Favorite Guitar Solo


What is your favorite guitar solo? The one that bypasses your cerebral cortex? The one that best hits your emotional center? Any genre. Any period. Any length. A million notes. Or just one note. Obscure or famous. You can make any excuse as to why you choose it, but explanations are optional. But you gotta choose just one.

My choice? Eric Clapton’s solo in "Sleepy Time Time" from the Fresh Cream album. Simplicity. Emotional ecstasy. Tone.
edcyn

For me, the two guitars plating together at the end (it seems like forever) of Hotel California are boring and repetitive. It should end at least 30 seconds or more earlier than it does. When that song comes on the radio, I turn to another station.

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@hifiguy42 

Watermelon in  Easter Hay is transcendent indeed. 

Another Zappa face melter is at the 2:00 mark on What's New In Baltimore on Meets the Mothers of Prevention.

 

Great picks!

Here's one, for all you fusion fans. With Steve Smith on drums.

Corrado Rustici - Vimana

First killer solo starts at about the 3:00 minute mark. Then, at about 8:00 minutes in, he plays some really tasty stuff. 

Corrado Rustici Trio - Vimana - Live @ ClCorrado Rustici Trio - Vimana - Live @ Club STB 139, Tokyo - April 2010 - YouTubeub STB 139, Tokyo - April 2010 - YouTube

 

Surprised no mention of Mike Bloomfield who at one time was considered maybe  the best in the world. Super Sessions, Paul Butterfield, Electric Flag, Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited, live at Newport take your pick.

Watermelon in  Easter Hay is transcendent indeed. 

Another Zappa face melter is at the 2:00 mark on What's New In Baltimore on Meets the Mothers of Prevention.

This is not a guitar but a very similar string instrument. 

The lady is simply INCREDIBLE, world class.

Meet Yeliz Pasa, Turkish "saz" player:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1o966gfmSU

 

Maybe obscure, but Pablo Cruise’s Ocean Breeze on the self titled album (not the live version). It starts with Cory Lerios getting it on piano and later David Jenkins lights it up a bit on guitar.


Since @dadork already said what I would have...Alex Lifeson - La Villa Strangiato...

I'll suggest Randy Rhodes - Diary of a Madman.
I love many of the guitarists listed here, and it’s like a Sophie’s Choice situation to pick a favorite guitar solo.

That said, if I was threatened with execution for not picking the best solos of all time, it would be a coin toss between:

Kid Charlemagne by Larry Carlton
or
Comfortably Numb by David Gilmour.

These would be my objective save-my-skin guesses.

Then, as they haul out the gallows and I realize I’ve muffed it, I’d say, Oh crap, it was:

Sultans of Swing by Mark Knopfler
Statesboro Blues by Duane Allman
Bohemian Rhapsody by Brian May
Chain Lightening by Denny Dias
My Old School by Skunk Baxter
Crossroads live by Eric Clapton

Then they’d kick away the chair. "It was Stairway to Heaven, you fool."
I do have to echo millercarbon. Roy Clark was amazing, especially that Youtube clip where he's in a duet with Glenn Campbell.
@oldaudiophile -- 

Bert Jansch, John Renbourn and Doc Watson are among my greatest acoustic guitar influences, along with my two top influences John Fahey and Paul Simon.  Whenever I pick up one of my acoustics, my fingers instinctively do tunes by them. I've seen all of them at various venues. I actually saw Pentangle at the Troubadour.  It might have been my last date with my high school girlfriend who, among other things, taught me how to finger pick, Merle Travis style.
It would be hard for me to come up with just one.

So many of my favorite guitarists, Like Allan Holdsworth, John McLaughlin, Alex Machacek, Jan Zehrfeld etc. hardly ever play the same solo twice. They are improvisors, based on a deep knowledge of musical language. They do not play set solos in the same song. 

I could name dozens of Gong, Bruford, UK, and Holdsworth tracks that are drop dead incredible. 

There are a few others that stick out, though that are played more less the same each time. 

Steve Hackett -The Lamia
Steve Howe - Awaken
Franco Mussida -  L'isola di niente
Joe Satriani's contribution to Merry Xmas.  I think the track is Oh Holy Night.  Stunning jazz/rock fusion on a Christmas classic.  Do yourself a favor and give it a listen.  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXj22WAiDPM
Lindsey Buckingham - ' Never Going Back Again ' more examples but a good illustration.
Anyone mention Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Lee Ritenour, Al Di Meola, George Benson, Jim Croce, Leon Redbone, Doc Watson, Norman Blake,  yet?  The are so many virtuosos of so many styles and so many different genre's of music.  We have been blessed!  This thread could go on forever!
@oregonpapa 
Concerto de Aranjuez.
I have that exact record. It is pretty good!
I listened to the awesome Budgie song..'Parents' last night. Tony Bourge's playing is truly inspirational...
Vince Gill nicknamed Danny Gatton ’The Humbler". When he felt his band were becoming a little too pleased with themselves he would play a Gatton CD on the tour bus sound system to put them in their place. ;-)
Roy Clark does make my hair stand up. This one makes my eyes gently weep. That he is no longer with us....  https://youtu.be/6SFNW5F8K9Y?t=200
millercarbon +1 Roy Clark…..made hair stand up.

Danny Gatton- Elmira St. Boogie (the “Telemaster” barely lost out to Eric Johnson’ Cliffs of Dover in 1990)
Michael Hedges- Aerial Boundaries (it’s ONLY him on the 6 string..)
Mark Knopfler "Tunnel of Love" finale. Many live versions to choose from.

And yes, David Gilmour "Comfortably Numb" 
Mick Taylor was the best thing that ever happened to the Stones, and he was really way too good for them. 
Mick Taylor on “You can’t always get what you want” on the Stones bootleg often known as Brussels Affair.
As a guitarist myself I find it difficult to name just one 'guitar solo' anymore, but there are a few performances on solo guitar that I would consider almost transcendental, such as this one:https://youtu.be/OwmljH41B1Q

cycles2
141 posts05-21-2021 5:48amI think Jeff Beck has the best chops of any living guitarist. However it’s the way he treats melodic songs such ’A Day in the Life’ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHHY3eRUMsM) or ’Nessun Dorma’ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdUdtpjv0ZI) that set him apart from other guitarists.

This is why there are SOOOOO many simply phenomenal performances from so many legendary guitarists to pick just one...That said, this Ronnie Scott’s performance is one for the ages. Vinnie and Tal lay down the perfect foundation for Jeff and Jason to do their thing. Jimmy Page and Robert Plant were in the audience. Quite a night, I have this on DVD.
@ danvignau842 Thanks for sharing the Roy Buchannon video. Truly amazing. Too bad the camera didn't show more of Roy's incredible fret work.
My favorite guitar solo of all time is Maleguena performed by Roy Clark on The Odd Couple https://youtu.be/-xssnp7R51A?t=22 
I challenge anyone to watch and listen to (On YouTube) to Roy Buchannon's Live from Austin cover of Hendrix' "Hey Joe", and then claim anything else!  I used to think that Stevie Ray Vaughn'sx cover of Hendrix' "Little Wing" was at least my favorite cover interpretation, but Roy!  I never cease to be amazed by beyond belief at the sounds he learned to make, and of his chops, which others have to use special effects, and multiple pedals on the floor, to poorly simulate.   BTW, Roy and Steve Vai (Ex Zappa and Ex David Lee Roth lead guitarist, old rocker in the movie)  wrote and performed the guitar parts in the "Karate Kid" remake using guitars intstead of Karate, for the movie "Crossroads". 
Yeah...too many to say just one is best. Lots of great examples here. Jeff Beck is a personal hero. No one does what he does with a guitar...and for so long.

I heard one the other day with an old interview of Bob Seeger and how he wrote "Main Street".

The melodic guitar line intro and solo are songs within the song. Simply masterful, and moving.
I'm surprised no one mentioned  Paul Kossoff.  He was the lead guitarist in the band Free that played the infamous solo in 'All Right Now'.  True, it's not a tricky solo, but it's probably one of the 10 best remembered guitar solos due to the countless airplay the song has received through the decades.  
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I think Jeff Beck has the best chops of any living guitarist.  However it's the way he treats melodic songs such 'A Day in the Life' (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHHY3eRUMsM) or 'Nessun Dorma' (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdUdtpjv0ZI) that set him apart from other guitarists.
Lou Reed’s live Sweet Jane opening interlude with Dick Hunter and Steve Wagner. Some of the most epic, melodic, tasteful solos ever recorded.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqpWTC-rvhQ
Too many to mention but Steve Howe’s soulful solo in the middle of the Yes’ "To Be Over" is particularly moving (3:55-4:25). Gets me every time.