Via Frat, because I couldn't locate the magazine during my lunch break. In no particular order. Because that is the way that David Fricke did it. And I love him for that. This list is Metro D approved. At least from my half. Without further adieu, the Top Twenty New Guitar Gods...
Tom Morello
John Mayer
Derek Trucks
John Frusciante
Luther Dickinson
Nels Cline
Warren Haynes
Jim James & Carl Broemel
Adam Jones
Kaki King
Mike McCready & Stone Gossard (are those the guys in Pearl Jam?)
Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (and my subscription is saved)
Ed O'Brien & Johnny Greenwood
Chuck Garvey & Al Schnier
Matt Pike
Jack White
Friday, February 09, 2007
At last. The 20.
Posted by NF at 2:51 PM
Labels: Adam Jones, Al Schnier, Chuck Garvey, Derek Trucks, Jack White, Jim James, John, Johnny Greenwood, Kaki King, Luther Dickinson, Mike McCready, Nels Cline, Omar, Stone Gossard, Tom Morello
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5 comments:
can't really argue with many of these picks. nice to see Stone and McCready get some recognition although I think most would agree that Mike is more deserving. Adam Jones is consistently great. can't say that i'm familiar with matt pike or kaki king.
if i am allowed one complaint (though i was still pleasantly suprised overall) i would say that i wanted to see nick zinner up there.
My introduction to Matt Pike was today and it included, but was not limited to, goosebumps, headbanging and the verge of tears. This list - this article - was worthwhile for that fact alone.
Woulda been great to see Wata (Boris) or Nick Zinner up there. Agreed. There is still a part of me that believes Ben Harper is just as good as some of these guys. But, I bet we could find another 20 just as solid. An interesting sidebar: Jones and Morello were in the same high school band (Electric Sheep). It wasn't my high school. But, it was someone's. Out in Illinois or something. And that's a pretty badass variety show if you ask me. Even if they played Ramones covers and had a terrible frontman.
John Mayer should be removed from that list. His song, Waiting on the World to Change", is a blatant rip off of Curtis Mayfield's 1964 hit song "People Get Ready."
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