Top 10 ES-335 Players Who Changed the World

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @fivewattworld
    @fivewattworld  Рік тому +124

    I believe that Alvin Lee was only meaningful for a brief moment, immortalized at in the Woodstock documentary. I have never heard, nor read of any major player saying they were influenced by his playing.
    As I've said before, this is my opinion, my list, my video, however you'd like to phrase it. Yours would/is different and that's cool.

    • @robertfarrimond3369
      @robertfarrimond3369 Рік тому +29

      Is your opinion based on research or actually listening to his music? Your statement suggests " I have never heard, nor read of any major player saying they were influenced by his playing". Statistics or Taste? Check Joe Bonamassa Playing Alvin Lee's Guitar "Big Red" in Royal Albert Hall

    • @cvdevol
      @cvdevol Рік тому +23

      His playing at Woodstock made me want to play fast like him. No doubt it had the same effect on many others.

    • @nyobunknown6983
      @nyobunknown6983 Рік тому +7

      @@cvdevol As he said his influence was brief.

    • @cvdevol
      @cvdevol Рік тому +22

      @@nyobunknown6983 But a LOT of people here are questioning why he wasn't included. Looks like "influence" to me. 54 years after Woodstock.

    • @westmorelandgreasy348
      @westmorelandgreasy348 Рік тому +26

      Could have been included for Cricklewood Green alone... that album was huge to us in California in the 70's.

  • @parkerflyrook5940
    @parkerflyrook5940 Рік тому +116

    Justin Hayward fronted The Moody Blues for 55 years playing a ‘63 335 yet he never gets recognition on these kind of lists. He’s the sole reason I started playing. His tone and solos are amazing.

    • @Petermusic1965
      @Petermusic1965 Рік тому +5

      Yep same here!

    • @scottmulrooney3130
      @scottmulrooney3130 Рік тому +4

      Here too! One of my favorites and criminally underrated as a singer/guitarist/songwriter.

    • @force263
      @force263 Рік тому +4

      That’s the reason these lists are all bullshit. Some guy thought that he had come up with some idea that everyone needed to hear; but he is wrong, every single time. It’s essentially’”Where’s Waldo!”…
      Who got left off “the list”?…and if it was MY guy, you’d better look out, because MY choice is smarter and, therefore, better than anyone else’s. It’s the desperate quest for parental approval extended into “adulthood”; “Look-a-me, daddeh!”, I ‘member’d tuh say ‘Ten Years After’! Aintcha PROWD?!?”…
      “MY list of greatest rock n roll guitarists is UNIQUE…”
      “How so? You have Hendrix at number one, like everybody else.”
      “Yeah, but my choices for #69 and 84 - not to mention 91 - don’t appear on anybody else’s list…and im fairly certain that that makes me brilliant…I mean, it’s not as if my mom wasn’t clued into my uniqueness from Jump…”
      bravo 😑
      It’s the yearly yammering on over who “belongs” in the RRHOF in miniature. It doesn’t matter. At all. None of it. Not the actual inductees, not Jann Wenner, not those plates they have in New York City that for some reason cost thousands of dollars to “honor” a form of music whose very simplicity & the ability of amateurs to play it as well - BETTER, actually, much much better - as millionaires, since its attitude & 3-chords that count for more than having money could ever make up for.
      Wait, what was the subject again?…

    • @markkelley453
      @markkelley453 Рік тому +3

      I love rock because of the electric guitar. And that is why I love The Moody Blues. Subtle, understated playing that is always in service to their overall sound (but still jams)...and thus is vastly underrated. Genius!

    • @zesvo
      @zesvo Рік тому +4

      With a Bigsby Wammy.

  • @thehighlandhamster
    @thehighlandhamster Рік тому +60

    No Alvin Lee! Major omission. A great player who played an iconic 335 with the peace sticker.

  • @gregnewman2512
    @gregnewman2512 Рік тому +29

    Got to see Alvin open for Sabbath around 1982. Awesome!!

  • @jeffmaloney8701
    @jeffmaloney8701 Рік тому +68

    Alvin Lee belongs on this list.

  • @guzzialfa
    @guzzialfa Рік тому +77

    Alvin Lee, "I'd Love to Change the World. " Enough said, thank you.

    • @roxammon5858
      @roxammon5858 Рік тому +6

      I'm Goin Home, at Woodstock. Guitar playing and tone are amazing.. Bluest Blue is another great song

  • @bstrat596
    @bstrat596 Рік тому +18

    Alvin Lee, man when I was 15 I first saw the woodstock film....... One of my many favorites since.

  • @JonFrumTheFirst
    @JonFrumTheFirst Рік тому +189

    Another vote for Alvin Lee. His Woodstock performance was iconic. His career as a popular, name guitarist wasn't as prominent as some players, but he burned up Woodstock, and Harvard Stadium in Boston when I saw him up close.

    • @kevinjohnbetts
      @kevinjohnbetts Рік тому +13

      I was going to mention him because he was the reason I wanted a cherry dot 335. I vividly remember hearing the Ten Year's After cover of 'Woodchopper's Ball' on BBC World Service some time in 1980 and have never been so blown away by a guitarist's technical abilities since. That may be down to my own growth as a player but even now I find that track, and the whole 'Undead' album, inspiring to listen to.

    • @justinmedina1612
      @justinmedina1612 Рік тому +13

      Alvin Lee is a must on this list. At least top 3.

    • @johnmac8084
      @johnmac8084 Рік тому +10

      Alvin Lee was the shredder of his day, and was the reason I wanted a cherry 335, after hearing him in 1970.

    • @oceanix1929
      @oceanix1929 Рік тому +8

      After Chuck Berry, Alvin Lee's 335 is the most iconic one and also the fastest one! Going Home performance from Woodstock is among the most defining guitar moments in history

    • @beornthebear.8220
      @beornthebear.8220 Рік тому +5

      To me, Alvin Lee was the original shredder. I still listen to Rock & Roll Music to the World to this day. Two things I learned are that he was given several 335s, but would always uncover the pickups, flip them upside down (which would drive Gibson crazy because it would make more noise) but to him it had a sharper sound, also he sometimes cut a hole in the middle to insert a Fender pickup. The second thing was that he said he had tried Strats, which he liked, but he kept hitting the pickup switch by mistake. Thus, history was made by a mistake.

  • @edwardsmith9801
    @edwardsmith9801 Рік тому +43

    Yeah Alvin Lee is pretty high on my personal list , definitely shouldn't be forgotten.

  • @marcbolan1818
    @marcbolan1818 Рік тому +111

    Alvin Lee drew more attention to the classic ES-335TDC than almost any other player. Shout out to the great Eddie Phillips of The Creation with his ES-335TDC that ended up in the hands of Dave Gregory of XTC (another superb player).

    • @AnthonyMonaghan
      @AnthonyMonaghan Рік тому +6

      Thank you for saying what I was thinking about Alvin Lee.

    • @bobbyb1607
      @bobbyb1607 Рік тому +5

      Totally. A big Ten Years After fan. That big red Gibson with a Fender pick up and a peace sign is unmistakably iconic

  • @jerryprice6414
    @jerryprice6414 Рік тому +32

    Wow, no mention of Alvin Lee?

  • @Jensen_Holger
    @Jensen_Holger Рік тому +50

    IMHO Alvin Lee is definitely missing on this list. RIP Alvin

  • @xxGriff
    @xxGriff Рік тому +51

    I think Alvin Lee shoulda been somewhere in the list. I'm going home ... iconic and was one of the "I GOTTA try this guitar thing!" moments for me and I assume many more.

  • @timpotter3337
    @timpotter3337 Рік тому +80

    I'm just gonna add a vote for Alvin Lee. Can't say where he belongs on the list but he definitely deserves to be on it

  • @hombre-del-campillo1291
    @hombre-del-campillo1291 Рік тому +42

    Agree with others below, Alvin should have been somewhere at top of the list. If I were to buy one, it would because of him. Of course BB and Jorma Kaukonen too, but Alvin Lee for sure. Most ferocious and psychodelic 335 sound of all time.

  • @vansongs
    @vansongs Рік тому +62

    Big Red and Alvin Lee were my teen image and sound of rock. The only tshirt I own or ever owned with a human picture on it is of Alvin rocking out on, to me the most iconic 335 ever

  • @kevinpotter2288
    @kevinpotter2288 Рік тому +19

    One of my favorite ES-345 players is Jorma Kaukonen of The Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna.

  • @MusicMike939
    @MusicMike939 Рік тому +93

    I really feel like Keith missed the boat for the first time. Alvin Lee is the greatest 335 player. His performance on woodstock is no doubt the most seen actual guitar performance on a 335.

    • @joshuafreedman7703
      @joshuafreedman7703 Рік тому +5

      Alvin Lee could be on this list, yes, but, no, not above Larry, B.B., or Chuck.

    • @kenhawkins1033
      @kenhawkins1033 Рік тому +6

      Alvin should definitely be on the list.

  • @flybynight1929
    @flybynight1929 Рік тому +151

    Sorry, you missed one of the most iconic 335 player, and one of the best ever, Alvin Lee! He blew everyone at Woodstock away, and he finally retired the guitar when someone offered him $500,000 for it.
    Now as I'm reading through the comments, it's good to see he's getting the love and respect he deserves. FWW could do a segment just on his 335, he was also famous for modding it before anyone even knew what a mod was.

    • @frankscuderi7605
      @frankscuderi7605 Рік тому +6

      I am sure glad you brought up Alvin Lee .For 52 years I wanted to get a Alvin Lee guitar 335 that is what I did . And the only thing that made me get one was I changed my outlook that I needed to have one. And yes it was from when I seen him play the 335 at Woodstock.

    • @brucecall1595
      @brucecall1595 Рік тому +8

      I became a fan of alvin at the age of 14. Just turned 60!

    • @bigwhitedog1991
      @bigwhitedog1991 Рік тому +9

      Absolutely Alvin Lee!!!!

  • @meesh4190
    @meesh4190 Рік тому +49

    Got to agree with everyone who chimed in about Alvin Lee missing from this “Top 10” list. For me, it was Justin Hayward of the Moody Blues who stamped me with the ES as my dream guitar.

  • @Stratocus
    @Stratocus Рік тому +29

    Excellent, except...Alvin Lee? His "I'm Going Home" at Woodstock was and remains a highlight of the festival and an iconic moment of his use of a Gibson ES335

  • @ericdeetz4185
    @ericdeetz4185 Рік тому +68

    Alvin lee was the most prominent 335 user of the rock era.

  • @davidkereluk1805
    @davidkereluk1805 Рік тому +23

    Alvin Lee said Big Red was worth too much money to a take on tour, and is probably the most famous 335.

  • @carlosxavier6466
    @carlosxavier6466 Рік тому +63

    I was expecting Alvin Lee to on the #1 position on your list. He was a great guitar player and back in the day his 335 was a remarkable guitar with 3 pickups and all that stickers.

    • @samfleming3839
      @samfleming3839 Рік тому +4

      Alvin, himself, added a strat p/u to go along with the 2 uncovered humbuckers. It's not surprising to see how many times he's mentioned in the responses here.

  • @ScottGregory-n5e
    @ScottGregory-n5e Рік тому +67

    Very surprised there’s no mention of Alvin Lee. I’m Going Home was a real workout to learn and I’m still using those licks today. That said, another great list!

  • @spokes28
    @spokes28 Рік тому +34

    I think Alvin Lee had more influence than some of the younger players that you mention. They may have actually been influenced by Lee.

  • @davidmacleod9313
    @davidmacleod9313 Рік тому +23

    Alvin Lee at Woodstock!!! That was the ear opener for me! Blows ALL these other players away, imo. 😊 I have never owned a 335. Not cheap these days. Lol

    • @heimomoilanen9654
      @heimomoilanen9654 Рік тому

      Santana blew all away.

    • @davidmacleod9313
      @davidmacleod9313 Рік тому +2

      @@heimomoilanen9654 I’ll give him a tie for the Woodstock performance. He should’ve stuck with his SG later in life. IMO.

  • @AdvenuringTime
    @AdvenuringTime Рік тому +26

    Alvin Lee! Going home!!

  • @seektruth1599
    @seektruth1599 Рік тому +12

    Justin Hayward w The Moody Blues, iconic sound and creativity !!!

  • @nickgreg7016
    @nickgreg7016 Рік тому +20

    Great show Kieth as always, I thought Alvin Lee should have been there also....

  • @chrisl5156
    @chrisl5156 Рік тому +27

    I have to agree with others in the comments here. I'm a big fan of almost everyone on the list, but when I hear the 335 being discussed my thoughts go immediately to Alvin Lee and Big Red. He was an amazing player to watch.

  • @dwightrobertson275
    @dwightrobertson275 Рік тому +34

    ALVIN LEE!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @markfahey3921
    @markfahey3921 Рік тому +14

    I'll go with Dave Edmunds. maybe he didn't change the world but his influence on me was incredible. I'd also as Keith Richards. Alvin Lee tore up woodstock with that intro on Goin' Home.

  • @jppagetoo
    @jppagetoo Рік тому +87

    Not that he belongs in the top 10, but Elvin Bishop deserves an Honorable mention. His influence on the west coast players in the 1970's was huge.

    • @SimpleManGuitars1973
      @SimpleManGuitars1973 Рік тому +6

      He aint good lookin' but he sure can play!

    • @glen7228
      @glen7228 Рік тому +2

      So true. I feel bad I didn't even think of him. Especially since "I Fooled Around and Fell in Love" was playing on the radio when my girlfriend and I decided we were in love, and should move in together, while sitting in line at a Taco Bell drive thru. We got married four years later and that was 32 years ago.

    • @hugh-johnfleming289
      @hugh-johnfleming289 Рік тому +2

      Good call. Seen him, them, at least twice opening for whomever way back when. They did a tight 4O minutes and Bishop did rip...

    • @gabrieln3613
      @gabrieln3613 Рік тому

      Nice! 50 year harmonica player here, full-time pro by age 20. Have opened for Elvin Bishop and last weekend I played a gig with Johnny V Vernazza- who is on about 5-6 Elvin B. Albums and whose guitar you hear on "Fooled around and fell in love".

    • @markhammer643
      @markhammer643 Рік тому +4

      Big Red IS one of the most famous and pivotal 355s in guitar history. The battle between Elvin Bishop and Mike Bloomfield in the epic instrumental "East-West", off the eponymous 1966 Paul Butterfield Blues Band album, pretty much set the standard for rock guitar over the subsequent decades.

  • @brianbullis6253
    @brianbullis6253 Рік тому +13

    Nice choices for this video. Alvin Lee's iconic Big Red should have a noteworthy mention.

  • @garypannone7755
    @garypannone7755 Рік тому +34

    OMG.... You forgot Alvin Lee and Big Red. One of the truly best and I only remember him playing a 335.

  • @thestratophile
    @thestratophile Рік тому +35

    No.1 HAS TO BE ALVIN LEE!!!!!!!!!!!! (great work though, love the channel) 😠😎

  • @biocyclomtb2359
    @biocyclomtb2359 Рік тому +23

    Another vote for Alvin Lee here✌️

  • @1959LP4U
    @1959LP4U Рік тому +32

    Not having Alvin Lee in the top five, let alone the top ten, renders this list irrelevant!!! One the the most iconic player/335 guitar combinations possible!!!

  • @frankfrank7921
    @frankfrank7921 Рік тому +14

    I agree with the Alvin Lee upvotes. Also, no love for the ES339? I like it because it's a part of the E series but smaller and more comfortable for me. Personally not small (6'-3', 250+lbs) but I always found 335s and the like too big and unwieldy.

  • @garymelton613
    @garymelton613 Рік тому +34

    Yep, another vote for Alvin Lee!

  • @michaelcrenshaw4387
    @michaelcrenshaw4387 Рік тому +24

    Johnny Rivers was a big influence. We must not forget Alvin Lee.

    • @samfleming3839
      @samfleming3839 Рік тому +1

      I was tempted to mention Johnny Rivers too; another hugely influential original talent who I recall played a 335 or similar.

  • @basicsforbaroqueimprovisation
    @basicsforbaroqueimprovisation Рік тому +24

    Just so that his name will be mentioned here : Bill Nelson ( Be Bop Deluxe and wonderful solo career ) used a stereo wired 345 for much of Be Bop Deluxe's run.
    Wishing you all the best - John

  • @riklionheart23
    @riklionheart23 Рік тому +15

    Another great show, though I must agree that the omission of Alvin Lee from at least an honourable mention a little odd, but its your list, not mine 😉
    I have been forever haunted by the time I tried a ‘64 cherry red ES-335 in a London vintage guitar shop, about 15 years ago. I was trying out a pedal they had for sale, which I found difficult to focus on as the beautiful guitar in my hands had that weird feeling that it was playing itself. I recently bought an Epiphone 335 and even though I replaced the pickups with Lollar Imperials and the harness with one from Monty’s, its still not giving me much mojo - though it must be said I’ve been fully converted to all things Telecaster since getting one three years ago.

  • @RussInCanada
    @RussInCanada Рік тому +54

    Another vote for Alvin Lee. He literally had a song called "I'd love to change the world".

  • @victorbeebe8372
    @victorbeebe8372 Рік тому +15

    Aloha Keith! Alvin Lee @ Woodstock.

  • @RichInternationalAir
    @RichInternationalAir Рік тому +38

    An excellent list of 335 players, but I believe that Steve Howe of YES definitely deserves a spot on this list. 🎸

    • @mikeyohe4750
      @mikeyohe4750 Рік тому +6

      He’s the stereotypical ES175 player (not 335)

    • @comajoebuck999
      @comajoebuck999 Рік тому +6

      @@mikeyohe4750There’s a video of Siberian Katru with him playing a brown? 335-55 series. But, yes, he’s known for the 175.

    • @careyvinzant
      @careyvinzant Рік тому +4

      ​@@mikeyohe4750There is footage of him using a 335 on Close to the Edge.

    • @RickRomanelli
      @RickRomanelli Рік тому +2

      He also played an ES-Artist.

    • @unknownkingdom
      @unknownkingdom Рік тому +1

      Don't think he played a 335. Or at least isn't known for it

  • @stuartmiller7419
    @stuartmiller7419 Рік тому +31

    Excellent and interesting, as ever. I'll add Ritchie Blackmore playing his 335 on 'Wring that neck' and 'Child in Time'. Worked for me, as a kid. 🙂

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 Рік тому +7

      Thank you Sir.
      You spared me from writing that. 😊👌
      Look at Deep Purples “Concerto for Group and Orchestra” to witness the 335 in full flight.

    • @grahamjeffries4566
      @grahamjeffries4566 Рік тому

      Shake with me

  • @LarreeHollywood
    @LarreeHollywood Рік тому +31

    How do you create a "Top 10 335 Players Who Changed the World" list without Alvin Lee? He should be at the top of the list. He wrote I'd Love to Change the World! My favorite guitarists on your list are Freddy, B.B., and Chuck. Rock on. :)

  • @hughmaxwell8143
    @hughmaxwell8143 Рік тому +34

    Alvin Lee, as usual , is again overlooked.

    • @elmopizza
      @elmopizza 11 місяців тому +4

      Definitely deserves an honorable mention

  • @eastwind32
    @eastwind32 Рік тому +11

    I know it may be my age but we did go back as far as Chuck Berry.
    Alvin Lee deserves to be at very least, on the list

  • @devans873
    @devans873 Рік тому +16

    PLEASE tell me why you missed Alvin Lee, even in your honorable mentions?

  • @victorb656
    @victorb656 Рік тому +27

    Big vote for Bill Nelson here. A major influence on a generation of guitarists shapedin the 70s…like me! And many others, of course.

  • @PeteA54
    @PeteA54 Рік тому +12

    Well thought out list Keith. I must also cast my vote for Alvin Lee. If influential is the criteria, he'd be number one in my book. Anyhow, keep 'em coming!!!

  • @willcraig6421
    @willcraig6421 Рік тому +35

    I’ll second that Alvin Lee comment,and raise you an Elvin Bishop,Mr.Crabshaw himself.

    • @CHodgy
      @CHodgy 11 місяців тому +2

      Elvin Bishop with Red Dog 👍👍

  • @WeirdErnie
    @WeirdErnie Рік тому +13

    Alvin Lee for sure, but with some of the names on this list and no love for Bob Weir? He's one of the most underrated rhythm players and through the early 70s would frequently use an ES-335 or ES-355. He sometimes still does. He's easily performed in front of more people than anyone living and has a very jazz-inspired melodic approach to rhythm and harmony, leading through his rhythm guitar role.

  • @banburyjammer
    @banburyjammer Рік тому +18

    No Alvin Lee???

  • @frankwolfe7641
    @frankwolfe7641 Рік тому +4

    Keith another excellent one. Although, I will have to add my my voice to the where is Alvin chorus. First electric Guitar I ever bought was a red Hagstrom swede. I could not afford an ES 335 back in' 79. The Swede was a solid body but it was from Europe , the same color, red with a black pick guard, and Alvin was one of my three biggest playing influences. Still, as always, just a marvelously crafted entertaining video on the topic. Thank you again from a native son of the 'Cuse on an extended stay in south Florida 🤠

  • @Brad-e9z
    @Brad-e9z Рік тому +37

    No Alvin Lee? Come on. One of the best blues players of all time.

  • @guitarsandcheesecake1632
    @guitarsandcheesecake1632 Рік тому +8

    Alvin Lee, by a country mile........even Ritchie Blackmore!! But this is a video from across the pond!!

  • @anthonyashlin3289
    @anthonyashlin3289 Рік тому +13

    Steve Howe's 345 playing on Close to the Edge and Siberian Katru was world changing for me. Steve plays an assortment of guitars. He is most notably famous for the ES 175, but also plays a 335 and 345.
    If you ever have a chance to see Yes in concert it is well worth the price. Steve is still at the top of.

    • @EastmanD
      @EastmanD Рік тому +1

      God bless you for doing the heavy lifting...Steve Howe left off of ANY list of guitar players (short of best banjo player) is a incomplete examination !

    • @johnpillow481
      @johnpillow481 11 місяців тому

      Ditto. He also used the 345 exclusively on ‘Fragile’ before CTTE and on their awesome cover of ‘America’.

    • @johnpublic6890
      @johnpublic6890 10 місяців тому

      Steve got his 175 used when he was just a kid. He stopped traveling with it for fear that it would be stolen, so he used the 335/345 on tour.

    • @anthonyashlin3289
      @anthonyashlin3289 10 місяців тому

      @@johnpublic6890 I believe he did have one stolen. Since then, when he travels by air he always books a second seat for "Mr. Gibson" He has a couple of 175's and one 345 (stereo) for Close to the Edge and Siberian Katru. When I saw Yes at the Anaheim Grove Steve had a problem with the 345 and switched to a Les Paul mid song.

  • @brianseneca3546
    @brianseneca3546 Рік тому +97

    Alvin Lee not being named over Noel Gallager is kinda of messed up

    • @davidgood6744
      @davidgood6744 Рік тому +12

      Wonderwall
      Don’t Look Back in Anger
      Some Might Say
      Champagne Supernova
      You ought to listen to Oasis’s What’s The Story Morning Glory again or try it if you haven’t.

    • @pookachu64
      @pookachu64 Рік тому +3

      Ok boomer

    • @pookachu64
      @pookachu64 Рік тому +3

      Also no one cares about his hand or music these days.

    • @DHgtr1
      @DHgtr1 Рік тому +1

      so true

    • @85isaboat53
      @85isaboat53 10 місяців тому

      ​@pookachu64 ok zoomer

  • @JohnCampbelljohnBlues
    @JohnCampbelljohnBlues Рік тому +22

    Great show but Alvin Lee over Noel Gallagher all day long. Plus special mention to Dave Edmonds and his gorgeous late ‘50s blond 335!

  • @andycummings-music
    @andycummings-music Рік тому +10

    Honorable mention and some love for Mr. Johnny Rivers. His version of "Memphis" is the one we ALL play.

  • @clwheeler6954
    @clwheeler6954 Рік тому +208

    Definitely Alvin Lee! Not only does he deserve #1 for his playing but also the 335 he played deserves #1 too 😊 come-on now… give it up 😂

    • @fivewattworld
      @fivewattworld  Рік тому +14

      Sorry, but I sort of felt Alvin's moment was just there in the 60's. Probably just me.

    • @clwheeler6954
      @clwheeler6954 Рік тому +6

      @@fivewattworld yeah, but… that guitar man 😎 and, he was so dedicated to that one guitar. Enjoyed the video. Merry Christmas all!

    • @flybynight1929
      @flybynight1929 Рік тому +21

      @@fivewattworld Lee is literally the reason I started playing guitar, and Ten Years After was mostly a 70's band.

    • @chrismcbrias4681
      @chrismcbrias4681 Рік тому

      Woodstock amazing​@@flybynight1929

    • @rottalmusik6563
      @rottalmusik6563 Рік тому +21

      Jep, Alvin Lee should be mentioned😊

  • @byronlemay2166
    @byronlemay2166 Рік тому +13

    Justin Hayward...no one sounded like him with that guitar from 68-71. It sounded like a violin...he was playing like Brian May and Steve Hackett years before they became known. Progressive, melodic and Bach like...he was the first to do it. Listen to the Moody Blues album "To Your Children's, Children's Children" to get an idea of just how majestic his playing was. All on this Gibson 335.

    • @scottmulrooney3130
      @scottmulrooney3130 Рік тому +1

      💯

    • @robertvavra414
      @robertvavra414 Рік тому +1

      Yeah! Hayward kind of re-invented himself. He went from the "Ride My Seesaw" Telecaster sound to his own 335 sound; starting (I think) with "Threshold of a Dream".

    • @byronlemay2166
      @byronlemay2166 Рік тому +1

      @@robertvavra414 Yes. He kept that tone on all the albums thru Seventh Sojourn. Listen to his playing on the Blue Jays album...I'm surprised he isn't given more credit for his guitar playing...as he is very, very good. His songwriting kind of overshadows his playing, I think.

  • @Mister_Samsonite
    @Mister_Samsonite Рік тому +42

    Alvin Lee, anyone? I would have put him on this list before Noel Gallagher.

  • @CraigSiR714
    @CraigSiR714 Рік тому +39

    An honorable mention should be Bill Nelson of Be Bop Deluxe. His 335 and half stack was magical

    • @basicsforbaroqueimprovisation
      @basicsforbaroqueimprovisation Рік тому +3

      Yes Craig ! I said the same regarding Bill. ( and his Carlsbro TC-100 amp ) ! Regards - John

    • @BillKurn
      @BillKurn Рік тому +2

      Totally agree. When I heard Live In The Air Age in 77(?) I was blown away by his playing. However, I think that particular guitar was a 345.

    • @heimomoilanen9654
      @heimomoilanen9654 Рік тому

      ​@@BillKurnYes

    • @Broadfieldpoint
      @Broadfieldpoint Рік тому

      @@BillKurnI believe that Bill Nelson was playing a Yamaha SG 2000 by the time of Live in the Air Age…..one of the best guitar players out of England at the time. Monster player

    • @BillKurn
      @BillKurn Рік тому +1

      @@Broadfieldpoint in the "Live! In the Air Age Dreamsville" thread (google that), Bill lists all the equipment he used on that tour, including pedalboard details. The only guitar on this list is the '64 345. Just sayin. Edit: context

  • @cvdevol
    @cvdevol Рік тому +47

    What??? No Alvin Lee? You gotta be kidding!

  • @kennethday9747
    @kennethday9747 Рік тому +28

    No Alvin Lee 😢

  • @danpearson2471
    @danpearson2471 Рік тому +20

    Alvin Lee Ten Years After Check out Woodstock the movie

  • @atp2051
    @atp2051 Рік тому +7

    Alvin Lee!! For god's sake! Thanks for the video, it's 99 % correct! 😂

  • @PaulSteinmayer
    @PaulSteinmayer Рік тому +4

    As with all of your videos, I love this one! I would have added Ritchie Blackmore as an honorable mention too. Although he's more known for his work with the Stratocaster, Blackmore used a 335 from his early session work days right up to - and including Deep Purple In Rock... and his mind-blowing solos on the studio versions, and every live version of Child In Time, Wring That Neck, and Mandrake Root prior to 1971 were all played on his red Gibson 335! He definitely set the standard for the term "Shredding," and showed just how blazingly fast he was using that guitar!!!

  • @whodom
    @whodom Рік тому +33

    Another vote for Alvin Lee.

  • @guzzialfa
    @guzzialfa Рік тому +10

    I am a bass player first of all but on my 40th birthday, I just had to have a Gibson ES-335 Dot. My 1st concert in 1973 was Ten Years After. There was no one like Alvin Lee. Even though BB King was great, Alvin Lee should have been #1. Chuck Berry should be on a most rock influential list, not an ES-335 list, sorry Keith, you really missed the boat here.

  • @alanhampshire34
    @alanhampshire34 Рік тому +29

    So happy someone else appreciates the talent of Bill Nelson, Yorkshires greatest guitar hero!

    • @draxbak
      @draxbak Рік тому +3

      Some of his playing has brought me to tears, so expressive, I love his playing. He was a huge part of me growing up and appreciating great musicians.

    • @LXferg
      @LXferg Рік тому +4

      Yep a great influence on me. His was a red 345 with bigsby that ended up getting destroyed be his estranged wife :-( .... I don't think any 335 players have come close to the fire and brimstone he created on that thing, listen to "Crying to the sky" ..soulful, fast and melodic.

    • @basicsforbaroqueimprovisation
      @basicsforbaroqueimprovisation Рік тому +1

      Yes !!!

    • @BillKurn
      @BillKurn Рік тому +2

      ​@LXferg I do believe his original 345 is still around. He posted photos of it and said it was in excellent playing condition back in 2020. I believe this is the original tobacco burst 345 given to him by his dad. I do know it went back to Gibson for repairs at one point. Search "Bill's 345 Dreamsville" for the thread. I'm not sure how many he actually owned, so I might be FOS.

  • @AdamLevyGuitarTips
    @AdamLevyGuitarTips Рік тому +14

    Nice one, Keith!
    I'd also include Emily Remler - an impactful jazz guitarist who passed away too young - and the hugely influential gospel/neo-soul guitarist Spanky Alford. Honorable mentions: Little Milton and Elvin Bishop. And though not a world-changer like the folks on your list, people ought to know about the great modern-day bluesman Chris Cain.

  • @kenzuercher7497
    @kenzuercher7497 Рік тому +9

    Although he has wandered away from use of his early 335, Lee Ritenour deserves an honorable mention for much of his solo recordings after leaving his day to day studio work. Lee is a great player and his Captain Fingers era recordings using a '58 335 with an Orange Squeezer (if I am correct) influenced many jazz/rock players, including me! Great well researched video!

  • @kevmac1230
    @kevmac1230 Рік тому +8

    Without a doubt,Bill Nelson is an unsung guitar hero no matter what he's playing.
    But he definitely fits the bill here. The cover of his album Axe Victim says it all !

  • @guismth
    @guismth Рік тому +13

    Wheres Alvin?

  • @richardconway6425
    @richardconway6425 Рік тому +6

    The ES 335 is such a beautiful musical instrument. When I first saw one, I fell in love with it immediately. Not all guitars are created equal, and some don't even seem like proper instruments, but a well made 335, that's something really special.

  • @LifeLivedThruMusic
    @LifeLivedThruMusic Рік тому +4

    Justin Hayward of the Moody Blues still plays his 335 and is a player not always given his just dues.

  • @wlodell
    @wlodell 11 місяців тому +1

    I’m adding Justin Hayward of the Moody Blues to that list. The sound quality and performance on his 335 did indeed change the lives of many around the world for the better.

  • @bobungvary8121
    @bobungvary8121 Рік тому +19

    Great video, but I think Alvin Lee had to be in there, and probably Steve Howe also.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Рік тому +2

      Many many people complained about Alvin Lee not being on the list, but you're the only one I've seen who said anything about Steve Howe, who is definitely deserving.

    • @littlerattyratratrat
      @littlerattyratratrat Рік тому +1

      @@goodun2974 I thought of Steve Howe, too, but his main and most famous axe was an ES-175, very different beast from a 335.

  • @phillipjelks3172
    @phillipjelks3172 Рік тому +20

    For me, B.B. King would be top spot. He was the main reason I started playing when I learned from him, you don't have to be able to shred to play meaningful music. The fact I saw him 5 times in concert might have driven that home. Alvin Lee was also an influence, but B.B. was the tops.

    • @Followerofthekingofkings1969
      @Followerofthekingofkings1969 Рік тому +1

      I agree sir BB could take 3 notes with his vibrato and bending and sound 100 times better than all the shredders running up and down the neck forever.

  • @hamupinhere
    @hamupinhere Рік тому +11

    Clapton also switched back to a red 335 in the 90's for the Nothing But The Blues Tour, so that extended his association with the guitar.

    • @LordStevie
      @LordStevie Рік тому +1

      Clapton also used the 335 exclusively on the album From the Cradle.

  • @sgtmac62
    @sgtmac62 Рік тому +10

    Seeing Rush with Alex playing Working Man in a high school audiotorium on his 335. Now that was something to behold. Video is on UA-cam. He used it again to play the same song in their last show, last tour. RIP Neil.

    • @atomicwedgie8176
      @atomicwedgie8176 11 місяців тому

      Came to see Alex mentioned! Favorite guitarist!!!
      Also, Chris Cornell was offed, due to his stance against child tr^fficking.

    • @aschule5684
      @aschule5684 10 місяців тому

      Alex and his white 355 came to mind first when I saw this

  • @DinsdalePiranha67
    @DinsdalePiranha67 Рік тому +10

    When I started up this video, I was thinking to myself, "This list had better include Alex Lifeson!" He wasn't using his 355 as his main instrument anymore by the time I really got into Rush, but I did get to see Alex play it in concert - when I saw them in '07, he brought it out for the encore when they played "A Passage to Bangkok". (Not only that, but Geddy brought out his Rick for that one.)

  • @jerrymacklow1452
    @jerrymacklow1452 Рік тому +19

    I remember watching a Chuck Berry interview where he said that he bought a new guitar each year, whether he needed to or not, and when he went on tour, it travelled with him as hand-luggage and it was the only piece of equipment he carried. That is what you call travelling light. Surely the epitome of the 5-Watt ethos.

    • @aroe3896
      @aroe3896 Рік тому +2

      He traveled so light he didn’t even have a band, just played with local bands as his back up

    • @jerrymacklow1452
      @jerrymacklow1452 Рік тому +2

      @@aroe3896 Not only did he use local bands, arranged by the promoter, he didn't rehearse with the bands, expecting that they should know his songs anyway. It could lead to variable results.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Рік тому +2

      ​@@jerrymacklow1452, Unfortunately a lot of the old blue guys did that sort of thing as well, just using a local pickup band without any prior rehearsal. I saw Hubert Sumlin play like that and it was extremely disappointing.

    • @jerrymacklow1452
      @jerrymacklow1452 Рік тому +3

      @@goodun2974 I saw Chuck play, in Oxford, a year or too before it became fashionable to see all the legends (gig tourism). It wasn't as good as I had hoped, though pretty good for a legend playing to around 150 people. Contrast with when I saw BB King a few years later. All incredibly polished and professional and the best gig I ever saw.
      Also worth seeing is Paul Jones' interview describing back John Lee Hooker "how many bars in a 12-bar blues? As many as Mr Hooker wants".

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Рік тому +1

      @@jerrymacklow1452 , I saw BB play some years back as the headliner in a show featuring 4 different bands: John Hiatt, Tommy Castro, Buddy Guy and BB. I might not have gone if John Hiatt had not been on the bill, because both my wife and I are big fans of him; but Tommy Castro was also excellent and BB was very good. Buddy Guy was the least good out of the four; l love his voice but he was playing the Cyber Twins and his tone was terrible (the roadies were constantly fiddling with the knobs of Buddy's amps). The best part of BB's performance might actually have been his Hammond Organ player, the guy was phenomenal!

  • @2112jeff
    @2112jeff Рік тому +22

    Alex Lifeson had more influence among guitar players than given credit for. His body of work, his work ethic, and number of shows over 40+ years is legendary. Also, based on recent reporting he might return to the stage in the near future.

    • @lynby6231
      @lynby6231 Рік тому

      Alex Lifeson was inspired by British rock band Yes, if Steve Howe out of Yes was on this list he’d be ahead of most of the other guitarists listed.

    • @RobertVeasquez
      @RobertVeasquez Рік тому

      @@lynby6231Check out Alex’s performance on Crossroads on the album Feedback….you might change your mind…lol

  • @JD-hh9io
    @JD-hh9io Рік тому +11

    Bill Nelson would be a good mention here. Adventures in a Yorkshire landscape from Live in the air age. I think he played a 335ish looking guitar.

  • @armandom28
    @armandom28 Рік тому +15

    Don’t forget Elvin Bishop

  • @berryster
    @berryster Рік тому +6

    Matt "Guitar" Murphy was a great blues player and favored 335/345 guitars for a long time.

  • @donkick2622
    @donkick2622 10 місяців тому +1

    I kept waiting to hear the name: Dave Edmunds with his Black Gibson ES-335. I saw him use this guitar on stage with Rockpile!

  • @macsarcule
    @macsarcule Рік тому +7

    Magic. I was trying to save this for Saturday morning and coffee (and I’ll probably rewatch then too), but I just couldn’t resist! Another amazing video, Mr. Keith. Very anticipated by me, and did not disappoint, how could it!
    Much, much thanks to you for this video and all the outstanding work you do. I hope you get to have a fun holiday break and reflect on all the good you put into the world for so many of us. Take care, be kind to yourself, and a very happy holiday season to you. 😌🎄✨

  • @jwsaxe
    @jwsaxe Рік тому +12

    So Alvin Lee didn't change the world, even though he'd loved to do so?

  • @rosieotis
    @rosieotis Рік тому +10

    Marcus is another King working his way into history. His grandfathers Gibby “Big Red” has been replicated by Gibson too. Cool story. Great player!

  • @hugh-johnfleming289
    @hugh-johnfleming289 Рік тому +6

    Bill Nelson, late of 'Be Bop Deluxe.' Very adept and elegant player...

  • @mtjsmith70
    @mtjsmith70 Рік тому +6

    Justin Hayward of the Moody Blues was a 335 kinda guy too.

  • @wadeyes
    @wadeyes Рік тому +1

    Another well done doc. Your shows remind me of watching MTV "Behind the Music" from the 90s, but more informative. And possibly better - I can only remember the tone and general effect of "Behind the Music". But I always liked those too.