Black Sabbath's Iommi Tops Guitar Greats List

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  • ALinChainz
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • Jan 2004
    • 12080

    Black Sabbath's Iommi Tops Guitar Greats List

    Sun Feb 1,11:13 AM ET


    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Here's one "guitar greats" list that Jimi Hendrix did not top: "the 100 greatest metal guitarists of all time."


    According to Guitar World magazine, the No. 1 metal guitarist is Tony Iommi, the God-fearing axeman with pioneering English heavy metal band Black Sabbath.


    Six musicians claimed the next four spots: Metallica's James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett tied at No. 2; AC/DC siblings Angus and Malcolm Young at No. 3; Randy Rhoads, the late sideman for Ozzy Osbourne, at No. 4; and Eddie Van Halen, of the foursome that bears his name, at No. 5. Hendrix was No. 12, six places behind Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page.


    The list appears in the magazine's March issue, which hits news stands next week.


    According to Guitar World editor-in-chief Brad Tolinski, the criteria for the list were purity and innovation. He said Iommi never strayed from a basic formula of B-tuned guitars played very loudly, plenty of power chords and slower rhythms.


    "He's essentially the guy that created most of the conventions for heavy metal," Tolinski said. Iommi's "shining moment" is the track "Warning" from the band's self-titled 1970 debut album, according to the poll.


    If Black Sabbath started the heavy metal ball rolling, then Metallica kept it alive, Tolinski said, pointing to the 1984 track "Creeping Death" as the band's stand-out.


    Page's relatively low No. 6 ranking raised some eyebrows since Led Zeppelin also helped pave the way for heavy metal. But Tolinski said Page would be the first to admit that his playing also incorporates blues and folk. Similarly, Eddie Van Halen has always had a foot in the pop world, he added.


    Hendrix, who died in 1970, introduced some of the genre's conventions, but Tolinski termed him more of a "futuristic blues player" than a heavy metal guitarist.
    Last edited by ALinChainz; 02-01-2004, 05:01 PM.
  • Mr Badguy
    Full Member Status

    • Jan 2004
    • 3554

    #2
    Yeah, I saw that poll.

    The top thirty are alright but the further down you get, the more obscure the players become.

    Who needs a poll like this anyway and who did they get to vote on it?
    sigpic

    Sitting on a park bench!

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    • ALinChainz
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • Jan 2004
      • 12080

      #3
      Will have to check out the article to see who was voting and the criteria.

      Comment

      • Mr Badguy
        Full Member Status

        • Jan 2004
        • 3554

        #4
        I would class Iommi as the most influential metal guitarist but not the greatest.

        He has a real wierd vibrato and his solo playing is pretty jazz influenced.

        There`s no denying his riff writing powers, although his rythym playing is no frills.

        I would pick Richie Blackmore as the top METAL guitarist of all time.

        That ought to get the ball rolling...
        sigpic

        Sitting on a park bench!

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        • Wayne L.

          #5
          Polls are meaningless anyway unless you're a part of the mindless media even though it's great the see legendary rock guitarist Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath getting the respect he deserves for his classic riffs after all these years speaking as an old fan.

          Comment

          • Golden AWe
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • Jan 2004
            • 33627

            #6
            Originally posted by Mr Badguy
            I would class Iommi as the most influential metal guitarist but not the greatest.

            He has a real wierd vibrato and his solo playing is pretty jazz influenced.

            There`s no denying his riff writing powers, although his rythym playing is no frills.

            I would pick Richie Blackmore as the top METAL guitarist of all time.

            That ought to get the ball rolling...

            I also hear a lot of blues in some of the slower Sabbath tunes...it is weird that in the article they only mention blues with Page...

            I do rate Iommi as nr.1 myself but I don't have a bad word to say about Blackmore...(except for maybe his latest records)...he's one of the few real virtuoso guitarists ever...he can't really be copied...the same goes with EVH...you can play his songs note to note but you'll always hear a tiny little difference between the copy and the original...and that's what makes them so great.
            Originally posted by Cato
            Golden, why are you FAT?
            Originally posted by lesfunk
            Much like yourself as the Jim Morrison of Nazi bunker flies
            http://i167.photobucket.com/albums/u...TheDMCross.jpg

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            • Mr Badguy
              Full Member Status

              • Jan 2004
              • 3554

              #7
              I only need to pick one Blackmore song to play to anyone and that`s the live version of "Highway star" from "Made in Japan".

              if you haven`t heard it, then you are missing one of the defining moments of rock guitar work.

              If you have, you know what I`m talking about.
              sigpic

              Sitting on a park bench!

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              • FORD
                ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                • Jan 2004
                • 58755

                #8
                Sabbath did indeed start out as a blues band before they came up with the whole dark, evil, and gloomy thing - with the distorted guitar added.

                If you want to hear what Tony sounded like before the fuzzbox, check out his only pre-Sabbath recording, Jethro Tull's "Song For Jeffrey" as performed on the Rollling Stones Rock n Roll Circus. It's a bluesy slide riff similar to the approach Page used on Zeppelin's "Ttraveling Riverside Blues"
                Eat Us And Smile

                Cenk For America 2024!!

                Justice Democrats


                "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

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                • Panamark
                  DIAMOND STATUS
                  • Jan 2004
                  • 17113

                  #9
                  Any list that doesnt have Kurt Cobain or that White Stripes dick as number one, is ok with me !
                  BABY PANA 2 IS Coming !! All across the land, let the love and beer flow !
                  Love ya Mary Frances!

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                  • Mr Badguy
                    Full Member Status

                    • Jan 2004
                    • 3554

                    #10
                    Amen to that.
                    sigpic

                    Sitting on a park bench!

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                    • Golden AWe
                      DIAMOND STATUS
                      • Jan 2004
                      • 33627

                      #11
                      Originally posted by FORD
                      Sabbath did indeed start out as a blues band before they came up with the whole dark, evil, and gloomy thing - with the distorted guitar added.

                      If you want to hear what Tony sounded like before the fuzzbox, check out his only pre-Sabbath recording, Jethro Tull's "Song For Jeffrey" as performed on the Rollling Stones Rock n Roll Circus. It's a bluesy slide riff similar to the approach Page used on Zeppelin's "Ttraveling Riverside Blues"

                      Thank you for the tip! Haven't heard that one yet...
                      Originally posted by Cato
                      Golden, why are you FAT?
                      Originally posted by lesfunk
                      Much like yourself as the Jim Morrison of Nazi bunker flies
                      http://i167.photobucket.com/albums/u...TheDMCross.jpg

                      Comment

                      • Hecubus
                        Foot Soldier
                        • Jan 2004
                        • 575

                        #12
                        There are a lot of obscures on that list, but then again, I don't listen to a whole lot of the really hard metal....

                        Hagar tho? Said it before & I'll say it again, the only thing 'metal' about him is a song title.
                        "Honey, my shirt got itself torn up. My shirt tore itself on that stripper's hand, and I need it to be sewed up for the show."
                        "No problem, Dave, no problem. Say hello to Fluffy."
                        "Fuck you, Fluffy."
                        "No, no, you're going to upset Fluffy."
                        "I ain't saying hello to no stuffed bear."
                        "You know, now that I think about it, it's going to take a little longer to sew up that shirt than I was thinking."
                        "Hi Fluffy, how you been?"
                        "Now that I'm thinking of it even more, it's going to take half the time, Double D, Diamond Dave! Would you hold Fluffy?"
                        "N--- yeah."

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