Radical Cut wrote:
rio wrote:
Hendrix is awesome!
Honestly, I don't see how someone can prefer George Harrison as a guitarist, but then each to their own I spose... :roll:
Pfft.
He may not have been able to touch the other guys mentioned for pure speed or technicality but we all know where nothing but technicality gets you, it's gets you Yngwie Malmsteen (in case you were wondering, yes, that's bad). He was one of the early guys to work with Indian music in western popular music, he wrote some classic songs (Taxman, While My Guitar Gently Weeps - props to Clapton of course on the soloing, Something, and Here Comes the Sun), and did his own bit of experimenting with guitar recording and breaking in new sounds and techniques with stuff like And Your Bird Can Sing and Tomorrow Never Knows. He may not have been as largely regarded for his innovations as Hendrix was, but considering he came years before and his music is IMO much more timeless and by far more well-crafted, I would definitely listen to him over Hendrix given the option and consider him the better songwriter if nothing else.
Obviously it all boils down to opinion but it always seems to me that Harrison gets the shaft when it comes to this era of guitarists because he doesn't measure up technically.
Sure. When the Beatles were at their peak you would get articles criticising Harrison for his lack of technique, but then this was hardly the point, as we all know. But even disregarding this as a comparison, I still think Hendrix's songwriting is better than Harrison's. Bold As Love, Manic Depression, Little Wing... IMO these are better melodies than even Lennon and McCartney were producing, let alone George Harrison. Honestly I think that, despite the plaudits he gets as a guitarist, he remains underrated as a songwriter.
And I think the beauty of Hendrix's guitar playing is not in his flashiness or virtuosity, but in the energy he managed to channel through the instrument. With Harrison, the guitar was usually a means of conveying a chord sequence or a melody, but with Hendrix (as with Jimmy Page, who you also mentioned) it was like it had a life of its own. It can be really wild and distorted, but he also knows when to sit back and let a melody take precedence.
Anyhow, I'm off on holiday so I'll see you all (kinda) in about a week.