MrKnickerbocker
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Rust In Peace has better riffs than Jon Schaffer’s entire discography.
I have never wished to to analyze Mustaine because I dislike Megadeth. But I sure have heard enough to realize that they are different.Foro, how is Schaffer any better as a riff maker than, say, Dave Mustaine?
What is generic about his riffs? Who played like him and did it earlier?
Jon Schaffer, that dude is so intricate and technical and he's got a great, crushing tone with really tight palm mutes. his acoustic songs are also really good, he almost always uses a 12-string guitar on them, and it sounds awesome. check out Iced Earth-
The Coming Curse(very intricate and inventive main riff)
Desert Rain
Melancholy(Holy Martyr)
Watching Over Me(to get an idea on how well he balances crushing tone with quiet acoustic chords)
Dante's Inferno(very technical, very difficult song to play, 16 minutes long with lots of rhythm changes and technical riffs)
and of course Demons and Wizards- Fiddler on the Green(masterpiece) and Dorian(great riffs in this one).
I seriously do not think that this is true.But come on, there are dozens of metal rhythm guitarists who play like this.
(?)And, further, Schaffer doesn't appear to be a stellar example of it.
Dimebag is great riff writer.As far as riff writing goes, I prefer Iommi, Blackmore, Mustaine, Hetfield... even Dimebag (though he's overrated as well IMHO).
I think it's pretty hard to be a Metal act & expect to write only riff-driven music and not have a whiff of generic about you. It is generic for your whole rhythm section to be based around a guy palm-muting his way around power-chords. And quite a lot of this type of playing is unmemorable. If you were doing this before everyone else you might escape that accusation; but everyone else is on shaky ground in terms of breaking new ground &/or being original playing like this. Yeh, it's still cool sounding; but it's not original & there are lots of guitar players doing the same thing as you.Anyway, I voted against him, because he failed to catch my attention.
This is a big factor for me. My favorite riff writer in Metal is probably Mikael Akerfeldt. His riffs are catchy, sometimes intricate, and abnormally melodic while remaining intensely heavy. That being said, the riffs are only one dimension of his playing. There's also his lyrical lead guitar style, his beautiful acoustic work, and his ability to put all those things in the melting pot and make it stay coherent (although I'm trying to leave general songwriting/arranging skills out of this game as I'm trying to judge the guitarists purely on guitar playing). Schaffer, on the other hand, only has riffs, and not very good ones at that.I actually think riffs sometimes belie a real lack of any other qualities in some bands/guitarists.
What if a guitarist is so good at one skill that it overshadows his all other qualities? I mean, most people say that Jimi Hendrix is one of the best guitarists ever (and I would agree), but he was all about soloing and no riffs or rhythm. Say it were the exact opposite with Schaffer, why isn't he on one level with Hendrix then?
Dunno, I'm voting Hendrix for more or less the same reasons, so I guess you make a good point there.What if a guitarist is so good at one skill that it overshadows his all other qualities? I mean, most people say that Jimi Hendrix is one of the best guitarists ever (and I would agree), but he was all about soloing and no riffs or rhythm. Say it were the exact opposite with Schaffer, why isn't he on one level with Hendrix then?
This reminds me a two things I was thinking about lately in respect to guitar playing. One was something I mentioned in the Satch thread; namely that Satriani's lead tone was fixed quite early (a great tone) but it has barely changed. So when a lead section comes in everything sounds kind of similar. And this is a big obstacle to me really enjoying his discography....they have the same tone, and I just don't find any of it exciting.
I read this & everything I think about Gilbert suddenly became a little clearer. I love his playing, but there's something strangely lifeless about some of it; something instantly gratifying, but not really so rewarding on repeat listening. And this quote sort of explains why. Not nuanced enough, too perfect. Again, a huge obstacle to me really enjoying his discography.For many years, I was inspired to play guitar like a harpsichord… very fast, very accurately, and with nearly every note being the same volume and tone. I wanted to be sort of a “perfect note factory,” with every note being the same.