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The 100 Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time

Blues pioneers, hippie jammers, punk rockers, metal warriors, funkateers, and more

Greatest guitar solos photo illustration

All hail the guitar solo — one of the most indestructibly great art forms in all of modern music. There’s nothing quite like the thrill of a glorious six-string explosion — a long, twisted, never-ending saga that stretches from “Free Bird” to “Purple Rain,” from “Johnny B. Goode” to “Eruption.” Some classic solos come from virtuoso shredders; others are just a blast of awesomely sleazy licks. But they’ve all burned their way into our brains.

Rolling Stone’s list of the 100 greatest guitar solos of all time is a full-blast mix of different genres, generations, grooves. We travel all over history, with blues pioneers, hippie jammers, punk rockers, metal warriors, funkateers. We’ve got surfers, stoners, starship troopers, and steely knives. We’ve got legends like Jimmy Page, Jerry Garcia, and Jimi Hendrix, alongside seasoned slingers St. Vincent and John Mayer, and young rebels like Geese and MJ Lenderman. Some are solos that always make you hum in the car, or play air guitar using the nearest vacuum cleaner. A few you could even sing in the shower. (Hey, we don’t judge. Guitar worship is a sacred thing.) We didn’t include any jazz (Les Paul and Mary Ford’s “How High the Moon” is a pop tune by a guy with a jazz background), and a few entries are instrumentals.

The criterion isn’t sales or airplay — just the six-string brilliance on display. We also took into account that the solo makes the song, and that it doesn’t just repeat the melody line. (A bonus: if you can sing it note-for-note.)

As you can imagine, the arguments we had assembling this list got louder than the final minute of “Voodoo Chile.” Note: This is about solos, not riffs, which is why our Deep Purple classic is “Highway Star” instead of “Smoke on the Water.” Some of these stretch out for double-digit minutes, exploring the cosmos. Others just need a few seconds to make their impact. But a guitar trip can be a cry from the heart, full of rage, joy, hunger, pain, or maybe all at once.

Some of these 100 solos are influential cult classics; others are so universally beloved they’re banned at your local guitar shop. Every fan would compile a different list, and that’s the point. But it’s a salute to the guitar-solo tradition and all the rituals that go with it. So crank up the volume, and read this list loud.

Photographs in Illustration By:

Gus Stewart/Redferns/Getty Images; Echoes/Redferns/Getty Images; Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images; Larry Marano/Getty Images; James Kriegsmann/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images;  John Atashian/Getty Images; Chris Walter/WireImage/Getty Images; Richard E. Aaron/Redferns; Gie Knaeps/Getty Images

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From Rolling Stone US

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Jimi Hendrix, ‘Machine Gun’

Nobody ever did more with the guitar than Jimi Hendrix, but “Machine Gun” is Hendrix at his most Hendrix — the most ambitious, raw, soulful, go-for-broke expression of his musical genius. It comes from Band of Gypsys, recorded live on New Year’s Day 1970 at the Fillmore East, a 12-minute firestorm of electric anguish and political rage, inspired by the violence in Vietnam and America. So many guitar legends have called this the greatest solo ever, from Slash (“that’s the Holy Grail”) to Kirk Hammett. “Not only is this my favorite guitar solo of all time,” Phish’s Trey Anastasio said, “but it includes the single greatest note ever played on electric guitar: the high screaming note Jimi plays right at the beginning of his solo.” (Check it out right at the four-minute point.) Hendrix had bigger hits, but this is the furthest he ever traveled. Over 50 years later, “Machine Gun” remains the outer limits of how high a guitar — and a guitarist — can reach. —R.S.

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Prince, ‘Purple Rain’

The origins of “Purple Rain” are filled with legends: Prince thought it could’ve become a country song; he offered it to Stevie Nicks, who felt it was too cinematic for her to record; and a homeless woman was the first to hear it when Prince invited her into the Revolution’s rehearsal space. But none of that matters, since for everybody else, the band birthed “Purple Rain” at Minneapolis’ First Avenue on Aug. 3, 1983, when Prince wrung a solo from his guitar that felt more like a moving cry of the soul than a musical spotlight. It’s the first time they played it live, and it’s the version on Purple Rain. Prince’s guitar prowess was well documented by that point, but the fluidity of his phrasing on the song and the way he pinched his strings for notes that ascended heavenward spoke more about what “Purple Rain” meant than his obtuse lyrics. —K.G.