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Strap on your air guitar and get ready to shred because we’re diving into the electrifying world of the best guitarists ever to grace the stage! From the blistering solos that melt faces to the soulful licks that tug at your heartstrings, these guitar heroes have left an indelible mark on music history. Whether you’re a die-hard rock fan or just love to jam out, this list of legendary pickers and strummers will have you dreaming of your own six-string stardom. StudyFinds consulted 10 expert websites to come up with our list of the best guitarists of all time to ever grace the music industry. Tell us who your favorite guitar player is – and why – in the comments below.
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Table of contents
1. Jimi Hendrix
With a flamboyant style and a sound that blended British rock and roll, American blues, jazz, and funk, Jimi Hendrix created something psychedelic and all his own, making his live performances something special to behold. A master soloist, he might always be the best guitarist of all-time. “Jimi Hendrix was the supernova of creativity that the electric guitar had been waiting for. It’s tempting to say that Hendrix was ahead of his time, and yes, it’s true, he was. There’s a stronger case explaining why he was born just at the right time,” states Guitar World.

Hendrix did what was never done before. “In just four years of mainstream success before his untimely passing, Jimi Hendrix changed the guitar world entirely,” notes LedgerNote. “He was one of the first to bring effects and the whammy bar to the guitar world, like fuzz distortion and wah-wah. … His rock and roll influences were early artists like Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Elvis Presley. He created a lot of “firsts” such as the usage of certain effects, the rejection of the barre chord and fretting with his thumb instead.”
So, where did Hendrix start out? “In his early days, Jimmy James, as he was then known, played in rhythm sections, backing artists like Little Richard, B.B. King and Ike and Tina Turner. It isn’t until 1966, when he moved to London and formed the Experience, that Jimi Hendrix was able to cut loose and start getting the attention he deserved for his magnificent guitar work, writes GuitarPlayer. “Hendrix’s complete artistic vision included elements of blues, funk, rock, psychedelia and utter chaos. His frequent use of effects like the wah and Octavia pedal, pioneering studio effects like ‘backward’ guitar and flanging, and use of controlled feedback and the tremolo bar added another dimension to his music.“
2. Jimmy Page
Often named as one of rock music’s most passionate and revolutionary guitar performers, his own wide-reaching and eclectic tastes heavily influenced his songwriting and playing style. Finding stardom with Led Zeppelin, he experimented with echo effects and revolutionary techniques in the recording studio. “Of course, there’s no way to have this conversation without mentioning Jimmy Page,” writes Louder. “Jimmy wasn’t just a genius in the way he played, he was a genius in how he recorded too. Sometimes he would play a little crazy, a little out-of-the-box, but he was just incredible.”

What made him so unique? “An undeniably dark, yet folkloric sound, Page’s guitar captivates multiple generations of fans,” states History 101. “As the lead guitarist for Led Zeppelin, Page wrote music, and in the recording studio, he was known to be a true workhorse, always fine-tuning his guitar to produce the right sound. He’s best known for his work in songs such as ‘Dazed and Confused,’ ‘Heartbreaker’ and ‘Kashmir.’”
And Rolling Stone writes, “Listening to what Jimmy Page does on guitar can transport you. As a lead player, he always plays the right thing for the right spot – he’s got such remarkable taste. The solo on ‘Heartbreaker’ has such incredible immediacy; he’s teetering on the edge of his technique, and it’s still a showstopper. But you can’t look at just his guitar playing on its own. You have to look at what he did with it in the studio and how he used it in the songs he wrote and produced.”
3. Eric Clapton
This English musician has been changing the way we think about electric blues and rock guitar, and how to seamlessly blend them, since the 1960s. “Bluesy British bloke Eric Clapton has been a household name since his recording debut with the Yardbirds in 1963,” writes GuitarPlayer.

He has influenced a countless number of musicians along the way. “Eric Clapton is one of the greatest blues guitarists of all time,” gushes Music Grotto. “He has been a guitarist in several iconic rock bands, including The Yardbirds, Cream, and Derek and the Dominoes, and has had a prolific solo career as a guitarist and songwriter.“
“Clapton is God: that was the belief during his Cream and Derek And The Dominos days, when Eric Clapton was one of the most expressive players around,” states udiscovermusic.
4. David Gilmour
Pink Floyd’s lead guitarist was a pioneer in the use of echo and other effects to develop signature – and often psychedelic – sounds. “He’s known for his simple but huge riffs and ambient chords, full of blues phrasing, note bends, and plenty of sustain,” states LedgerNote.
Gilmour’s guitar solos are legendary for their moodiness and lyricism. “He was a fiery, blues-based soloist in a band that hardly ever played the blues – his sprawling, elegant, relentlessly melodic solos were as bracing a wake-up call as those alarm clocks on The Dark Side of the Moon,” writes Rolling Stone. “But Gilmour was also adept at droning avant-garde improv … and could be an unexpectedly funky rhythm guitarist.”
And Louder states, “A lot of what Gilmour does is about feel and emotion and atmosphere. It’s about that ability that he has to put something into a song that lifts it and sort of augments the meaning, that adds to it in a way that you can hear it many, many times and still get that emotion. It’s not just about soloing, either, it’s about what and how you play throughout the song. And David Gilmour is one of the masters of that.”
5. Jeff Beck
This British-born guitarist is best known for his time as Eric Clapton’s replacement in The Yardbirds and his genius solo work. “Beck is best known for his songs ‘A Day in the Life,’ ‘I Ain’t Superstitious’ and ‘Heart Full of Soul,’ and is a true solo artist,” writes History 101. “Beck has been innovative his whole career, combining sounds from all over the world, from Indian to jazz.”
Beck is a musician of wide-spanning skill and tastes, bridging genres and generations of music fans alike. Music Grotto writes, “While many from this era found greater commercial success, Beck turned his focus to innovative instrumentals on the guitar. He has bridged countless genres, from hard rock to jazz to electronica, and incorporated world music into his sounds. His virtuosity has earned him countless praise and acclaim over the years.”
And Guitar World writes, “Yet another genius player to emerge from the Yardbirds to carve out a singular career, Jeff Beck was the guitar player’s guitar hero. He was the player who eschewed the pick, used his Strat’s whammy bar as truly an extension of himself, and spent his career chasing down every dynamic he could find from the instrument.”
Sources used to create this list
- Rolling Stone
- udiscovermusic
- LedgerNote
- Guitar World
- Musical Instru
- GuitarPlayer
- Music Grotto
- Louder
- History 101
- Musicholics
Note: This article was not paid for nor sponsored. StudyFinds is not connected to nor partnered with any of the brands mentioned and receives no compensation for its recommendations. This article may contain affiliate links in which we receive a commission if you make a purchase.








Terrible article. First, the headline, “…5 string..”? 2nd someone noted already, this is rated on popularity. Who are the experts?
If this is a list about innovators of rock guitar, then yeah, I can see it. The only one I’d keep from your list is Hendrix. I have never understood the Clapton is God train of thought. Page ripped off countless riffs note for note. There are websites and YouTube videos dedicated to proving it. In the comments are some excellent, more appropriate mentions. Roy Clark was a great one I saw. Not my cup of tea but helluva player. Charo, she trained under Segovia! Andy Summers for original riffs. Go relearn “Message In A Bottle” because you are playing it wrong. Eddie and SRV certainly belong in the top 5. Adrian Belew. Prince?!?!
Never seen a 5 string shredder!
#1 DUANE ALLMAN
Frank Zappa
Dont forget leslie west and i believe billy strings may belong in there as well!!!!
Ok what bridge do you hide under?
Firstly all 5 of your guitarists are not Shredders so why use that as your headline.
A shredder for your information is someone who can play the guitar really really fast.
Your 5 guitarists ate blues based lmao.
Learn how to have proper titles not click bait ya troll Melissa
Of all time is Amis liable. Chet Atkins, Les Paul, Andres Segovia, and Paganini were masters. You should look them up and listen. But you only considered rock guitar.
Add Alex Skoelnik to that list
No mention of Robin Trower, or Ted Nugent, both long established super great guitarists!
Where’s Phil Keaggy who played in the group, “Glass Harp”? They recorded at Electric Lady Studios which is the same studio Hendrix recorded at. It’s said that after Hendrix heard a recording of Glass Harp, he said of Keaggy, “that’s the finest guitar work I’ve ever heard.
Experts? And Eddie Van Halen is not on this list? He changed the way guitar was played. VHs debut album brought back rock n roll. I knew Les Paul who told me on a few occasions that Ed was the best
He not only played he created guitars. He has patents.
I call straight up Bullshit
The best guitarist as you know. You haven’t heard about Radomir Mihajlović Točak. Ask Eric Clapton about him, and what he’s thinking.
Al DiMeola can play rings around all 5 of them! Eddie Van Halen too! And don’t forget Steve Howe of Yes! And John McLaughlin, Yngwie Malmsteen, Robert Fripp, Steve Hackett, (who invented tapping,) Ritchie Blackmore, Chet Atkins, Les Paul, Roy Clark, Glen Campbell, Tommy Tedesco, Andres Segovia, Julian Bream…the list goes on and on. Don’t get me wrong, Your top 5 do indeed, belong in perhaps, a top 100 list, and fairly near the top, at that!
When you call your list, ‘The Best Guitarists of all Time’, and then name only ROCK guitarists, it makes you look like an uninformed fool. Try researching this further, before you publish again!
Can’t understand why Rory Gallagher is not on dis list and Gary Moore
Roy Clark puts all these dudes to shame!
Roy Clark and Glenn Campbell! …
This is definately not it. What about EVH? Vitto Bratta? George Lunch? Steve Vai? Joe Satriani? Nuno Bettencourt? Malmsteen? Those other guys were good, but they weren’t killers like these guys. That has to be the most generic list I’ve read in a while. Tell me you don’t play guitar without telling me you dont. Jimmy was a great guitarist, but best? Far from it. That conversation got thrown out when EVH showed up. Anyone with some skill could play Jimmy, playing like EVH is a whole nother story. RIP Eddie
100 % Agree!! EVH trounced all of these.
Not sure how Stevie Ray Vaughn didn’t make the list. Eric Clapton said this about SRV, “His playing was so majestic that he had to leave early out of jealousy. “One of the purest channels I’ve ever seen,”” Where everything he sang and played flowed straight down from heaven.”
Umm , Prince is right up there top 3
Guitar world wouldn’t exist if it we’re not for all the interesti EVH stirred up.see how many times he was on cover or story
Such an impossible list to put together. So subjective and impossible to not leave someone or in fact many great guitarists who inspired each other…