One guitar, or three?


Many fans of Rock music guitar playing consider the players who were the only guitarist in their band "the best": Jimi Hendrix (in The Experience), Eric Clapton (in Cream), Jeff Beck (post-Yardbirds), Jimmy Page, Billy Gibbons (ZZ Top), Eddie Van Halen, Stevie Ray Vaughan, the clown in Black Sabbath, etc. etc.

I on the other hand have a love of not the classic 2-guitar line-up (The Beatles, Stones, Rockpile, etc.)---good as that can be---, but of 3-guitar bands: Buffalo Springfield, Moby Grape, Fleetwood Mac in their Peter Green/Danny Kirwin/Jeremy Spencer period, and The Flamin’ Groovies in the Shake Some Action album era.

Three guitars is even more musical than two, and far more so than one. All kinds of little song parts are possible with three musical instruments, and Springfield and The Grape really exploited the possibilities. One guitar is so, well, 1-dimensional. Sure, on recordings the single guitarist in a band can recorded multiple parts, but "lead" guitarists rarely think in "song part" terms, but instead in "guitar chops" terms. Know what I mean?

I bought the first two albums by both Cream and Hendrix when they were released, and saw both live twice in 1967 and ’68. But the music of both got old pretty quickly, I losing interest after those albums. You may disagree. ;-)

Now, one guitar is fine if you have other musical instruments (bass and drums can be played musically, but they aren’t "chordal" instruments), such as piano and/or organ. Two of Rock ’n’ Roll’s most musical ensembles had both piano and organ, and only one guitar: The Band and Procol Harum. Those bands also had great songs. Coincidence?

If anyone has other 3-guitar bands/groups to recommend, I’m all ears.

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Seen plenty of multi-guitar outfits in my time, from the Rolling Stones to the Grateful Dead to original Allmans to Wishbone Ash to Lynyrd Skynyrd to Television etc etc, but these days, I care a lot more about the song than the guitars; heard my share of great rockers with NO guitars! 

Not  three guitars but very similar with many Bluegrass bands which have a Guitar, banjo, and mandolin. Then throw in the fiddle for good measure and you can hear lots of good music

Can and do, @artemus_5! Just my taste, but Bluegrass sounds much more musical than Rock ’n’ Roll to me these days. There are exceptions, mostly from the singer/songwriter crowd (Rodney Crowell, John Hiatt, Iris DeMent---Bluegrass AND Singer/Songwriter, Lucinda Williams, Buddy & Julie Miller, etc.). For Rock ’n’ Roll it’s the likes of Los Lobos, Richard Thompson, the dearly-departed Tom Petty for some. Hey, TP & The Heartbreakers. There's a 3-guitar band!

And in the opinion of some but not all, Dylan is somehow remaining as relevant as ever. But at 80 years of age, it can’t be for much longer. The next few years are going to be brutal. Gee, this is cheery! Someone here asked me how I’m finding the Northwest, having fairly-recently moved here after spending more than 3-1/2 decades in sunny SoCal ;-) .

And for really deep listening, there’s still J.S. Bach. This will reduce me in the eyes of some, but most Jazz just doesn’t speak to me. Too urban.