C O L U M N S

Tales from the Jugular

Why We Want Guitar Solos

By: Frank Hill
Published: Saturday, November 11, 2006
Tales From The Jugular - Why We Want Guitar Solos

I've listened to metal and hard rock for 30 years and as much as I think I know, I am always learning more. Recently, I've learned about what is behind the storm and stress of metal from a slightly older book called "Running With the Devil: Power, Gender, and Madness in Heavy Metal Music" by Robert Walser. I had never before come across, nor had I expected, such an academic look at the style I've loved so much. Most of the book is difficult to read by normal standards (we're talking college professor levels here) and would probably be useless to somebody who isn't interested in an analysis of why music does what it does.

There was a big stink raised when Metallica's "St. Anger" came out without guitar solos by the skillful Kirk Hammett with the remark that they weren't all that necessary. People wanted them, but few could say why. A guitar solo taken by itself can be deconstructed into nothing more than a series of musical notes played at different speeds, but that removes it from its role within the context of a song and the emotion it pulls from us.

The power chord within metal evokes excess but also stability, control and permanence. This static articulation of power, along with steady bass and drum patterns keeping organized, controlling time is conservative and cyclically fateful. The guitar solo, though, gives us moments of freedom within the framework where we rise above everything and 'fly' until it usually resolves itself back it the grounding of the song. There is a dialectic between the instruments where we become liberated by the guitar solo. Almost all classic metal relates to this.

Speaking simpler, you have repeating guitar riffs and repeating rhythms that get you into a mental pattern. That pattern is broken by the guitar solo.

A great example--Iron Maiden's "Flight of Icarus" which sets up a juxtaposition between mid-pace, static guitar lines within the verses and the transcendent lyrics of the choruses (Fly on your way like an eagle \ Fly as high as the sun) until the guitar solo plays and takes you even beyond the choruses and into the flight itself.

Listen to Slash's guitar solos (the more memorable ones), say within 'November Rain' and at the end of 'Paradise City' and tell me at those moments that you don't feel *free*. They are escapist (much like the moans and wails of vocalist, Axl) and they really add to his lasting appeal. If he didn't have that ability and was just a 'cool guy in a top hat' his status would probably be much lesser than what it is today. I also think it's part of the reason Velvet Revolver was panned by many. The songs didn't always let us get what we expect from him--brief moments of freedom.

I am still amazed by the sounds of what's being produced across the world. Instead of metal atrophying over the years, there are bands playing old styles, new styles, and combinations of both. The guitar solo when done right still remains the moment of psychological freedom within the song and I happily rise with a thousand solos.




[Other Maximum Metal Columns]

<< back >>





RANDOM ACTS OF METAL
. Mudvayne. Rebellion
. Twelfth Gate. Cradle of Filth
. Goatwhore. Twisted Tower Dire
. Symphorce. Commit Suicide
. Seven Witches. Celestial Ode
. Queensryche. Rawhead Rexx
. Mortician. Agoraphobic Nosebleed
. Wizard. Vyndykator
. Led Zeppelin. October 31
. H.I.M.. Exawatt
. Biomechanical. Rage
. Dream Weaver. Pink Cream 69
. DevilDriver. Asperity
. Body Count. Volbeat
. Soil. Exodus
. Evanescence. Bang The Union
. Cans. Madison Paige
. Skyfire. U.D.O.
. Lonewolf. Judas Priest
. Cyst. Brutal Mastication
. Joe Stump. Black Destiny
. Dio. Aina
. Tearabyte. Unearth
. Katagory V. Division
. Silent Force. Blind Guardian
. Legion. Motley Crue
. Emerald Sun. The New Breed
. The Mighty Nimbus. Blood Red Throne
. Lost Soul. Requiem Aeternam
. Car Bomb. Chuck Schuldiner
. Samael. Diecast
. Bruce Dickinson. Strapping Young Lad
. Thunderblast. System Of A Down
. Neil Turbin. Gizmachi
. Sinisthra. Mirador
. Python. Darkane
. Goddess Of Desire. Slik Helvetika
. Supagroup. Frameless Scar
. Fates Warning. Widow
. Edenbridge. Redemption
. Before The Dawn. Monster Magnet
. Armored Saint. Violent Storm
. Blood Thirsty Demons. Bolt Thrower
. Savage Circus. Phantom X
. Balatonizer. Urizen
. Chain Collector. Zero Down
. Dogs Of Winter. Gorefest
. Dismember. Beecher
. Vader. Grimfist
. Enforsaken. End My Sorrow
. Southern Black Sand. Katatonia
. Upwards of Endtime. Hell-Born
. Steep. Degree Absolute
. The Ocean. Silver Dirt
. The Smackdown. Imagika
. Athanator. The Strongest Proof
. Non-Human Level. Spawn of Possession
. Before Silence. Smohalla
. Azure. She Said Destroy
. Sahg. Time Requiem
. Agalloch. Vicious Rumors
. Burialmound. Isis
. The Showdown. Starkweather
. Warmachine. Fu Manchu
. Lost Eden. Terry Sullivan
. Dream Theater. Mindgrinder
. Necrophobic. Zyklon
. Dezperadoz. White Wizzard
. Passion. Antigama
. Lipstick Magazine. Malevolent Creation
. Randy Ellefson. Sworn Enemy
. Temple Of Blood. Diamond Dogs
. Dantesco. Averse Sefira
. Gutted With Broken Glass. Father Befouled
. Jesus Martyr. Aetherius Obscuritas
. Trivium. Witchfinder General
. Manilla Road. Kreator
. Uriah Heep. The More I See
. Luna Mortis. Coffins
. Wolfgate. Battleroar
. DC4. Suspyre