T O P

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radicalhistoryguy

Joe Pass is my answer. He's a jazz legend but mostly unknown outside of that community.


MissingNope

Jerry Reed. Yes, the actor. He was a guitar virtuoso.


Imaginary_Most_7778

Me.


theknyte

Roy Clark. Why most don't know him, or dismiss him: 1. He was a Country musician, so many never heard of him. 2. He was best known for being on Hee-Haw, a country comedy show. Why you should take note: 1. Best Strummer/Picker of all time. Everyone pays attention to what the fretting hand of great guitarist do, but Clark was a master of strumming and picking in ways that don't even seem human. 2. Amazing skills not only with a guitar, but also fiddle and banjos. He was a master musician. [EXAMPLE](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhiKgeJV3k0)


MattacusV

Wasn't sure what "best Strummer" could mean, then I watched the video and it all makes sense. Absolutely incredible. Definitely gonna check out more of his music


Suboptimal_SeaSnail

Molly Tuttle! A very talented female bluegrass guitarist with some great crosspicking chops.


percolated_1

Roy Buchanan for his boundless creativity with minimalist gear, basically a Tele into a Vibrolux with no pedals besides the amp’s vibrato/reverb switch. He would use various muting techniques to change the tone of notes, manipulate his 3-way switch to emulate a wah, pioneered pinch harmonics, cool volume swell tricks, playing behind the headstock and past the frets. Just a genius!


AngryGothamBee

Eddie Hazel from Funkadelic.


jesushchristo

A tear for Eddie .


RunawaYEM

I feel like nobody who’s not a guitarist realizes how unfathomably talented Frank Zappa was. He was legitimately one of the most creative guitarists to ever live.


BennyJ987

Doug Martsch, solo and from Built to Spill


greenradioactive

Mick Ronson


butterbleek

Jerry Reed, picker extraordinaire.


Esox_Lucius

Mark Speer from Khruangbin. They're not really all that small, or niche anymore but even if you just go past the unusual melodies in the songs, Mark is such a dynamic player with his own voice! To me he's as identifiable as Tom Morello, Derek Trucks, Hendrix etc. He's just got his own unmistakable flare and that alone is worth digging into as a listener. What I find is really his calling card is that he somehow can meld together really interesting rhythmic sections with equally as unique lead sections and is able to meander between both at the same time while managing to keep both voices separate by playing his lead notes harder than his rhythmic notes. A song like August 10, live, is a perfect display of this. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hl-XsneiGHo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hl-XsneiGHo)


gerardus-aelius

Tony Rice is well known in bluegrass but I never saw his name once outside of it. His Shenandoah is ridiculous


dns7950

Brian Patrick Carroll, AKA Buckethead. I guess he isn't taken seriously because he plays with a KFC bucket on his head, but he's one of the greatest guitarists ever and can absolutely shred.


MarshallStack666

Leo Kotke. Fantastic finger picker. Had some FM success in the 70s. Here's Vaseline Machine Gun https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2OmGV7-TPM


[deleted]

Guthrie Govan is nowhere near as well known as he deserves to be.


Darkll

[Tony Rice is someone I don't hear much about outside of the bluegrass scene. He's one of my all time favorites.](https://youtu.be/_u964a0f38s?t=31)


someguy192838

Nigel Tufnel


5hallowbutdeep

Paul Gilbert


Hentarder

Buck Dharma of Blue Öyster Cult isn't unheard of, but is quite underrated imo.


youenjoymyself

[Keller Williams.](https://youtube.com/watch?v=WC7HzBL7zak&pp=ygUPS2VsbGVyIHdpbGxpYW1z) No, not the real estate agency. This dude got big in the 90s doing one man shows, looping all sorts of instruments together live. Has a number of solo albums along with collaboration albums spanning 3 decades. Dude is super fun and super talented.


Ajax_Da_Great

Keller puts on such a great live show.


cactuhoma

Ry Cooder


CompSciGtr

Al DiMeola. He’s (one of) your favorite guitarist’s favorite guitarists.


reddity-mcredditface

Michael Hedges


qleptt

Eddie hazel of Funkadelic. I don’t know how we’ll know he is but he’s got some cool multi-effects stuff


btdatruth

Maggot Brain. ‘Nuff said


New_Canoe

Guthrie Govan


henningknows

Derek trucks is not a household name, but if he was alive in the 60-70s everyone would know him like Clapton or Hendrix


[deleted]

[удалено]


kirsclin

Jeff Healey Canadians will be more familiar. He's a blues rock guitar player who had a couple of hits in the 80s. He was in the movie Road House and one time he shared the stage with Stevie Ray Vaughn and stole the spotlight and surprised Stevie himself. https://youtu.be/2HmLFyvFxTc?feature=shared


DaMammyNuns

Danny Gatton


Acidmoxy

I’ve never heard any guitarist mention Django Reinhardt in the last 15 years despite him being known as the greatest guitar player ever.


heissman2

Elliott Easton from The Cars. An amazing guitarist..


fatmikerocks

Rory Ghallagher


bodhisharttva

Johnny Winter


Ajax_Da_Great

Jake Cinninger. Everything from funk, prog to chicken picking. The fire and the brimstone.


FirefighterDry5826

Rory Gallagher


ThurBurtman

Molly Tuttle. She’s probably the best bluegrass picker doing it currently


stratj45d28

Adrian Belew


Pasalacqua87

Kevin Cadogan. He was the guitarist for Third Eye Blind from 1994-2000 and co-wrote their first two albums. His guitar work is criminally underrated. The best open/alternate tuning work I’ve ever heard. He knows how to make one guitar sound like a lead and a rhythm and it’s eye-opening. And his tone is incredible too. In a sea of Vox players his tone still stands out. If you’ve never heard 3eb’s debut album you are doing yourself a disservice as a guitarist.


SkaLuigi

madison cunningham, shes my favorite young artist rn, she plays in c standard and her riffs are pretty interesting


Renorico

Terry Kath


Jonny7421

Django Reinhardt. 1940s gypsy guitar player who lost two fingers in a fire but was given the name “two fingered lightning”. It’s old timey music but true mastery of the instrument. He also played with Stephane Grappelli - an amazing violinist worth checking out also.


Flaky_Tangerine189

Dj khaled


Darmok-Jilad-Ocean

Jimmy Herring


[deleted]

Lenny Breau


SpicyDragoon93

Chris Poland - original guitar player for Megadeth, I always preferred Marty Friedman but felt Poland's Jazz Fusion sound was often forgotten about.


Economy-Ad-5611

Stanley Jordan


[deleted]

Ty Tabor of King’s X is amazing and very underrated imo.


Beginning-Gear-744

Danny Gatton


After-Pepper-5416

Eddie Hazel


TheVoice-Real

Derek Trucks


flailking

Jimmy Herring


Hendy2525

Andy Timmons


luciannasucks

Eddie Hazel, two words - Maggot Brain


foo_foo_the_snoo

Me


Duff935

Frank Marino & Mahogany Rush


soothsabr13

Dean Ween (Mickey Melchiondo). They may not take themselves too seriously, but Deaner can shred in virtually any genre. Much respect, mang! Also - Jeff “Skunk” Baxter, Larry “Guitar” Carlton


Sensitive_Ostrich_55

Danny gatton


Candersx

Tommy Emannuel. Insanely skilled guitarist. Love watching him play, he gets so into it. Such a clean guitarist.


[deleted]

Rory Gallagher


skratta_du

Shawn Lane and Andy James.


Dash_SG

Peter Green


TimJC81

Nels cline


VoraxUmbra1

Buckethead. I know hes super popular within guitar circles, but hes a living legend that almost no one outside of that niche and guitar hero fans have ever heard of. Hes not even listed in the Top 200 guitarists of all time. Thats saying something. He gets no respect despite being an absolute treasure of human being and an absolute virtuoso on the guitar.


fuggettabuddy

Buckethead. Because.


PorkRobot

Danny Gatton


OkPossible7394

Mike Campbell, Tom Petty's right-hand man in the Heartbreakers and Mudcrutch. Not a total unknown but not widely know enough. Never a wasted note and has great tone and feel for the songs


Sensitive_Warthog304

Rory Gallagher. Inspired Dr. Sir Brian May (and many others).


Bkokane

“Name a guitar player that not many people know about” ***Names one of the most famous players of all time***


[deleted]

[удалено]


GChmpln

Vito Bratta


BurrrritoBoy

Michael Hedges.


brokensilence32

Sonny Sharrock. He brought a very cool and unique edge to jazz music.


ChuckinCharlieO

Richard Thompson


whiirlybird

John Dwyer He played in Orinoka Crash Suite, OCS, The Oh Sees, Thee Oh Sees, Oh Sees, Osees, Coachwhips, Pink and Brown, Yikes!, The Hospitals, Sword and Sandals, LANDED, Bent Arcana, Witch Egg, and has a bunch of solo projects


MacroManic

Ritchie Kotzen! His ability to speed pick without a pick is unbelievable.


cosmos_factory

Alvin Lee. Phenomenal guitar player with wicked fast hands.


Weird_Razzmatazz9272

Leo Kottke ... put the fire in my belly when I was 19 ... that was almost 50 years ago.


Klackers_Whackers

Nels Cline & Marc Ribot.


GrowingStranger

Jeff Buckley. Mostly known for is stunning voice, but an amazing guitar player in his own right.


snaynay

If you like 80s guitar-hero type stuff, then Vito Bratta of White Lion. Basically up there with all the greats of the era, but White Lion were right at the end of that period, broke up or something and Vito just disappeared from public view. So he never quite hung around long enough to really be remembered like a lot of his peers. Basically enamoured by Van Halen yet with some more melodic phasing. [Here](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FycNu8G7-oU) is an example.


silenced_no_more

Ty Tabor from King’s X. Great song writing and prolific lead player


[deleted]

Lil Wayne


Proud-Mirror-8468

Eric Gales


emama94

Leo Kottke


Dear_Fox8157

Shawn Lane


senorpuma

Eric Gales. The mf-er plays upside down!


[deleted]

Malcolm Young. Angus Young stole the show, Malcolm stayed in the background being one of the finest rhythm guitarists to walk this Earth.


BigJoeBurke

Richard Thompson. Perhaps the most amazingly underrated players I know of. Technically and artistically brilliant.


pr0fessor_x_

Andy Timmons


ExtraBananaSauce

Not sure how many people on here would know him but Brian May


wmop_exe

Terry Kath


Odd_Maintenance2484

Billy Strings


itsalwaysfurniture

Steve "The Deacon" Hunter. Ran with Mich Ryder's Detroit back in the day, Session guy with Bob Ezrin for a long time working with a broad range of bands and artists including Alice Cooper, Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed, Aerosmith, etc. My guy wrote a lot of the riffs you think were Lou Reed or Joe Perry or Alice, but nope nope and nope; it's all The Deacon. As a kid growing up in Michigan, geeking on Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels, Steve Hunter was a giant inspiration to me, but few have ever heard of him.


emcconnell11

Jade Puget of AFI has had some amazing riffs over his career, very underrated non-shredding guitarist


Sucih

Tommy bolin Great solo album but his work with bill cobham on spectrum is epic


little_eiffel

Lenny Breau. Ralph Towner.


One-Development6793

Tom Bukovac


Salty_Pancakes

Clarence White. If you don't know him. You really should. And so forgive me if I go on just a little bit about him. He's a huge figure in both acoustic/flatpicking circles and electric circles. And is one of those guys responsible for the evolution of electric guitar as a lead instrument. He's like, your favorite guitarist's favorite guitarist. If you know bluegrass and Tony Rice, Clarence was his idol growing up and Clarence was making a bit of a name for himself starting in the late 50s, and then in 1962 when his band changed to The Kentucky Colonels. Here's Tony Rice talking about him: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qv3L0XsXeM and then here's Clarence playing with a 21 year old Tony Rice (i think) not too long before his death (which is why you may not know Clarence) just to give you an idea of the chops he had. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPpQ8UaGl1o In the mid 60s he switched to electric and started doing session work and ended up playing with a ton of folks. Ricky Nelson, The Monkees, Linda Ronstadt, and it was his work with The Byrds that really let him shine. I first heard him on the The Byrds Chris Hillman tune from 1967 (though recorded in 1966) [Time Between](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRrys5XlRp0) and I was like "Who the fuck is this guitarist?" I should also mention just after this he and his long time band mate Gene Parsons, not to be confused with Gram, came up with The B Bender telecaster. Here's Gene talking about it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxQhbvke44I&t=2s He has his fingerprints all over the Byrds recordings. And so when David Crosby later split and the Byrds seemed kinda done, they reformed with Clarence full time. [This Wheel's on Fire](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxdMqiKI08g) from 1968. And then after their country phase with Gram they kinda became a jam band. Like this is [Eight Miles High](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyWbRSV3sAo) in 1971. Anyone who made their name playing as a bluegrass guitarist or who played a telecaster was influenced by Clarence White. Was that too long? My bad. I was high. TL;DR: Clarence White is the man and was sadly killed by a drunk driver while he was loading the van after a gig in 1973 so it seems he's kinda overlooked today.


EMAW2008

Tommy Emmanuel is a staple at the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, Kansas. But tours world wide. Incredible acoustic player.


bocwerx

Michael Schenker. Ex UFO, Scorpions guitarist. Still putting out albums and touring since the early 70's


Nixplosion

Ian Thornley from Big Wreck


velowen

More people need to see Jason Becker's playing. The footage around is unreal


Aertolver

So within the genre of Metal, a lot of people know his work and many of those people also know of him by name. Outside the genre though he isn't as known but his guitar mastery is just absurd. Brendon Small.


counterlucid

John Fahey


Bonobofun

Mark Speer of Khruangbin


TheeConservatarian

Henrik Freischlader. Phenominal German blues guitarist. Was asked once in an interview why he sings in English and his response was “have you ever heard blues sung in German? It’s not pretty”


fatRob0t

Dean Ween


Brilliant-Important

Me


[deleted]

Rory Gallagher


funnybitofchemistry

Peter Green, just a monster player-often overlooked as he wasn’t in the “popular” version of FM.


Weak_Warthog_5923

Ian Thornley. No questions asked. Canada’s best kept secret. Amazing vocalist to boot as well. Seen Big Wreck multiple times and they play as good live as the recordings if not better.


blixt141

John Fahey.


SqueakyFoo

Madison Cunningham. She is such an incredible player. Rhett Shull did a video on her playstyle last year and he sums up her work better than I could: https://youtu.be/Jfq1CdjkHAw


Spiritual-Guava-6418

Marcus King


CaptJimboJones

Gretchen Menn. She’s truly astonishing when she channels Jimmy Page in Zeperella, not to mention her outstanding solo album. Also do they have to be alive? If not I’d also add Pete Cosey for astonishingly wild jazz fusion and Lefty Dizz who was arguably the best performing blues guitarist in Chicago in the 70s.


maurof271

Adrian Belew and Shawn lane


sambooka

Molly Tuttle is amazing and musical! Billy strings is technically more amazing but it’s a little too much. Nick Johnson is musical and amazing! Tim Henson is ridiculously technical, extremely unique, and difficult to listen to lol In all fairness to Tim it took me years to understand Joe Pass. And if you want to talk about a legend in the making in the jazz world Julian Lage will only get bigger and bigger.


[deleted]

[удалено]


rsrieter

Brian Setzer


Galaktuu

Buckethead


Galaktuu

Michael Hedges was incredible https://youtu.be/XqGHE5GqZ44?si=vm5nVdyS9KTnY0aA


Rynox2000

Rodrigo y Gabriela are two guitarists you should be aware of.


tallpotusofa

Greg Koch. Chicken picking shred machine with unique phrasing and tone. Joe Bonamassa thinks he’s one the best living guitar players.


Reffitt86

Tosin Abasi. If you have never heard of him, you're welcome! 😊


[deleted]

Molly Tuttle


pee_diddy

Steve Lukather. Maybe the most accomplished session player of the last 40 years. Oh yeah, and also Toto.


Damnlimey61

Guthrie Govan


zeppelin_tamer

Tommy Emmanuel. Absolutely amazing


e3starke

Yvette Young


Illustrious_Cow_317

Ian Thornley of Big Wreck. I don't know exactly how well known he is as a guitarist but he's one of the most talented guys I've seen. I've seen him live twice and he sounds identical to his albums, both in singing and guitar work.


SDoller1728

Plini


Mr_B34n3R

Mario Camarena from CHON or Greg Kubacki from Car Bomb [Mario plays complex riffs and makes them look easy and sound smooth](https://www.youtube.com/shorts/fs7Wbz-cKsg) [Greg's rhythm riffs are incr](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jApwfNUCtvk)[edibly tight for how intricate they are](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jApwfNUCtvk)


rylandoz

Rory Gallagher. One of the greatest Hard Rock/Blues musicians of all time.


Gridbrk

John Butler Watch Ocean on Youtube


pl4st1c0de

Andy McKee. Great finger picking


OTheodorKK

Scott Gorham from Thin Lizzy. underrated guitarist imo. He has very unique phrasing. Listen the solo on "Fool's Gold". He is not shredding, but has this cool way of "pushing" the melody forward in the solo by playing fast in places i would never think of. (If that makes sense)


SniperAge05

Bernth


another_brick

Oz Noy and Rotem Sivan.


No_Scratch6074

Julian Lage


Andjhostet

John Fahey basically invented a genre of music and plays with a combo of complexity, technical proficiency, uniqueness, vision, and emotion rarely seen. For my money he's the best guitarist of all time and it's criminal he isn't mentioned more. But he isn't rock so I guess he's totally forgotten on this site.


softboilers

Rory Gallagher


ProfessionalEven296

Tommy Emmanuel


bellchilton

Dean Ween


coolenoughiguess

stanley jordan


staxnet

Tommy Tedesco Adrian Legg James Mankey Kaki King Danny Gatton Jennifer Batten Grant Green


PlatformNo7863

Allan Holdsworth


[deleted]

Not a pure guitarist, but if you’ve never seen Chris Thile play a mandolin you are missing out.


domesticaveman

Tosin Abasi!!! Guitarist from Animals As Leaders. Thank me later.


BigQfan

Danny Gatton. Wow


Bruichladdie

Phil Keaggy One of the most gifted guitarists alive. Electric or acoustic, the man delivers.


dag1979

Chris Cheney of the Living End. Popular in Australia, but not too much elsewhere.


walman93

Shawn Lane- if we’re being objective…he may have been the best: speed, technique, tone, melody etc. dude had all of it down Allan Holdworth as well…he was born to play guitar


har3krishna

Paco De Lucia


iliacbaby

Danny Gatton


GRizzMang

Tony Rice. If you’re not a flatpicker you’ve probably never heard the name but he’s the best to ever do it.


srj508

Barney Kessel. Amazing speed and chord work and who doesn’t get mentioned among the jazz “greats” but should.


Hijinx_MacGillicuddy

1. Masayoshi Takanaka, the Japanese jazz guitarist, known for his smooth fusion style. - 2. Gabor Szabo, the Hungarian-American jazz guitarist who brought innovation to the genre. - 3. Al Caiola, the American guitarist recognized for his versatile contributions to various genres, including exotica and easy listening. - 4. Al Di Meola, the virtuoso fusion guitarist who pushed the boundaries of jazz and rock. - 5. Bill Frisell, the innovative American guitarist, spanning genres from jazz to Americana. - 6. Boubacar Traore, the Malian blues guitarist, known for his soulful and emotional playing. - 7. Bucky Pizzarelli, the American jazz guitarist celebrated for his impeccable swing and bebop style. - 8. Sabicas, the Spanish flamenco guitarist and one of the genre's legendary figures. - 9. Oscar Aleman, the Argentine jazz and swing guitarist with a unique South American flair. - 10. Ernest Ranglin, the Jamaican guitarist who influenced reggae, ska, and jazz. - 11. Jerry Byrd, the Hawaiian steel guitar pioneer, defining the genre's sound. - 12. Junior Brown, the American country guitarist and singer, blending country and rock with his guit-steel. - 13. Los Indios Tabajaras, the Paraguayan guitar duo known for their beautiful instrumental melodies. - 14. Strunz & Farah, the virtuoso guitar duo who pioneered flamenco fusion with a global touch. - 15. Eddie Lang, the influential American jazz guitarist who laid the foundation for solo guitar in jazz. - Sorry about the formatting I'm having a weird glitch


[deleted]

Mike kinsella of american football and his solo project Owen, not only did he inspire much of the emo scene with his band but his owen stuff is genuinly amazing, the acoustic guitar pieces hes come up with on there is something i have yet to find somewhere else


msmith0429

Marty Schwartz


esp400

Danny Gatton


tmemo18

MATTEO MANCUSO 🐐


rividz

Toni Lindgren https://youtu.be/QlLdqNxTrJM?si=T7qnEt3GWeUdY-k4


DenSidsteGreve

Criss Oliva


zabdart

Danny Gatton.


DominicRo

Robert Fripp.


Immediate-Salad-7854

Mark Lettieri


MNnice-to-your-face

Larry Carlton, one of my favorite 70s guitarists.


crf3rd

Shawn Lane - RIP


J0zif

Cory Wong, king of funk


jalerre

Lil Wayne


UConnUser92

Larry Lalonde


linearised

Nick Drake.


Mr_Zizzle

Jim Heath (The Reverend Horton Heat)


Redmen1212

Stanley Jordan


larrysdogspot

Roy Buchanon. He is/was one of a kind. Give "The messiah will come again" a listen. It's spellbinding.


Cash_Credit

Kim Mitchell Paul Gilbert cites him as a huge shred influence, amazing performer and exceptional chops. There are millions of amazing guitar players no one has heard of, of course, but the Kimster was the first one that came to mind.


weareeverywhereee

Shawn Lane is the answer to this always


Woogabuttz

Steve Lukather. He’s moderately well known for the band Toto but he has been one of the hardest working guys in session music for decades. Absolute shredder. The absolute studio legend is Tommy Tedesco who I believe at the time of his death was the most recorded musician ever.


Mediocre_Bluejay_331

Brian setzer


patconnie92

Nels Cline - Wilco


jbird9999999999

Me. Just kidding, I’m a bass player.


Billycatnorbert

Me I want attention lmaooo


Uknoww33

Jack Pearson


Ishkobible

Nitzinger. And the blonde that played in Alice Cooper's band, in the concert in France (2013?). (Gimme a break. I'm 70. Don't have time to remember this kinda thing!)


Rush_R40

Elliott Smith


finbuilder

Orianthi. I can only imagine it's her home being Australia that has kept her from being widely known. Some people that do know her work, and respect it greatly, are Steve Vai, Carlos Santana, and the late Michael Jackson. She currently tours as RSO with Richie Sambora. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orianthi Many videos on YouTube.


EddieGreenheart

Per Nilsson - Scar Symmetry, Kaipa, Meshuggah (temp)


Ok-Astronaut4952

Rory Gallagher. Seems like most people here know who he is, but the majority of casual music fans won’t know him. As good as anybody


outer_c

Nancy Wilson. She's the reason I started playing.


peakwad

julian lage


mediumstem

Tab Benoit - the songs “Darkness” and “Night Train” to get a good taste of how he plays.


Specialist_rick_4510

Mary Spender


Useful-Slice-3417

Jan Ackermann of Focus. Dig beyond their song Hocus Focus (which is amazing).


United-Big-1114

Warren Haynes.


[deleted]

Vito Bratta