80's Guitar Revolutionaries!!! The Players!

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  • čas přidán 22. 04. 2024
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    A look at 80's GuitarPlayers that shaped the 1980's era and changed the electric guitar. From my memory/perspective.Joe Satriani, Malmsteen, Steve Vai. 80's guitar nerdism. A trip down memory lane of19 80's shred guitar players.
    #80'sGuitarHeroes #80'sGuitarPlayers #80'sGuitars
    MY WEBSITE:
    jazzimproviser.com
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Komentáře • 24

  • @arnaudstegle5034
    @arnaudstegle5034 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I was a teenager in the 80's and saw all this incredible guitar players popping up.
    But one day in 1989-90 I was in a record fair and saw this 33rpm of the first U.K album with Brufford, Wetton,
    Holdsworth (whom I only read things about but never heard) and Jobson I knew from Zappa's live in New-York.
    It was my opportunity to check out that guitarist I was reading about in almost every guitar magazine for years.
    And damn ! On the first solo on the first track I understood why he was praised by many of the 80's "shredders".
    I also thought that even if they were playing new and incredible things, Holdsworth was already there in the 70's and the lineage was clear.

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yeah, Holdsworth was playing the most incredible stuff even around 1974. I remember buying "Road Games" in the 80's and playing the solo's on there to other guitarists and most couldn't really understand it and the response was "Is he just playing anything" or "It's so unemotional" and that's how original his style was back then. I remember also buying an American guitar magazine "Guitar world" and Allan was on the front cover and it had a really great interview and a look at at his style and I knew then that he was going to be one of the greats. Yes, but like you said back then we only heard about the names of these players from the magazines and then we had to go out and search for records, tapes or cd's because that was the only way to hear them. Having said it was a magical time👍

  • @shanewalton8888
    @shanewalton8888 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Man, those magazine shots bring back memories.

  • @richardplenos2928
    @richardplenos2928 Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is so amazing! Lots of my favorite players 🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤

  • @shlaptop
    @shlaptop Před měsícem +1

    Stanley Jordan, a true innovator and i think he had a perfect ear, and his brain allowed him to transfer brain to guitar seamlessly. How else could he have done those things, 2 guitars at once, and improvising at the same time..Never hugely popular but what a talent.

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před měsícem +1

      Yeah, I first saw him on a tv show called the tube and nobody had ever seen anything like it before, I mean me and my mate who also played guitar were speechless! it was like , "Oh we have to learn guitar all over again" lol, and I went out and bought the album "Magic touch" straight away. 👍

  • @sonicstoryteller
    @sonicstoryteller Před 3 měsíci +1

    Cliff the good old days great video Phil 👍

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yeah, a trip down memory lane. Everything seemed so new and exciting back then. The guitars, the players, and the albums, magical times👍

  • @JazzGuitarScrapbook
    @JazzGuitarScrapbook Před 3 měsíci +1

    I love listening to early Yngwie live stuff. Just a guitar into a cranked amp and great playing. Very raw sound, rock and roll. Reminds me a bit of 70s Gary Moore. I think most modern shredders would run a mile from that sound, they wouldn’t be able to play it. Everyone has that smoth Guthrie type tone, that old school lowish gain cranked amp sound is kind of dead sadly. I think it came from playing live…

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah, it all came from hours of live playing I would imagine. Also, the albums were made really quickly especially the Mike Varney ones. I think in a lot of cases the guitarist or group flew out to LA and literally got off the plane and recorded whole albums in 2 days. But that's definitely what made it great because it was expressive, raw and you could really feel that live in the moment vibe to it . I also like Gary Moore in the "Colessium" [War Dance] days. 👍

    • @JazzGuitarScrapbook
      @JazzGuitarScrapbook Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@CliffordMartinOnline a bit ike the way you'd record jazz lol

  • @isaiahmarquez9717
    @isaiahmarquez9717 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Eddie Van Halen kicked the door open. Yngwie, Vai, Reb Beach, etc, took it and ran with it. Yngwie in particular took guitar mastery to a whole new level. Nowadays, playing like that is commonplace.
    As a 70’s baby and a 80’s young teen, I’m still chasing EVH. These 12 year olds that are doing Yngwie-type playing all over You Tube are ridiculous! What’s changed??? How are these kids doing it?

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah, after Van Halen and the Kramer Baretta guitar everything changed and seemed to be changing every week. It was great! ....In the old days the only way to get information and learn the stuff was either from the American guitar magazines or the American Hot licks type videos or cassettes with the little work books with them. Nowadays, everything can be learnt very quickly as there is an overload of content available online with google/youtube etc. Also, nowadays it can all be had for free.....But, the 80's guitar world felt special and there really was an air of excitement about every new player or guitar or album, great days!. 👍

  • @Wizardofgosz
    @Wizardofgosz Před 3 měsíci +1

    Guitar Player used to call those flexible discs "Sound Pages."

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yeah, that's it! I used to love those, they were quite diverse. It's how I got to hear all the new players of the time from Danny Gatton to Eliot Fisk to Frank Gambale for the first time.👍

    • @Wizardofgosz
      @Wizardofgosz Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@CliffordMartinOnline My friend Todd in Minneapolis has a set of pretty much all of them.

    • @CliffordMartinOnline
      @CliffordMartinOnline  Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@Wizardofgosz Hey, that's great!..I wish I kept all of mine and the magazines but they all got lost when I moved in the early 2000's. 👍

    • @Wizardofgosz
      @Wizardofgosz Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@CliffordMartinOnline I had a weird linear tracking turntable that made it difficult to play those. The player automatically was set to remove the tone arm in the needle for records like 45s and be sound pages made the tonearm move even closer to the center of the turntable than 45s would. Mine turntable just automatically ejected towards the end and I never got to hear the end of them.

    • @Wizardofgosz
      @Wizardofgosz Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@CliffordMartinOnline somebody must have the master tapes to all this stuff. And wonder if guitar player or anybody else transferred them to digital and posted them somewhere.