I can't find it in mysekf to disagree, he is one of the reasons I fell in love with rock music in the early 70's as a ten year old kid. Still loving that stuff to this day. LONG LIVE ROCK & ROLL 🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘
Blackmore: "Jeff cheats on the guitar - because he has notes on his guitar that I dont have on my guitar..!" So... but that's ok - I let him go on that one... :)))))))))
~~ Jeff Beck often said that for guitar players - "the guitar is your voice" - which is why so much of his material was without any vocalist - and when he did covers of Beatles songs - his lead guitar was doing the vocal melody part of the song - but it sounded completely natural - something most guitar players could not do ..
JB sang in "Hi Ho Silver Lining", but regretted it later. And said something like "That song has been like a pink toilet ring around my neck ever since." Haha!
Great guitarists particularly admire guitarists that are inovative and technically superior. However, at the end of the day producing beautiful music is what is most important, in my opinion. With that said, I would place Page and Gilmour ahead of someone like Beck. Not sure what Gilmour would say or has said, but Page has said Beck is better. There is a distinction between who’s “better” and who is “greater”. I would say Beck is better, but Page and Gilmour are greater.
Knebworth '85. That's all I need to say. The only thing that came even within sight of being close was 1980 with Slade, and for completely different reasons.
Maybe he couldn't write memorable songs, but he played some of them! Nadia from Nitin Sahwney and Never Alone from Jason Rebello for example! Nobody creates such an intensive emotion with so little notes like him!
@@timrobinson9192 I agree 1000 percent. Ritchie's solo is sublime!!!!! I love the ballad melody he plays before he scorches us with the main section of that blistering solo.
For me, when it comes to Jeff Beck, I love his development and exploration into fusion that really sets him apart from any other rock player. When you hear tracks like Blue Wind and Freeway Jam, now you are really into the essence of what Jeff Beck was really trying to achieve in my opinion.
@@MrJusmobile Try to count the amazing songs that he made both with Purple and Rainbow,all these musicians that become stars,just because they played with him,the bulk of his work..Nobody else has that on their record...Being prolific on guitar..ok..But how many of them can make amazing songs???Not just crazy fast complex solos,but actually songs...and albums..Thats the hard part..He did it better than anybody else..!!!
I've heard interviews with Blackmore where he also praises Leslie West, Brian May, Jimmy Page, Django Rheinhart, and George Harrison. Everyone has their favorite players and Blackmore has his but I think he genuinely respected many other players in the 60s and 70s and borrowed from them. He just put his own twist on whatever he borrowed.
@kentsibille6850 , all the great guitarists, Steve vai, Satriani, Iommi, May, Gilmour, Blackmore, they all consider Van Halen the greatest, and you, who don't know anything about guitar, don't like Van Halen, obviously they are the ones who are right, hahahahaha.
Can't argue with Blackmore's top 3 with Beck at #1. There are many amazing rock guitarists and music is subjective with people having different preferences in terms of musical tastes, so there are lots of great players to choose from. No wrong answers if your top three is different. However, Beck, Hendrix and Van Halen were so influential on guitar playing back in their era and beyond. Decades later their impact is still felt.
Ritchie Blackmore also said the best guitar players you don't know about because they play in their living rooms but they're but they can't play in public but they're great players
Allan Holdsworth,Eric Johnson, Joe Satriani, Yngwie, Johnny Winter,Johnny Hiland, Joe Walsh, Michael Bloomfield, Frank Marino,Alex Lifeson, Kim Mitchell, Roy Clark ,Glen Campbell, Rudy Sarzo, Randy Roads, Hank Marvin, Steve Lukather, Jeff Baxter, Elliott Randall, Denny Diaz, and the list goes on !
AGREE 100% WITH MR. BLACKMORE. THE ONLY THING I MIGHT ADD IS THAT RICHIE DESERVES TO BE PLACED AMONG THE THREE GREATEST HE MENTIONED. THE ONLY ONE I NEVER GOT TO SEE PERSONALLY WAS EDDIE. BLACKMORE TWICE AND BECK AND HENDRIX ONCE EACH. I HAVE BEEN TRUELY BLESSED.
As great as Hendrix was, Beck does things that Hendrix never imagined. Jimi died young, and Beck had several more decades in which to develop, so I am not slurring Jimi at all. He was the best of his era, for sure.
How come, if EVH is his 3rd favorite guitarists, you don’t include Blackmore speaking about him? Why does the narrator speak for Blackmore? I’m skeptical about #3.
so many great Rock players of 60's/70's and what sets them apart was their creativity and writing ability, something that today's technical wizard/shredders DO NOT HAVE.
Blackmore was able to translate emotion into music at a level that others such as Beck have been reputed to do better. Personally, I never heard it, though I am sure the exponents who extol such ideas are technically much better able to express themselves than I ever could. If you can find me one stanza that encapsulates and exceeds Broken Sunsets, among a plethora of others including the Highway Star solo from 'Japan, then you're a better man than me Gunga Din.
This is an excellent video! I was never a big Hendrix fan... not even close, but then again, I don't play and the technical virtuosity is lost to me. I DO love several of his cuts like Villanova Junction and most of his old blues stuff, but it's certainly not because he is so good at the instrument, it's because the music appeals to me. As far as expressive guitarists go, my favorite is Tony Iommi!
Blackmore has the modern day creative genius of the Beethovens, Mozarts and Tchaikovskys of yester year. Take a look at his back catalogue. He will forfeit competent musicians in his band in pursuit of musical perfection.
He was mad at the drummer Mitch Mitchell because Jimi started the intro to Hear My Train A Comin' and he wanted the band to come in after the intro but Mitch started in the middle of the intro.
I watched this concert snd never noticed that. He was also angry whole Stockholm concert in 1969 becouse a cream broke and Isle of Wight 1970. Concert with a prison music industry contract necklase on neck.
@@JimiHendrixEX In Stockholm he was just tired, fed up and inspired. Had nothing to do with Cream splitting up. Isle of Wight, again, tired, too dark, technical problems, sick of having to play the hits all the time. He certainly must have felt a bit like a slave indeed.
look, theyre all astounding but you would have to say beck is possibly the greatest and the first to push progressive electric guitar in that the early 60's
Blackmore with Joe meek is worth a listen this was before beck
11 วันที่ผ่านมา
Jimmy and Eddie are certainly one and two.Not sure who 3 would be .Ritchie? Clapton? Jeff Beck? Gilmour or Mark Knopfler, Brian May maybe? Love how honest Blackmore is about who he stole from.
~~ 1964 was middle of Clapton's run with Yardbirds - I'm sure Blackmore heard them with Eric - but Richie has never been one to give much praise to Clapton ..
@@billyz5088 He has recently, though. In the tales from the tavern- series on his own channel, he's spoken very warmly about Cream and Clapton. Also, it's no secret that Lazy was inspired by Steppin' Out off of the Beano album.
it was done twice, once with the Yardbirds, Then The Jeff Beck Group with Rod Stewart and it was slowed down and kicked ass, Gary Moore used it for a lead solo spot, check it out, Jan S
Actually his playing was blues based, very soulful, with the tapping elements merely icing the cake and extending the harmonic ideas of his solos generally. I've heard very little by Eddie that doesn't have class and soul, even when playing fast.
Well, strictly speaking EVH played heavily modified superstrats with humbuckers in them. Totally different tone. But yes, and all 3 also used the tremolo extensively, with Hendrix the pioneer of it. Beck ended up taking that style of playing to a whole new level. Those three are giants. Ritchie was hugely influential too. But maybe not quite as much as the other three.
And yet, in Steve Rosen's "Tonechaser" on the two occasions Eddie tried to meet Blackmore Black more treated him like such an ass that Eddie refused to ever mention his name after that.
Blackmore look more handsome in yhis video than he looked in a 70. I bet he wear a wig. He had a weak hair in seventies and after that in 80 his hair structure changed. But i mist admit he look better when he get older. In 70 he looked like mr Bean
Not sure that video required that much narration. You could have said less and let the music do the talking as the Joe Perry Project and Aerosmith have said in the not too terribly distant past.
Today Van Halen and Pete Townsend are remembered for their fantastic keyboard virtuosity, Jeff Beck for not coping and Jimi Hendrix for boozing and taking sleeping pills. Blackmore was a member of Deep Purple. He was OK, but the rest of the band was more than OK.
Beck was in a own League... Like a force of nature that never stop develope... Blackmore and some others are for the rockers around the world genious in there ways... The more i lissen on more and more guitarists i think there is impossible to say how is the best... You have 10.that stands out... Al of them is insane good in there style... Its better to enjoy them as they are... And let beck sit there on hes trone as a god... Bless you al out there 🙏🧙♂️🍀
Wow - I've Never heard him speak-well of any other guitarist. Always came-off as Jealous . . . and-a-Hater (even though he is really good) ??? Guy even said: "Never one to give compliments lightly" about Blackmore.
We need to appreciate Ritchie so much more than the world does while he's still here.
Mr. Blackmore has all the skills. His ability to captivate the audience is on the same level as the other guitarists discussed in this video. ✌️✌️
Indeed
Had.
With *creative melodies* and unique sound *Ritchie Blackmore* is the king of the guitar riffs and solo parts
Iommi is 👑
I freakin' love Ritchie Blackmore!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤ One of my all time favorites 😍
There are so many kings in music... I wouldn't be able to choose only one.
@@Pluto12th eddy’s are superior by far!!!!
His melodies are creative, unlike you who uses an AI to type an obvious reply
I freakin' love Ritchie Blackmore. Always one of my all time favorites 😍 ❤️
I can't find it in mysekf to disagree, he is one of the reasons I fell in love with rock music in the early 70's as a ten year old kid. Still loving that stuff to this day. LONG LIVE ROCK & ROLL 🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘
Blackmore: "Jeff cheats on the guitar - because he has notes on his guitar that I dont have on my guitar..!" So... but that's ok - I let him go on that one... :)))))))))
~~ Jeff Beck often said that for guitar players - "the guitar is your voice" - which is why so much of his material was without any vocalist - and when he did covers of Beatles songs - his lead guitar was doing the vocal melody part of the song - but it sounded completely natural - something most guitar players could not do ..
JB sang in "Hi Ho Silver Lining", but regretted it later. And said something like "That song has been like a pink toilet ring around my neck ever since." Haha!
Beck was a guitarist for guitarists. Blackmore wrote riffs for the world.
Beck is not only a guitarist for guitarist. He is also a musician for humans who love high quality musicality!
@@frankmeenzen787 Especially for open-minded music fans
@@Cashtoc Correct!
Great guitarists particularly admire guitarists that are inovative and technically superior. However, at the end of the day producing beautiful music is what is most important, in my opinion.
With that said, I would place Page and Gilmour ahead of someone like Beck. Not sure what Gilmour would say or has said, but Page has said Beck is better. There is a distinction between who’s “better” and who is “greater”. I would say Beck is better, but Page and Gilmour are greater.
Ritchie is a legend, got to see DP back in the 80s on their Perfect Strangers tour with him, lucky to have that memory!
Knebworth '85. That's all I need to say. The only thing that came even within sight of being close was 1980 with Slade, and for completely different reasons.
Ritchie Blackmore one of my most favourite guitar players.... together with Jeff Beck and Jimi Hendrix......
Spot on for me!
loved this guy since 1972 made in japan best of the best,this guy will be the of the best my top 1111111111111111
Blackmore said too that Beck couldn't write memorable songs and that's one of the reason why I prefer Ritchie.
Maybe he couldn't write memorable songs, but he played some of them!
Nadia from Nitin Sahwney and Never Alone from Jason Rebello for example!
Nobody creates such an intensive emotion with so little notes like him!
Oh Ritchie, Guitar Hero of my youth...
Child In Time solo, wow, gets me every time , pure magic. A in hairs stood on end.
@@timrobinson9192 I agree 1000 percent. Ritchie's solo is sublime!!!!! I love the ballad melody he plays before he scorches us with the main section of that blistering solo.
@@ThomasCummins-b3e And it never gets old, I feel the same experience every time I hear it.
For me, when it comes to Jeff Beck, I love his development and exploration into fusion that really sets him apart from any other rock player. When you hear tracks like Blue Wind and Freeway Jam, now you are really into the essence of what Jeff Beck was really trying to achieve in my opinion.
RITCHIE BLACKMORE THE GOAT!!!!
lol
HE IS BADASS!!!!!!
@@MrJusmobile Try to count the amazing songs that he made both with Purple and Rainbow,all these musicians that become stars,just because they played with him,the bulk of his work..Nobody else has that on their record...Being prolific on guitar..ok..But how many of them can make amazing songs???Not just crazy fast complex solos,but actually songs...and albums..Thats the hard part..He did it better than anybody else..!!!
I've heard interviews with Blackmore where he also praises Leslie West, Brian May, Jimmy Page, Django Rheinhart, and George Harrison. Everyone has their favorite players and Blackmore has his but I think he genuinely respected many other players in the 60s and 70s and borrowed from them. He just put his own twist on whatever he borrowed.
That is the famous Blackmorizer
Well said
The riff on Smoke on the Water is iconic enough to put Blackmore on top of my list
Andrés Segovia, Tomatito, Paco de Lucia .😊
Smile once in a while Ritchie 😊
Sloppy jimmy
He do but not so much.
His face would break.
😂😂😂
Welp hard to do when one has sold their soul, eh Blackmore?
My top 5 ...
Gary Moore
Jimi Hendrix
Eddie Van Halen
Richie Blackmore
Jeff Beck
Good man, At last Gary Moore, acknowledged
👏👏👏👏
I love the "No Release" riff. all riffs in the songs are great.
I always felt that Ritchie had complete control of his guitar. The guy is just faultless.
And he wanted complete control, of everyone around him, but he wasnt smart enough to realise that wasnt possible.
@@admiralbenbow5083 - Har.......... pull his wig off.
Agree with Blackmore completely, these three are truly the three greatest.
Van Halen does not belong in this group
@kentsibille6850 , Van Halen belongs, and besides belonging, he's the best of them all.
@ - I’m sorry but there’s no way
@kentsibille6850 , all the great guitarists, Steve vai, Satriani, Iommi, May, Gilmour, Blackmore, they all consider Van Halen the greatest, and you, who don't know anything about guitar, don't like Van Halen, obviously they are the ones who are right, hahahahaha.
@ - you don’t know anything about me do you? You might consider that next time
I couldn't agree more with R.B., those 3 and R.B. himself top my list.
Ritchie is a king of melody ❤
And Blackmore is sadly the only one still with us…. 😢
Yeah, let's appreciate him while we have him!
Hope he lives the rest of his life happy.
I've heard Ritchie giving props to Andy Latimer of Camel as well.
Can't argue with Blackmore's top 3 with Beck at #1. There are many amazing rock guitarists and music is subjective with people having different preferences in terms of musical tastes, so there are lots of great players to choose from. No wrong answers if your top three is different. However, Beck, Hendrix and Van Halen were so influential on guitar playing back in their era and beyond. Decades later their impact is still felt.
Peter Green and a great voice too
Legend!
Ritchie Blackmore also said the best guitar players you don't know about because they play in their living rooms but they're but they can't play in public but they're great players
Session players
I agree. Beck #1, EVH, Blackmore, Page, Hendrix. Top 5 Hendrix 5 due to short career.
Brian may Martin barre garry Moore dave gilmore alvin Lee Rory Gallagher the list goes on!.
B.B.King, Albert King, buddy guy, Srv, Robin trower and on and on
Ronnie Pickering !!!
Peter Green!! Frank Zappa!! Santana!!! Joe Pass!!! Džango Reinhard
Allan Holdsworth,Eric Johnson, Joe Satriani, Yngwie, Johnny Winter,Johnny Hiland, Joe Walsh, Michael Bloomfield, Frank Marino,Alex Lifeson, Kim Mitchell, Roy Clark ,Glen Campbell, Rudy Sarzo, Randy Roads, Hank Marvin, Steve Lukather, Jeff Baxter, Elliott Randall, Denny Diaz, and the list goes on !
Steve Rothery (Marillion)
AGREE 100% WITH MR. BLACKMORE. THE ONLY THING I MIGHT ADD IS THAT RICHIE DESERVES TO BE PLACED AMONG THE THREE GREATEST HE MENTIONED. THE ONLY ONE I NEVER GOT TO SEE PERSONALLY WAS EDDIE. BLACKMORE TWICE AND BECK AND HENDRIX ONCE EACH. I HAVE BEEN TRUELY BLESSED.
As great as Hendrix was, Beck does things that Hendrix never imagined. Jimi died young, and Beck had several more decades in which to develop, so I am not slurring Jimi at all. He was the best of his era, for sure.
The "recognizable riff" from Smoke on the Water is Jon Lord playing an organ through a guitar amp...
How come, if EVH is his 3rd favorite guitarists, you don’t include Blackmore speaking about him? Why does the narrator speak for Blackmore? I’m skeptical about #3.
so many great Rock players of 60's/70's and what sets them apart was their creativity and writing ability, something that today's technical wizard/shredders DO NOT HAVE.
Blackmore was able to translate emotion into music at a level that others such as Beck have been reputed to do better. Personally, I never heard it, though I am sure the exponents who extol such ideas are technically much better able to express themselves than I ever could. If you can find me one stanza that encapsulates and exceeds Broken Sunsets, among a plethora of others including the Highway Star solo from 'Japan, then you're a better man than me Gunga Din.
This is an excellent video!
I was never a big Hendrix fan... not even close, but then again, I don't play and the technical virtuosity is lost to me.
I DO love several of his cuts like Villanova Junction and most of his old blues stuff, but it's certainly not because he is so good at the instrument, it's because the music appeals to me.
As far as expressive guitarists go, my favorite is Tony Iommi!
Listen to " Somewhere " and " Bold as love " , satisfaction guarantee ......
Talented guy
Blackmore has the modern day creative genius of the Beethovens, Mozarts and Tchaikovskys of yester year. Take a look at his back catalogue. He will forfeit competent musicians in his band in pursuit of musical perfection.
Wow! Blackmore actually likes someone.
There's nobody better than Jeff Beck😊
My top three are Jeff Beck Jan akkerman and Joe Satriani😊
4:06 What do you think Jimi was angry about?
I wondered that, probably Noel Redding saying something dumb....
He was mad at the drummer Mitch Mitchell because Jimi started the intro to Hear My Train A Comin' and he wanted the band to come in after the intro but Mitch started in the middle of the intro.
@@studionumbersixNope. Mitch Mitchell was the reason.
I watched this concert snd never noticed that. He was also angry whole Stockholm concert in 1969 becouse a cream broke and Isle of Wight 1970. Concert with a prison music industry contract necklase on neck.
@@JimiHendrixEX In Stockholm he was just tired, fed up and inspired. Had nothing to do with Cream splitting up. Isle of Wight, again, tired, too dark, technical problems, sick of having to play the hits all the time. He certainly must have felt a bit like a slave indeed.
Blackmore is my favourite
look, theyre all astounding but you would have to say beck is possibly the greatest and the first to push progressive electric guitar in that the early 60's
Blackmore with Joe meek is worth a listen this was before beck
Jimmy and Eddie are certainly one and two.Not sure who 3 would be .Ritchie? Clapton? Jeff Beck? Gilmour or Mark Knopfler, Brian May maybe? Love how honest Blackmore is about who he stole from.
Come On Itchie
Get The MK lll Line Up
Going….We Want To
Hear The Burn 🔥
Album Live Just One
More Time F@%#
Ok with Ritchie Blackmore Jeff Beck is number one and by far, the guitarist of guitarists... but don't forget Alvin Lee and Leslie West
Traduction
Ritchie has also said he really likes Eric Johnson.
At first glance I thought the picture in the thumbnail was Bernard Black as he is now (Black Books).
Or the Spanish equivalent.
Shapes of Things was released in 1966.
I caught that too.
~~ 1964 was middle of Clapton's run with Yardbirds - I'm sure Blackmore heard them with Eric - but Richie has never been one to give much praise to Clapton ..
@@billyz5088 He has recently, though. In the tales from the tavern- series on his own channel, he's spoken very warmly about Cream and Clapton. Also, it's no secret that Lazy was inspired by Steppin' Out off of the Beano album.
it was done twice, once with the Yardbirds, Then The Jeff Beck Group with Rod Stewart and it was slowed down and kicked ass, Gary Moore used it for a lead solo spot, check it out, Jan S
Eddie van Halen always told stories with his guitar playing? Not when he was shredding, he didn't.
Yes he did, he told the story of a hamster running at very high speed on a little wheel
Actually his playing was blues based, very soulful, with the tapping elements merely icing the cake and extending the harmonic ideas of his solos generally. I've heard very little by Eddie that doesn't have class and soul, even when playing fast.
Blackmore is the best guitarist in the world
They all play better than me,for sure
It’s a big club we’re all in 👍
Machine Gun Hendrix and Echoes Pink Floyd for me.
Two of my favourites as well. Child in Time off of Made in Japan would be a third.
@@Innerspace100 Made in Japan got that album 👍
The first 11 minutes of that echo track was one of the best pieces of music ever played by the floyd.
Rock n Roll fair enough but let's be totally frank it doesn't matter how good you are looking cool is EVERYTHING
For tone and simplicity Hank Marvin is a Blackmore favourite.
Iva ebeen a Deep Purple fan since the seventies ad I can tell you one song by Rainbow
How can SRV not be included?
What do ll 4 guitarists have in common? The Fender Strat........
Well, strictly speaking EVH played heavily modified superstrats with humbuckers in them. Totally different tone. But yes, and all 3 also used the tremolo extensively, with Hendrix the pioneer of it. Beck ended up taking that style of playing to a whole new level. Those three are giants.
Ritchie was hugely influential too. But maybe not quite as much as the other three.
If you see "Studio Number Six" as the source, change the channel! Where in the video does Ritchie actually say anything about this?
And yet, in Steve Rosen's "Tonechaser" on the two occasions Eddie tried to meet Blackmore Black more treated him like such an ass that Eddie refused to ever mention his name after that.
All Strat players primarily.
Uli jon roth
👍👍👍
What about Rory Gallagher
Ritchie Blackmore said Rory was the most natural guitar player so surprise he didn't give Rory a mention.
Rory greatest of all time
Hero
@@paullagendijk1409 Yes
What about him? It's blackmores favourite guitarists, not yours.
Great choices from Blackmore but he´s at the same level.
Page !! 🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️
That Jimi Hendrix was pretty good !
Blackmore look more handsome in yhis video than he looked in a 70.
I bet he wear a wig.
He had a weak hair in seventies and after that in 80 his hair structure changed.
But i mist admit he look better when he get older.
In 70 he looked like mr Bean
The Yardbirds started Heavy Rock
What about me.... i play guitar! 🤤
Have ya written a "Smoke" type riff in yer life?
Not sure that video required that much narration. You could have said less and let the music do the talking as the Joe Perry Project and Aerosmith have said in the not too terribly distant past.
Today Van Halen and Pete Townsend are remembered for their fantastic keyboard virtuosity, Jeff Beck for not coping and Jimi Hendrix for boozing and taking sleeping pills. Blackmore was a member of Deep Purple. He was OK, but the rest of the band was more than OK.
Are you serious!
pretty spot on but evh was always nice?
5:51
5:55
6:15
I couldn’t disagree more
I just don't believe Ritchie said that...
He should follow what Brian May favorite guitarist... Alip Bata, the most talented guitarist ever
O.k it's not guitar talk but where did he buy his new hair, it looks better than in the 70's. Looks good.
Beck was a beast
And Eddie said Blackmore dissed him. Its U Tube!
Hendrix was definitely the greatest composer of the three with Beck being the fantastic next
Three Js for me - Hendrix, Beck, and Page
Beck was in a own League... Like a force of nature that never stop develope... Blackmore and some others are for the rockers around the world genious in there ways... The more i lissen on more and more guitarists i think there is impossible to say how is the best... You have 10.that stands out... Al of them is insane good in there style... Its better to enjoy them as they are... And let beck sit there on hes trone as a god... Bless you al out there 🙏🧙♂️🍀
Damn right
Hammer- ons go back to Segovia at least.
What about Rory Gallagher ,a very unusual guitarist in his own right
Wow - I've Never heard him speak-well of any other guitarist. Always came-off as Jealous . . . and-a-Hater (even though he is really good) ??? Guy even said: "Never one to give compliments lightly" about Blackmore.
Rory Gallagher was a magical guitar player sadly missed and the late great Gary Moore.
Witchie Blackmoore..
Great players true,I never bought any of their stuff,just didn't hit the spot
This is a lie. He didn't even want to meet EVH, and disrespected him in some earlier statements.
Yeah. I remember Blackmore couldn't stand Eddie's solo on beat it. He thought it was garbage.
My personel best three Guitarists are:
John Williams on Classical Guitar
Al Die Meola with Jazz Rock
Yngwie Malmsteen with Heavy Metal.
Yngwie is not heavy metal!
Blackmore and I have something in common - we both think Jeff Beck was the G.O.A.T.
John Sykes
Back, EVH and Hendrix. No need more!
Is this Arnold Schwartznegger? I can tell by the way you say Jeff's name.
Jiff Back my fave two....
this sounds more like hero worship than anything else
Jimi hendriks broj jedan za sada ne prevazidjen da je poživeo još desetak godina svašta vrhunsko bi čuli
Jimmy Hendrix, Steve Vai and Joe Satriani. An the road comes to an end.
Haha don't make me laugh. Hendrix I agree but for the other two nonsense
@davidwebber9511 I can play guitar man, not only lick the asses of the icons, as you do.
Hendrix,EVH and Yngwie...and Yngwie is the last living guitar god that changed Rock guitar
@@okidoke-xe8gj I dont think so.
Rory Gallagher makes them all irrelevant!
Don't agree. Nonsense. Gallagher was great but not in my top five and mostly anyone else's. Top 3 mentioned are the best, Blackmore 4th.enough said
Absolutely 🙌
I concur