The first technically proficient shredding on a rock record?
A quick search on Wikipedia confirmed my hunch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shred_guitar
Zep II has never really been surpassed as "heavy" guitars record BTW.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZp2I3rntWw Comments
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I think Voodoo Chile (Slight Return) has some shredding
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I could see an argument for made for this. At about 2:10, there's some "proto" shredding licks. Still a little too greasy and blues based to be REAL shredding.JoeEDangerously said:I think Voodoo Chile (Slight Return) has some shredding
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I'd also put Jeff Beck's outro soloing at about 2:00 min mark on I'm a Man as some proto shredding @JoeEDangerously .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAdCePtwoW4 -
I was scrolling down to post exactly this.JoeEDangerously said:I think Voodoo Chile (Slight Return) has some shredding
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Great subject… love this question. Kinda does depend on what you consider to be shredding in that are you saying rapid and precise guitar? Or are you also including distortion as part of the total sound [most people consider that shredding needs to incorporate fuzz busting to be Bonafide]
Early adopters and wave shapers absolutely include the obvious candidates of early career Jimmi Page and Eric Clapton as the precision players with the level and complexity + speed of execution which are at the heart of shredding… Page and LED ZEP add in the distortion later in a classic display of the new nation of cool.
One of the early examples of Shredding with Distortion as a defined sound was the Classic Innagodadavida 17 minute recording which largely amounts to a Shredding with distortion beginning at 3:30 of the video…
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UIVe-rZBcm4
You also kind of have to include Blackmore as one of the leading early creators of the fuzz busting with taste and texture Shredding sound as he was rocking that sound prior to Deep Purple and continued on from there… a lot of people would say that he IS the true creator of Shredding…
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=H2ikDylNt8A
The other amusing thing is the obvious origins of shredding without distortion that occurs in throughout the history of country music…check out glen campbell back in the day…
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=coZfnXTBEJA -
Larry Carlton at the 2 minute mark, through the outro. He said it was the only spontaneous solo he’s done on record. IIRC, he did two takes, and Donald and Walter mashed them together…
https://youtu.be/jJ9Xk-VoGqo -
Upvote since Kid Charlemagne is on my Mt Rushmore of favorite guitar solos. So is Peg off Aja.Fishpo31 said:Larry Carlton at the 2 minute mark, through the outro. He said it was the only spontaneous solo he’s done on record. IIRC, he did two takes, and Donald and Walter mashed them together…
https://youtu.be/jJ9Xk-VoGqo
But there's nothing "technically, proficient shredding" on any Steely Dan recording. Ever.
It's jazz based noodling and it's amazing, but does not "shred". -
I'm in the same vein as @TheRoarOfTheCrowd for shredding definition. I'll add the solo should have multiple 16th notes and multiple scale runups and run downs.
I know this topic is about rock, but this classical piece is an excellent example of shredding. The run at 1:20 and the outro are infuckingcredible. You definitely hear this in Yngwie Malmsteen's solos....and it's esoteric enough that even @creepycoug has to approve
https://youtu.be/WMLoBXgPil8 -
YellowSnow said:
Upvote since Kid Charlemagne is on my Mt Rushmore of favorite guitar solos. So is Peg off Aja.Fishpo31 said:Larry Carlton at the 2 minute mark, through the outro. He said it was the only spontaneous solo he’s done on record. IIRC, he did two takes, and Donald and Walter mashed them together…
https://youtu.be/jJ9Xk-VoGqo
But there's nothing "technically, proficient shredding" on any Steely Dan recording. Ever.
It's jazz based noodling and it's amazing, but does not "shred".
https://youtu.be/Z3jYfDHkH-w -
I actually listened, rather than roll my eyes at the thought of a Steely Dan shredding solo, and it definitely sounds like jazz rock you'd hear at the mall in the 90's while trying on your soon-to-be favorite pair of Dockers pants.YellowSnow said:
Upvote since Kid Charlemagne is on my Mt Rushmore of favorite guitar solos. So is Peg off Aja.Fishpo31 said:Larry Carlton at the 2 minute mark, through the outro. He said it was the only spontaneous solo he’s done on record. IIRC, he did two takes, and Donald and Walter mashed them together…
https://youtu.be/jJ9Xk-VoGqo
But there's nothing "technically, proficient shredding" on any Steely Dan recording. Ever.
It's jazz based noodling and it's amazing, but does not "shred".





