, grappling mutely with a pain he struggles to name. He remains haunted by visions of classic malehood—dad’s perfectly pressed fitted shirt on Girls Can Tell’s “The Fitted Shirt,” or here: “Picture yourself in a living room/your pipe and slippers laid out for you,” from “The Underdog.”

The best moments on their enigmatically titled sixth studio album Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga explore this cavern of unspoken hurt, the nebulous territory between the swagger and the limp. There’s a startling moment near the end of “You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb” that encapsulates this nervy ambiguity. The mix suddenly drops out, bringing to the foreground all the rustling little sounds the band makes in the studio; Jim Eno restlessly tests a few drums, a nervous little guitar lick spontaneously erupts, someone whispers and shuffles. It’s as if the confident façade has suddenly dropped away, revealing the vulnerable, anxious heart beating behind the bluster.
[Jayson Greene]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

06. Kanye West - Graduation

Amidst all the recent hullabaloo over indie-rock’s apparent estrangement from rhythm and soul (and the unsurprising counter-argument that mainstream pop and rap aren’t exactly conversant with freak-folk and twee either), an ideal seems to have been aggregated of an singer who can effortlessly surmount such distinctions of race, class and genre.

Lucky for us then that such a savior already exists in the ever-so-humble visage of Kanye West, sampling Can without self-consciousness, putting Chris Martin on without sacrificing "streetness," exposing diplomas and hood cred as equally illusory. And this isn’t about some tokenist, "rap album it’s OK to like" bullshit either, but rather about an singer who has crafted a persona generous enough to communicate compellingly with hipsters, self-styled thugs and Middle America all at once. Certainly this needn’t be the aim of all artists (niches need love too), but this is what you handwringing motherfuckers were asking for, ain’t it?
[Josh Love]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

05. The National - The Boxer

Boxer seems an unlikely album to inspire devotion—intensely modest, even soporific, songs sung in an effete baritone that suggests the singer is either working out a Leonard Cohen fetish, or else badly overslept. But even more than Alligator these are songs of unplumbed depths, moved by crosscurrents of unease and disaffection, a sense of being less than master of one’s destiny.

Berninger’s slim, wryly apologetic lyrics are the journal entries of a disenchanted romantic—the lucid mumblings of a twitchy, punchdrunk ego wary of the following footsteps, neither quite conscious nor un-. Boxer is not exorcism or ecstasy, but mimesis rendered lovely: we see ourselves, “Showered and blue-blazered.” And the thrill of recognition is no less acute, nor less devotional, for being unwelcome, unflattering, disturbing.
[Andrew Iliff]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

04. Lil Wayne - Da Drought 3

From the digestive tract to Mars. Weezy doesn’t just have range—he’s damn near cellular. Or more precisely, he’s a Golgi apparatus: in comes the tepid pop, out goes the rejuvenated, juvenile bundle of phonetic hip-hop energy. The best Lil’ Wayne mix tape in a year stuffed with merely successful ones, the two-disc hydra of Da Drought 3 is, in a bizarre way, a supreme exercise in economy. He’s reusing and recycling, getting rippling, rich productions out of the hands of DJ UNK, Jibbs, Dipset, MIMS, rhyming “Emmett Till” and “Johnny Gill” and expanding into every conceivable cadence these songs can hold. He’s not human; he’s a chimera, a super-virus of bloodied emotions, taunts and pure sounds running as fast as voltage through the body.
[Evan McGarvey]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

03. Panda Bear - Person Pitch

I have ceased trying to reconcile Person Pitch’s conflating ingredients. Noah Lennox’s domesticity with “I’m not trying to forget you with / I like to be alone.” The Beach Boys with Lennox’s garbling of dance mp3 music. “Sure, the Wilson brothers seemed a little stiff, but I bet Mike Love could cut a rug…” …stop. Just stop it. Do not try to parse this album’s loves; they are many. Besides, you get the feeling that those samplers that Lennox stands over hold more than just the whirring, incandescent sonic arches of the album; that it’s possible he’s got a patch labeled “fatherhood,” or one for “sobriety.” That he’s fucking with the cutoff filter on Lisbon. An analog delay on spirituality. No, there’s not time to sort through this sort of mischief; just help it love, instead.
[Andrew Gaerig]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

02. Miranda Lambert - Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

Since young guys with indie tastes tend to vote for country albums only when Jenny Lewis and Gretchen Wilson are snarling them, the enthusiasm for Miranda Lambert's sophomore effort aroused suspicion. After two lead cuts that announce Lambert's allegiance both to the outlaw mythos to which too many country stars have been enamored and the Nashville novelty number, she digs deeper: a rueful midtempo song about small town life that would scare the shit out of John Mellencamp; something called "Desperation" in which she calls herself a bitch and asks for a bone; and a "Jolene" rewrite less sympathetic and more self-coruscating than the original and thus perfectly suitable for post-teenage angst.

But "Guilty In Here"'s gotten the most attention, and deservedly. Put aside its Jagger-baiting allusion to boys under her thumb and it's still amazing—it goes beyond novelty and outlawery to articulate the limitless appetite of young women whose horniness-with-brains butts heads against the men who are unworthiest to comprehend it.
[Alfred Soto]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

01. LCD Soundsystem - Sound of Silver

Never in my tenure at Stylus has an album felt so immediately like a year’s summation as LCD Soundsystem’s Sound of Silver. Now almost a full year from its leak, LCD Soundsystem’s follow-up was immediate proof not only of James Murphy’s growth as a songwriter and sound-designer, but also the first indication we record lovers were in for a good year (and it has been). Sound of Silver has a favorite for every fraction of the day; the stirring spastic grooves of “North American Scum” and “Us V Them” to get you limber in the morning; the title track’s dead-eyed machine soul for post-lunch zoneouts; even the ludicrous piano-balladry of “New York, I Love You (But You’re Bringing Me Down),” which set its pitch to something novel and grand for departure-times, teasing our static notion of the album closer the same way “Losing My Edge” ridiculed our we-were-theres ‘cause nobody saw us enter.

But it was the album’s wide-sprung center which really caught us cold—the warbling, love-sour “Someone Great” and the shimmering glide of “All My Friends.” Murphy still sounded hip-slung and glammy, sure. But the dude had assumed the shape of reminiscence, fond years, in songs you’ll have to play decades from now to put a bit of green and red back in days gone photo-gray. In many ways, Sound of Silver houses all of those genres we at Stylus have tried to keep in front of us over the years, from pillowy pop bursts to thick-as-shag dance jams. Fitting then, that in the week that we close our doors, we come to this album as to one we know we’ll still need in thirty years. Even if we have to settle with tapping our feet to its steady, vivid pulse instead of dancin’ its fire out.
[Derek Miller]
[Stylus Review][MySpace][YouTube]

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Keisha Buchanan’s Sugababes grief

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Keisha Buchanan was "in mourning" for months after Mutya Buena left the Sugababes.

The singer admits she found it incredibly difficult and lonely when Mutya decided to leave the girl group, which she founded with Keisha, in December 2005.

Keisha said: "The past two years have been an emotional rollercoaster with Mutya leaving. Having to adjust was really difficult because we spent every day from primary school to high school together.

"I felt so alone when she left. I've had to move on with my life but I had the support of Amelle and Heidi who respected that if I was down one day, I was just mourning a loss.

"The whole thing has just taught me to appreciate friendship."

Keisha eventually got over her friend's departure by realising she should be grateful for everything she has in her life.

She said: "At the time, my friend Alesha Dixon was going through her marriage breakdown and I thought to myself, she's lost everything, so if she can carry on so can I. It gave me strength."

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Technorati Profile

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Technorati Profile

Мой блог находят по следующим фразам

The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

Guitarist: Tony Iommi
Song: “Iron Man” Black Sabbath – Paranoid
Album: Black Sabbath – Paranoid

Guitarist: James Hetfield & Kirk Hammett
Song: “One” Metallica – …And Justice For All
Album: Metallica – Master Of Puppets

Guitarist: Ace Frehley
Song: “Shock Me” Kiss – Love Gun
Album: Kiss – Alive!

Guitarist: Angus & Malcolm Young
Song: “You Shook Me All Night Long” AC/DC – Back in Black
Album: AC/DC – Back in Black

Guitarist: Wes Borland
Song: “Nookie” Limp Bizkit – Significant Other
Album: Limp Bizkit – Significant Other

Guitarist: Tom Morello
Song: “Killing in the Name” Rage Against the Machine – Rage Against the Machine
Album: Rage Against the Machine – Rage Against the Machine

Guitarist: Dimebag Darrell
Song: “Cowboys From Hell” Pantera – Cowboys From Hell
Album: Pantera – Vulgar Display Of Power

Guitarist: Brian “Head” Welch & James “Munky” Shaffer
Song: “Got the Life” Korn – Follow the Leader
Album: Korn – Follow the Leader

Guitarist: Joe Perry & Brad Whitford
Song: “Walk This Way” Aerosmith – Toys in the Attic
Album: Aerosmith – Toys in the Attic

Guitarist: Slash
Song: “Sweet Child O’ Mine” Guns N’ Roses – Appetite For Destruction
Album: Guns N’ Roses – Appetite for Destruction

Guitarist: Jerry Cantrell
Song: “Rooster” Alice in Chains – Dirt
Album: Alice in Chains – Dirt

Guitarist: Billy Corgan
Song: “Cherub Rock” Smashing Pumpkins – Siamese Dream
Album: Smashing Pumpkins – Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness

The British Giants

Guitarist: Jeff Beck
Song: “Freeway Jam” Jeff Beck – Blow by Blow
Album: Jeff Beck – Beckology

Guitarist: Eric Clapton
Song: “Crossroads” Cream – Wheels of Fire
Album: Derek & the Dominos – Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs

Guitarist: George Harrison & John Lennon
Song: “The End” The Beatles – Abbey Road
Album: The Beatles – Revolver

Guitarist: Jimmy Page
Song: “Stairway to Heaven” Led Zeppelin – IV
Album: Led Zeppelin – II

Guitarist: Keith Richards
Song: “Honky Tonk Women” Rolling Stones – Hot Rocks 1964-1971
Album: Rolling Stones – Sticky Fingers

Guitarist: Pete Townshend
Song: “Won’t Get Fooled Again” The Who – Who’s Next
Album: The Who – Who’s Next

Guitarist: Nigel Tufnel
Song: “(Tonight I’m Gonna) Rock You Tonight” Spinal Tap – This is Spinal Tap
Album: Spinal Tap – Shark Sandwich

Fallen Heroes

Guitarist: Jimi Hendrix
Song: “Machine Gun” Jimi Hendrix – Band of Gypsys
Album: Jimi Hendrix – Are You Experienced?

Guitarist: Duane Allman
Song: “One Way Out” Allman Brothers Band – Eat a Peach
Album: Allman Brothers Band – At Fillmore East

Guitarist: Kurt Cobain
Song: “Smells Like Teen Spirit” Nirvana – Nevermind
Album: Nirvana – Nevermind

Guitarist: Randy Rhoads
Song: “Flying High Again” Ozzy Osbourne – Diary of a Madman
Album: Ozzy Osbourne – Blizzard of Ozz

Guitarist: Stevie Ray Vaughan
Song: “Pride and Joy” Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble – Texas Flood
Album: Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble – In Step

The Bluesmen

Guitarist: Buddy Guy
Song: “Leave My Girl Alone” Buddy Guy – Complete Chess Studio Recordings
Album: Buddy Guy – Complete Chess Studio Recordings

Guitarist: Reverend Gary Davis
Song: “Candyman” Reverend Gary Davis – Pure Religion & Bad Company
Album: Reverend Gary Davis – Complete Early Recordings of Reverend Gary Davis

Guitarist: John Lee Hooker
Song: “Boogie Chillen” John Lee Hooker – The Ultimate Collection 1948-1990
Album: John Lee Hooker – The Ultimate Collection 1948-1990

Guitarist: Blind Lemon Jefferson
Song: “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean” Blind Lemon Jefferson – King of the Country Blues
Album: Blind Lemon Jefferson – King of the Country Blues

Guitarist: Albert King
Song: “Born Under a Bad Sign” Albert King – Born Under a Bad Sign
Album: Albert King – Born Under a Bad Sign

Guitarist: B.B. King
Song: “The Thrill is Gone” B.B. King – Anthology
Album: B.B. King – Live at the Regal

Guitarist: Freddie King
Song: “The Stumble” Hideaway: The Best of Freddie King
Album: Hideaway: The Best of Freddie King

Guitarist: Hubert Sumlin
Song: “Killing Floor” Howlin’ Wolf – Greatest Hits
Album: Howlin’ Wolf – Chess Box

Guitarist: T-Bone Walker
Song: “Call It Stormy Monday” Blues Masters: The Very Best of T-Bone Walker
Album: T-Bone Walker – Complete Capitol/Black & White Recordings

Guitarist: Muddy Waters
Song: “Hoochie Coochie Man” Muddy Waters – Chess Box
Album: Muddy Waters – Chess Box

Virtuosos

Guitarist: Ritchie Blackmore
Song: “Highway Star” Deep Purple – Machine Head
Album: Deep Purple – Machine Head

Guitarist: Yngwie Malmsteen
Song: “Black Star” Yngwie Malmsteen – Rising Force
Album: The Yngwie Malmsteen Collection

Guitarist: John Mclaughlin
Song: “Reincarnation” John Mclaughlin – Que Alegria
Album: Mahavishnu Orchestra – Inner Mounting Flame

Guitarist: Steve Vai
Song: “Blue Powder” Steve Vai – Passion & Warfare
Album: Steve Vai – Passion & Warfare

Guitarist: Edward Van Halen
Song: “Eruption” Van Halen – Van Halen
Album: Van Halen – Fair Warning

Guitarist: Joe Satriani
Song: “Satch Boogie” Joe Satriani – Surfing With the Alien
Album: Joe Satriani – Surfing With the Alien

Guitarist: Danny Gatton
Song: “Love My Baby” Robert Gordon and Danny Gatton – The Humbler
Album: Danny Gatton – 88 Elmira Street

Guitarist: Al Di Meola
Song: “Race with the Devil on Spanish Highway” Al Di Meola – Elegant Gypsy
Album: Al Di Meola – Splendido Hotel

Guitarist: Allan Holdsworth
Song: “Metal Fatigue” Allan Holdsworth – Metal Fatigue
Album: Allan Holdsworth – Metal Fatigue

Guitarist: Eric Johnson
Song: “Cliffs of Dover” Eric Johnson – Ah Via Musicom
Album: Eric Johnson – Ah Via Musicom

Guitarist: Steve Morse
Song: “Cruise Control” Dixie Dreggs – Divided We Stand: Best of the Dixie Dreggs
Album: Steve Morse – The Introduction
Guitarist: Uli Jon Roth
Song: “Sails of Charon” Scorpions – Taken By Force
Album: Scorpions – Virgin Killers

Country Gentlemen

Guitarist: Clarence White
Song: “Nashville West” The Byrds – Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde
Album: The Byrds - Untitled

Guitarist: Jimmy Bryant
Song: “Stratosphere Boogie” Stratosphere Boogie: The Flaming Guitars of Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant
Album: Stratosphere Boogie: The Flaming Guitars of Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant

Guitarist: Albert Lee
Song: “Country Boy” Albert Lee - Hiding
Album: Albert Lee – Gagged But Not Bound

Guitarist: Brent Mason
Song: “We Tell Ourselves” Clint Black – The Hard Way
Album:

Founding Fathers

Guitarist: Chuck Berry
Song: “Johnny B. Goode” Chuck Berry – The Great Twenty-Eight
Album: Chuck Berry – Chess Box

Guitarist: Chet Atkins
Song: “Chinatown, My Chinatown” Chet Atkins – RCA Years
Album: Chet Atkins – Gallopin’ Guitar

Guitarist: Big Bill Broonzy
Song: “See See Rider” Big Bill Broonzy – The Bill Broonzy Story
Album: Bill Broonzy – The Young Bill Broonzy

Guitarist: Charlie Christian
Song: “Rose Room” Charlie Christian – Solo Flight
Album: Charlie Christian – Solo Flight

Guitarist: Bo Diddley
Song: “Bo Diddley” Bo Diddley – Chess Box
Album: Bo Diddley – Chess Box

Guitarist: Robert Johnson
Song: “Crossroads” Robert Johnson – King of the Delta Blues
Album: Robert Johnson – Complete Recordings

Guitarist: Andres Segovia
Song: “Etude for Guitar #15 in D minor”
Album: The Segovia Collection, Vol. 3. My Favorite Works

Guitarist: Django Reinhardt
Song: “Nuages” Quintet of the Hot Club of France
Album: Django Reinhardt 1935-1936

Guitarist: Les Paul
Song: “How High the Moon” Les Paul – The Legend and the Legacy
Album: Les Paul – The Legend and the Legacy

Guitarist: Merle Travis
Song: “Cannon Ball Stomp” Merle Travis – Walkin’ the Strings
Album: Merle Travis – Walkin’ the Strings

Guitarist: Dick Dale
Song: “Miserlou” King of the Surf Guitar: The Best of Dick Dale
Album: King of the Surf Guitar: The Best of Dick Dale

The Three Funkateers

Guitarist: Steve Cropper
Song: “Soul Man” Sam and Dave – The Best of Sam and Dave
Album: Booker T. and the MG’s – Best of Booker T. and the MG’s

Guitarist: Eddie Hazel
Song: “Maggot Brain” Funkadelic – Maggot Brain
Album: Funkadelic – Maggot Brain

Guitarist: Jimmy Nolen
Song: “Let Yourself Go” James Brown – Star Time
Album: James Brown – Star Time

Jazzmen

Guitarist: Pat Metheny
Song: “Missouri Uncompromised” Pat Metheny – Bright Size Life
Album: Pat Metheny – Song X

Guitarist: Lenny Breau
Song: “If You Could See Me Now” Lenny Breau with Dave Young
Album: Lenny Breau – Live at Bourbon St.

Guitarist: Wes Montgomery
Song: “S.O.S.” Wes Montgomery – Full House
Album: Wes Montgomery – Complete Riverside Recordings

Guitarist: Freddie Green
Song: “Topsy” with Count Basie
Album: Count Basie – The Best of the Roulette Years

Guitarist: Jim Hall
Song: “John S.”
Album: Jim Hall – Live at Town Hall

Guitarist: Johnny Smith
Song: “Jaguar” Johnny Smith Quintet – Moonlight in Vermont
Album: Johnny Smith Quintet – Moonlight in Vermont

Progressive Rockers

Guitarist: Robert Fripp
Song: “21st Century Schizoid Man” King Crimson – In the Court of the Crimson King
Album: King Crimson – Essential King Crimson: Frame By Frame

Guitarist: David Gilmour
Song: “Comfortably Numb” Pink Floyd – The Wall
Album: Pink Floyd – Dark Side of the Moon

Guitarist: Trey Anastasio
Song: “Billy Breathes” Phish – Billy Breathes
Album: Phish – A Live One

Guitarist: Steve Howe
Song: “Roundabout” Yes – Fragile
Album: Yes – Close to the Edge

Guitarist: Alex Lifeson
Song: “Limelight” Rush – Moving Pictures
Album: Rush – Moving Pictures

Guitarist: Brian May
Song: “Bohemian Rhapsody” Queen – A Night at the Opera
Album: Queen – A Night at the Opera

Rockabilly

Guitarist: Brian Setzer
Song: “Rock This Town” Stray Cats – Best of Stray Cats: Rock This Town
Album: Stray Cats – Best of Stray Cats: Rock This Town

Guitarist: James Burton
Song: “Hello Mary Lou” Rick Nelson – Best of Rick Nelson 1963-75
Album: James Burton and Ralph Mooney – Corn Pickin’ and Slick Slidin’

Guitarist: Cliff Gallup
Song: “Race with the Devil” Gene Vincent – Capitol Collector’s Series
Album: Gene Vincent – Capitol Collector’s Series

Guitarist: Scotty Moore
Song: “Mystery Train” Elvis Presley – Complete Sun Sessions
Album: Elvis Presley – Sun Sessions

The Traditionalists

Guitarist: Neil Young
Song: “Hey Hey, My My (Out of the Blue)” Neil Young and Crazy Horse – Rust Never Sleeps
Album: Neil Young and Crazy Horse – Live Rust

Guitarist: John Fogerty
Song: “Travelin’ Band” Creedence Clearwater Revival – Chronical
Album: Creedence Clearwater Revival – Chronicle

Guitarist: Peter Buck
Song: “Wolves, Lower” R.E.M. – Chronic Town
Album: R.E.M. – Murmur

Guitarist: Roger McGuinn
Song: “Eight Miles High” The Byrds – Fifth Dimension
Album: The Byrds – Mr. Tambourine Man

Guitarist: Richard Thompson
Song: “1952 Vincent Black Lightning” Richard Thompson – Rumor and Sigh
Album: Richard and Linda Thompson – Shoot Out the Lights

Guitarist: Dickey Betts
Song: “Jessica” Allman Brothers Band – Brothers and Sisters
Album: Allman Brothers Band – At Fillmore East

Space Cadets

Guitarist: Syd Barrett
Song: “Interstellar Overdrive” Pink Floyd – Piper at the Gates of Dawn
Album: Pink Floyd – Piper at the Gates of Dawn

Guitarist: Jerry Garcia
Song: “Dark Star” Grateful Dead – Live/Dead
Album: Grateful Dead – American Beauty

Guitarist: Robby Krieger
Song: “When the mp3 music’s Over” The Doors – Strange Days
Album: The Doors – The Doors

Guitarist: Carlos Santana
Song: “Samba Pa Ti” Santana – Abraxas
Album: Santana – Santana

Free Radicals

Guitarist: The Edge
Song: “Pride (In the Name of Love)” U2 – The Unforgettable Fire
Album: U2 – The Joshua Tree

Guitarist: Thurston Moore & Lee Ranaldo
Song: “Kool Thing” Sonic Youth – Goo
Album: Sonic Youth – Sister

Guitarist: Bob Mould
Song: “Celebrated Summer” Husker Du – New Day Rising
Album: Sugar – Beaster

Guitarist: Lou Reed
Song: “Sweet Jane” Lou Reed – Rock ‘n’ Roll Animal
Album: The Velvet Underground – White Light/White Heat

Visionaries & Madmen

Guitarist: Billy Gibbons
Song: “Blue Jean Blues” ZZ Top – Fandango
Album: ZZ Top – Deguello

Guitarist: Sonny Sharrock
Song: “Dick Dogs” Sonny Sharrock – Seize the Rainbow
Album: Sonny Sharrock – Into Another Light

Guitarist: Link Wray
Song: “Rumble” Rumble! The Best of Link Wray
Album: Rumble! The Best of Link Wray

Guitarist: Frank Zappa
Song: “Inca Roads” Frank Zappa – One Size Fits All
Album: Frank Zappa – Shut Up ‘n Play Yer Guitar

Punk & Disorderly

Guitarist: Ron Asheton
Song: “I Wanna Be Your Dog” The Stooges – The Stooges
Album: The Stooges – The Stooges

Guitarist: Steve Jones
Song: “Anarchy in the U.K.” Sex Pistols – Never Mind the Bullocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols
Album: Sex Pistols – Never Mind the Bullocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols

Guitarist: Johnny Ramone
Song: “Blitzkrieg Bop” The Ramones – The Ramones
Album: The Ramones – The Ramones

Guitarist: Johnny Thunders
Song: “Personality Crisis” The New York Dolls – The New York Dolls
Album: The New York Dolls – Rock ‘n Roll

Unplugged Heroes

Guitarist: Michael Hedges
Song: “Rickover’s Dream” Michael Hedges – Aerial Boundaries
Album: Michael Hedges – Aerial Boundaries

Guitarist: Leo Kottke
Song: “Ojo” Leo Kottke – 6 & 12 String Guitar
Album: Leo Kottke – 6 & 12 String Guitar

Guitarist: Joni Mitchell
Song: “Hejira” Joni Mitchell – Hejira
Album: Joni Mitchell – Hits

Guitarist: John Renbourn
Song: “Faro’s Rag” John Renbourn – The Hermit
Album: John Renbourn – The Black Balloon

Guitarist: Doc Watson
Song: “Deep River Blues” Doc Watson – Doc Watson
Album: Doc Watson – Doc Watson On Stage

They Might Be Giants

Guitarist: Charlie Hunter
Song: “Come As You Are” Charlie Hunter – Bing, Bing, Bing!
Album: Charlie Hunter – Ready, Set, Shango!

Guitarist: Dave Matthews
Song: “So Much To Say” Dave Matthews Band – Crash
Album: Dave Matthews Band – Under The Table And Dreaming

Guitarist: Kim Thayil
Song: “Rusty Cage” Soundgarden – Badmotorfinger
Album: Soundgarden – Badmotorfinger

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