Randy's favorite guitarists....
Moderators: Randy Perry, The Flying Dutchman, Stiltzkin, skezza, Trigger
- ShaolinGuitarMaster
- Junior Member
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Fri May 20, 2011 10:00 pm
Randy's favorite guitarists....
I have been a huge Randy fan since Blizzard came out and I will mention 2 of Randy's favorite guitarists to start this thread off. The first being Leslie West of Mountain and the second being Michael Schenker of UFO. If you listen to Michael's guitar solo on the live UFO album/CD "Strangers in the Night" (recorded live in 1978 in Chicago) you can hear that Randy may have "borrowed" some of Schenker's licks. Listen to that whole CD and especially his main guitar solo and you can hear it. I am thinking that Randy owned and really liked this recording. Huge influence or just coincidence?
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
Mick Ronson, Jimmy page and EVH. He borrowed looks from Mick, Licks from Jimny and the tapping from Ed. It's more complicated but there is 3...
Happy Rapture!
Happy Rapture!
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
I remember reading an interview with Kelli G and he stated that while Randy liked Page's acoustic work, he thought he was overall pretty sloppy.
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
now there's an oxymoron if ever there was onehansolo wrote:Happy Rapture!



Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
Yeh caint argue that jimmy page lead work was very sloppy at timesNicDots wrote:I remember reading an interview with Kelli G and he stated that while Randy liked Page's acoustic work, he thought he was overall pretty sloppy.
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
Alcohol and drugs tend to help.
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
Leslie West was one of Randy's favorite players and I can understand why. Go to Wolfgang's vault and download the two Mountain Fillmore East shows from 1970 and 1971 and listen to him play. His tone, harmonics, sustain and playing style are awesome! 

Last edited by funk49 on Sat May 21, 2011 10:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
FUNK49
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
How many of Randy's student do you think wanted to learn Page licks? He wrote some of the most memorable riffs and has a large body of work. The breaks in the 2nd half of the Over the mountain solo are very reminiscent of the Whole lotta love breaks. Years after Randy died I became a Zep fan. I really appreciate Page now. Live/on boots his sound is really clean - not really that distorted. He was really inconsistent (I am too). One night he would be on and the next sloppy. Drugs did not help especially in 1977. The 69-75 years are their best years with '73 at their peak. Zeppelin did a far amount on improvisation which makes it interesting to listen to. Almost Like NEW versions! A few SB's are out there too!
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
And the happy rapture is for our friends who find peace in dying and they all get beamed up! I guess they didn't take me. And if Randy worked hard at his playing (studying, playing 8hrs a day or more) was his talent really god-given? Or is that just a fast and loose term and I should be on another site to ask that?
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
I'd say Brian May.
Going back to the japanese documentary,
Kelle says that the first record they owned was the
first Queen record !
Going back to the japanese documentary,
Kelle says that the first record they owned was the
first Queen record !
-
- Cool Member
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Sun Apr 24, 2011 4:32 pm
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
I don't know about Schenker, I would have to give a closer listen. I tried to listen to his music back in the day. It never grew on me, though I do consider him a top notch player. I think May is a definite influence. One QR song in particular sounds like Queen to me. Can't recall the name of it at the moment.
Also while on this topic I tend to think there was a definite difference in European and American Metal players. Is it just me or can anybody else hear a difference/vibe?
Funny when I first heard BOO I didn't think he sounded like anyone else. Most great players don't.
Also while on this topic I tend to think there was a definite difference in European and American Metal players. Is it just me or can anybody else hear a difference/vibe?
Funny when I first heard BOO I didn't think he sounded like anyone else. Most great players don't.
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
I agree with Solo, Page not only was a great player but a great song writer as well ( I think better song writter than player). How could anybody living in the early seventies as a guitar player not be influenced by his work ? I think the 1975 tour was their best though due to the body of material they played and they seemed more energized in concert. The Earl Court shows from 1975 are some of my favorites.hansolo wrote:How many of Randy's student do you think wanted to learn Page licks? He wrote some of the most memorable riffs and has a large body of work. The breaks in the 2nd half of the Over the mountain solo are very reminiscent of the Whole lotta love breaks. Years after Randy died I became a Zep fan. I really appreciate Page now. Live/on boots his sound is really clean - not really that distorted. He was really inconsistent (I am too). One night he would be on and the next sloppy. Drugs did not help especially in 1977. The 69-75 years are their best years with '73 at their peak. Zeppelin did a far amount on improvisation which makes it interesting to listen to. Almost Like NEW versions! A few SB's are out there too!
Funk
FUNK49
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
Is there any word on what Randy thought of Alex Lifeson? When I hear epic tracks like 'Diary' and 'Revelation' I wonder if maybe he at least checked out '2112'.
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
I remember reading somewhere a long time ago that Randy was a huge Glenn Buxton fan. Thats right, the original lead guitarist for Alice Cooper. That always stuck with me through the years and can actually hear some influence on Randy in there. Glenn was much much simpler but very melodic and mixed heavy riffs with wierd but cool sounds
Re: Randy's favorite guitarists....
well jimmy page may have been sloppy at times but fuck the song remains the same recordings are some of the best live guitar work ive ever heard...his acoustic playing was also great but, cant knock jimmy.....he was the master.
"If I knew then what I know now, I'd have made five albums with them" Ozzy Osbourne
It's regret, i think that really is the worst kind of pain, yeah guilt is bad, and sadness is bad, but regret is the sickly combination of both.
It's regret, i think that really is the worst kind of pain, yeah guilt is bad, and sadness is bad, but regret is the sickly combination of both.