Slowhand
Hendrix, easily. He populerized distortion, now without distortion your playing some f***ed up blues type sh**.
~Snake
I'm glad someone finally mentioned Robert Johnson. He was reputed as selling his soul to the devil to transform hmself, seemingly overnight, into the incredible talent which he became. Anyone know how he died?
In Greenwood, Mississippi, Johnson messed with the wrong man's woman and was murdered by strychnine placed in his whiskey by the jealous husband.
Here's another name for you...Leo Kottke, the man with four hands. More of a bluegrass picker, but his 12 string abilities are almost inhuman. Well worth a listen...
A word on Hendrix..Definately a unique style, but I don't think he was that great technically. Unquestionably a pioneer deserving of tremendous respect, but just not among the greatest.
Well considering the first "electric" guitars was really nothing more than a microphone placed inside a accustic guitar it goes back aways.
If I recall it was Leo Fender that made the first solid body electric so I would have to assume he would have been the first to play it
http://www.b0b.com/infoedu/tutmarc1.html
Here is a link to where one claims to know the true origin of the electric.
I have several memories of Muddy Waters. The weirdest one is when we first went into Chess Studios in '64, the first time we came here... There's Phil Chess and there's Ron Malo, the engineer, and this guy in white overalls painting the ceiling. As we walked by into the studio, somebody said, Oh, by the way, this is Muddy Waters, and he's painting the ceiling. He wasn't selling records at the time, and this is the way he got treated... I'm dying, right? I get to meet The Man - he's my fucking god, right - and he's painting the ceiling! And I'm gonna work in his studios. Ouch! Oh, this is the record business, right?... And bless him. When we started the Rolling Stones, we were just little kids, right? We felt we had some of the licks down, but our aim was to turn other people on to Muddy Waters.
- Keith Richards, 1992
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When I started out, they called my music nigger music. People wouldn't let that kind of music into the house. The Beatles started, but the Rolling Stones really made my kind of music acceptable. I really respect them for opening doors for black music. The Stones made all that possible. I'll tell ya, the guitar player ain't bad either. - Muddy Waters
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