Multiple guitar players

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In rock and other related genres, bands often have multiple electric and/or acoustic guitar players to perform the different musical parts, such as instrumental melodies, "licks", riffs, guitar solos, and chords. The band can divide up the roles by assigning one or more performers the role of lead guitar and assigning another guitarist (or several guitarists) the role of rhythm guitar. Alternatively, two or more guitarists can share the lead and rhythm roles throughout the show, or both guitarists can play the same role ("dual lead guitars" or "dual rhythm guitars").

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[edit] Approaches

There are several ways that multiple guitar players are used. In the standard configuration used in many rock, hard rock, and metal bands, a lead guitar player performs melody lines and guitar solos and one (or sometimes more) rhythm guitar player(s) plays chords or riffs as an accompaniment. The rhythm guitar part outlines the chord progression of a song and provides a rhythmic pulse. The Beatles-style quartet consisting of two electric guitars, an electric bass, and drums has become the standard formation for rock groups. "Since then, bands as varied as the Clash, Television, Thin Lizzy,the Replacements, Kiss, Foo Fighters, Queens of the Stone Age, and modified quartets with singers like the Yardbirds, Aerosmith, the Rolling Stones, and AC/DC have explored and refined the interplay of dual guitars. The musical exchange between instruments has become so seamless that identifying tags such as lead guitar and rhythm guitar almost no longer applies." [1]

[edit] Dual lead guitars

In many heavy metal subgenres and occasionally in other genres, bands may use two lead guitarists. Some bands use the two lead guitars to play two independent melody lines, which creates interweaving counterpoint, while other bands use one lead guitarist to perform instrumental melodies while the second lead guitarist adds lead embellishments and improvised flourishes. In some bands, the two guitarists may play previously composed lead lines or riffs in harmony, usually in diatonic thirds or sixths. This practice has been extended to the point where some guitarists compose solos before performing them (as opposed to improvising), which allows the entire solo to be harmonized in this manner.

In Russell Hall's article 10 Great Dual Lead Guitar Albums, he discusses albums with "spectacular dual lead guitar work", including Derek and the Dominos' Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (1970), which paired Eric Clapton and Duane Allman; Wishbone Ash's Argus (1973)and Thin Lizzy's Jailbreak (1976), which were an early use of "dual-guitar harmonies"; Lynyrd Skynyrd's Second Helping (1974), which had "three guitars parlaying swampy Southern blues"; and the Allman Brothers' At Fillmore East (1971), in which "Duane Allman teamed with Dickey Betts to craft tangled solos that combined blues rapture with the improvisational ethos of jazz." He also praises proto-punk or punk-influenced albums, such as Lou Reed's Rock 'n' Roll Animal (1974), which is "powered by a dual lead guitar tapestry crafted by Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter"; Television's Marquee Moon (1977), which used a "jaggedly brilliant twin-guitar approach" of Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd; and Sonic Youth's Daydream Nation (1988), in which the two guitarists blended "ringing harmonics, molten distortion, and alternate tunings". [2]

In Adrien Begrand's review of the 2006 "Unholy Alliance Tour", a multi-band metal concert, he states that "Lead guitarists Mark Morton and Willie Adler, one of the great dual lead guitar tandems in the business, traded solos and rhythm riffs seamlessly.[3]For more information, see the List of rock and metal bands that cofeature two guitarists.

[edit] Shared lead and rhythm roles

Alternatively, each guitarist may play both lead and rhythm guitar parts at different parts of a song or at different parts of a performance. Many songs also feature two guitarists playing riffs or chord progressions in unison. They will often trade off guitar solos; usually, when one guitarists is performing a solo, the other will maintain a backing rhythm by playing chords. In some songs, both guitarists may solo at the same time.

[edit] Dual rhythm guitars

Another approach is to use two guitarists to play rhythm guitar, which is known as "dual rhythm guitar". Belgian Gypsy jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt (1910 – 1953) performed during the big band era with a band which "consisted of violin, lead guitar, two rhythm guitars, and standup bass", [4]. Reinhardt's use of two acoustic rhythm guitars helped to create a strong rhythmic pulse for the group, which did not have a drummer. Heavy metal pioneers Judas Priest popularized the dual rhythm guitar approach in a metal context. A number of Judas Priest songs use two guitarists playing the same rhythmic riff simultaneously, often on the same octave, which creates a more powerful sound.

[edit] Variant approaches

In rock or metal bands with a single guitarist, the guitar player usually plays rhythm guitar for most of each song, to accompany the vocalist. However, the guitarist may also perform solos during a song. In a small ensemble, such as a power trio (electric guitar, electric bass, and drums) e.g. Muse (band) and Nirvana (band), the loss of the rhythm guitar's accompaniment role during a lead guitar solo can considerably thin out the sound of the band. To resolve this problem for recordings, some bands with a single guitarist use overdubbing on recordings to record a rhythm guitar part behind their guitar solos.

In live performances, bands with a single guitarist can create the effect of having rhythm guitarist playing behind the guitar solos by using digital looping pedals. Looping effect pedals can be used to record a short riff or chordal accompaniment, which the guitarist can then solo over. In some cases, a session musician may play a rhythm guitar part offstage during the lead guitar solo, or a touring guitarist can be hired.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Two-Guitar Attack! Five of Today’s Coolest Players Weigh In". Article on Gibson Lifestyle: Top Stories. http://forums.gibson.com/default.aspx?g=posts&t=3573 (Note: this is an article for the website. While blog posters comment on the article, this text is from the article, not the anonymous blog responses)
  2. ^ 10 Great Dual Lead Guitar Albums
  3. ^ PopMatters | Columns | Adrien Begrand | Blood and Thunder | Postmortem
  4. ^ Longmont Swing Festival II: Gypsy Rendezvous!
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