Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
UK EditionUK US EditionUS AU EditionAustralia SG EditionSingapore
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Music Gear Reviews
  • Synths
  • Guitars
  • Controllers
  • Drums
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Guitar Amps
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About us
Don't miss these
Queen II
Guitarists “His dependents became incredibly greedy”: Queen are being sued by the relatives of Mick Rock
Mark Morton of Lamb Of God takes a solo onstage with his prototype signature Les Paul
Artists Mark Morton on the chemistry behind Lamb Of God's twin-guitar groove and what he owes ZZ Top
Zakk Wylde cups his hand to his ear as he asks the crowd for more during a 2026 Black Label Society performance.
Artists “Look at AC/DC. Whatever was popular, it didn’t matter. It’s like McDonald’s. ‘We make the Big Mac and we make fries and we don’t care about doing sushi’”: Zakk Wylde on musical identity, jailhouse rocking with Ozzy and the return of Black Label Society
holy holy
Artists “David didn’t seem happy about it”: Tony Visconti reveals Bowie's reaction to Holy Holy
Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee work that '80s style as they perform live with Rush in 1984.
Artists Geddy Lee on the making of Rush’s 1984 classic Grace Under Pressure
Midge Ure
Artists “We're all fragile little creatures. You sit down, lick your wounds and think - is there any point in going through this whole process again?”: We speak to Midge Ure
Brian May [left] leans back and feels a chord as he performs live with his Red Special. Steve Vai [right] wears a ballcap and looks pleased as punch as he shows off his custom 'Green' Red Special that May had built for him.
Artists Steve Vai once played Brian May’s guitar “like a baby giraffe on roller skates” – now the Queen icon has gifted him his own ‘Green’ Red Special
A PRS McCarty 594 on a hard case
Electric Guitars Best electric guitars 2026: Our pick of guitars to suit all budgets
Rusty Anderson and Paul McCartney
Artists “Maybe I’m Amazed is always a fun song to play and sing”: How a Beatles fan ended up playing guitar for Paul McCartney
Bowie and Queen
Artists The tense night David Bowie and Queen spontaneously came up with a classic
Chic in 1992
Artists The influential Chic classic that spawned one of the most recognisable basslines of all time.
Close up of a Taylor GS Mini acoustic guitar lying on a wooden floor
Acoustic Guitars Best acoustic guitars 2026: Super steel string acoustics for all players and budgets
Queen
Bands “The single biggest leap we ever made”: Queen II to be given big reissue treatment
The Rolling Stones
Artists “Brian Jones was the first steel slide player I heard”: Keith Richards pays tribute to Stones guitarists past and present
Woman in orange hat plays classical guitar in front of a laptop
Guitar Lessons & Tutorials What are the best online guitar lessons in 2026? I’m a professional guitar gear reviewer and these are my highest-rated lessons platforms
More
  • Sly and Survivor
  • In My Life
  • 95k+ free music samples
  • One chord Diamond
  1. Tutorials
  2. Guitar Lessons & Tutorials

Brian May's top 5 tips for guitarists

News
By Rich Chamberlain published 10 April 2017

Plus, Queen guitar icon reveals all about new album, Golden Days

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

"Riffs: who knows where they come from?”

"Riffs: who knows where they come from?”

He may be more than 50 years into a sparkling career, but Brian May admits that his knack for penning iconic guitar lines remains a mystery even to himself.

Somewhat reassuringly for those of us still grappling with the art of writing earworm riffs, May suggests that there is no secret formula that he is hoarding when it comes to creating the kind of magic that he has made a living from since Queen’s inception.

The latest grade-A hook hot off the Brian May production line is found in Roll With You, the lead single from May’s new album Golden Days. The record is the immensely affable guitarist’s latest collaboration with West End star-turned-pop-rock-vocal-powerhouse Kerry Ellis. 

“I don’t know where [the Roll With You riff] came from,” he says. “I don’t know where my riffs come from. I was looking for something that I could play interactively with Kerry. 

“I thought it would be great to have a riff that was insistent and was challenging Kerry all the way through. That riff just popped into my head. I was consciously searching for something like that, I think, but where these things come from I don’t really know. You hear it in your head first and you try to play it. Riffs: who knows where they come from?”

You won’t just find new material on Golden Days; there’s also a smattering of covers, including a reworking of Gary Moore’s Parisienne Walkways.

“I was asked to do a tribute to Gary Moore, and Parisienne Walkways hadn’t been chosen by anybody else - I thought that would be a great track for me because it is very lyrical,” May explains. 

“I was always a great admirer of Gary. What we did was more or less recreate the track in a way that was not too dissimilar to the way it had been recorded before, but I also wanted to design it in a way that would suit Kerry and made sure it was in the right key for Kerry. 

I thought it would be great to have a riff that was insistent and was challenging Kerry all the way through. That riff just popped into my head

“It was a bit of a step into the dark because I don’t think anyone had ever considered it to be a woman vocalist’s song before, but as soon as you hear Kerry come in on that vocal it sounds so natural but also so different. That was great. A lot of things fall into our laps and that was one of them.”

It may have landed in the laps, but it quickly became a track that defined the very make-up of Golden Days. 

“It’s nice also, because [Parisienne Walkways] was the pivotal place where we decided that this album had to be myself and Kerry together rather than just Kerry’s album, as the guitar is the principle voice on that track. That song really works well for us in terms of it being a partnership.”

Don't Miss

In pictures: Brian May's Red Special up close

May and Ellis may have been re-interpreting some classic tracks on Golden Days, but when it came to gear, the 69-year-old wasn’t reinventing the wheel.

“With gear, I am the same as I always was,” he says. “I haven’t changed that much in 40 years, really. I had an AC30 and a treble booster and my own guitar that I made with my dad. That is my sound most of the time. 

“I don’t really like to use many effects. I use delay for certain things, but mostly on this album I don’t think there is any trickery at all. I just like to go in and play.”

That unmistakable Brian May approach to tracking guitar also remains reassuringly intact throughout the record. 

“I like to regard my guitar as a voice really that stands beside Kerry and that has always been my way,” he explains.

“If you listen to We Are The Champions, the guitar is the second voice on that, and I remember Freddie very distinctly with his hand pushing up the fader on my guitar for the last chorus. Even I was thinking if it was a little too much, but he said it was the voice that was fighting with his, and it was essential that it was there. That’s how I view guitar.

“Guitar can do lots of stuff: it can make the nice background, it can make a nice rhythm bed for things to lie on. But, the guitar of the last 50 years or so, post-Hendrix, is a voice which demands to be heard in the same way that a human voice demands to be heard.”

Some sage words from a genuine icon right there. And he didn’t stop at that; Brian has a wealth of sage advice to share, as he reveals his top five tips for guitarists. Read on and learn…

Golden Days is out now.

Page 1 of 6
Page 1 of 6
1. Find a musical partner

1. Find a musical partner

“I think part of staying fresh [in your guitar playing] is about surrounding yourself with people that you are inspired by. 

“You could easily go away into a corner and get lost. It is good to be in the world. I was very fortunate to find Kerry. If nothing else, working with Kerry is a fantastic vehicle for a song. You couldn’t wish for better. She is someone that can bring her own interpretations to stuff and she is interactive. That has been great for me.

I’m not sure if I would be still writing had I not met and worked with Kerry...

“I’m not sure if I would be still writing had I not met and worked with Kerry and been challenged to come up with arrangements and material. 

"It is very hard not having Freddie around, still. That is because Freddie was an amazing person to interact with. He would always be coming up with ideas and always challenging and flying off in all kinds of different directions. It was very lateral thinking. Of course, he was the greatest possible vehicle for a song, if you want to call it that. I have been very lucky.” 

Page 2 of 6
Page 2 of 6
2. Turn recording into a live performance

2. Turn recording into a live performance

“My guiding light in the studio as far as performance is that you have to get yourself somehow in the state of mind where you feel like it is a live performance. 

“If you are thinking about, ‘I have to come in here, I have to stop here, I have to be in tune, I have to be in time,’ then you are never going to get that feeling. 

“You have to somehow throw your brain somewhere else where you are just there are you’re performing. You might be in the middle of an arena or anywhere but you have to throw yourself into that place where you’re just performing. 

“That is the purity of recording: you’re letting whatever is inside you speak and you’re speaking out to the people out there. That is the trick of making a studio recording come to life: you have to have that imagination.”

Page 3 of 6
Page 3 of 6
3. Sing your solos

3. Sing your solos

“My advice for anyone writing a solo would be to sing it in your head. You should be able to hear it in your head before you start to play. 

“Don’t just pick up the guitar. Think about it and feel it first. You should visualise how you would like it to sound. That also gives you something to work towards.”

Page 4 of 6
Page 4 of 6
4. Always think of the vocals

4. Always think of the vocals

“As a guitarist, you can go so far, but I have never thought that the guitar is the most important thing on most records. 

“It is the singer and the song that is important. The guitar helps, of course. I am generally much more excited about the rest of the song than I am about the guitar part. The guitar usually gets put on at the last minute and it gets done in 10 minutes quite spontaneously.

I am generally much more excited about the rest of the song than I am about the guitar part

“The challenging part is the arrangement and making sure the vocal sits in the song properly and making sure that the vocal is highlighted.  

“Also, if you are a producer you need to make sure that your singer is feeling comfortable and that they can forget about the constraints of a studio. Putting a track together in the studio is a fantastic jigsaw puzzle that you have to put together.”

Page 5 of 6
Page 5 of 6
5. Believe in yourself… and each other

5. Believe in yourself… and each other

“The thing you have to have is belief. You have to believe in yourself. That needs examining every now and then. 

Don't Miss

In pictures: Brian May's Red Special up close

“Basically, you need to work with people that you like and people who believe in you, and you need to believe in them. That is the key. You can’t work in a vacuum.

“You certainly can’t go on tour with people that you don’t believe in and that you don’t like. Well, you can, but it will be a disaster. 

“I’ve been so lucky that I have had some great people to tour with and work with in the studio.”

Page 6 of 6
Page 6 of 6
Rich Chamberlain
Rich Chamberlain

Rich is a teacher, one time Rhythm staff writer and experienced freelance journalist who has interviewed countless revered musicians, engineers, producers and stars for the our world-leading music making portfolio, including such titles as Rhythm, Total Guitar, Guitarist, Guitar World, and MusicRadar. His victims include such luminaries as Ice T, Mark Guilani and Jamie Oliver (the drumming one).

Read more
Brian May [left] leans back and feels a chord as he performs live with his Red Special. Steve Vai [right] wears a ballcap and looks pleased as punch as he shows off his custom 'Green' Red Special that May had built for him.
Artists Steve Vai once played Brian May’s guitar “like a baby giraffe on roller skates” – now the Queen icon has gifted him his own ‘Green’ Red Special
 
 
Paul Gilbert wears a tricorn and period dress as he poses in shred mode with his signature Ibanez guitar
Artists “I’ve got to compete with Bach and Beethoven and Mozart and The Beatles!”: Inside the mind of guitar hero Paul Gilbert
 
 
The Rolling Stones
Artists “Brian Jones was the first steel slide player I heard”: Keith Richards pays tribute to Stones guitarists past and present
 
 
Mark Tremonti throws the horns and points to something during a live performance with Creed. His signature PRS singlecut is strapped on his shoulder.
Artists “I had no idea that he was that good”: Mark Tremonti on Alter Bridge’s “secret weapon” and his soloing strategies
 
 
Pink Floyd
Artists “In terms of the guitar solo, he just keeps going!”: The genius of David Gilmour – by Matt Bellamy, Kirk Hammett and more
 
 
Cory Wong
Artists “My advice is play the song. Can you find a part that is tailored to the music”: Cory Wong’s tips for better rhythm guitar
 
 
Latest in Guitar Lessons & Tutorials
Tom Morello
Artists How Tom Morello used his guitar to drill into the off-limits domain of the turntablist
 
 
Close up of a person playing guitar
Guitar Lessons & Tutorials With a massive 89% discount, $99 for a year's worth of Guitar Tricks online lessons is the best way to upgrade your guitar playing this Black Friday
 
 
Close up of a person holding an acoustic guitar bathed sunlight
Guitar Lessons & Tutorials Ignite your inner guitar god for just 27 cents a day with TrueFire’s July 4th sale - save 60% on online lessons
 
 
MusicNomad fret tuition
Guitar Lessons & Tutorials Can you fix your guitar's frets yourself? We try three innovative approaches from MusicNomad to investigate how they might conquer a major cause of fret buzz
 
 
George Harrison
Guitar Lessons & Tutorials How to play like George Harrison on The Beatles' Abbey Road
 
 
MusicNomad guitar fret cleaning
Guitars "You owe your guitar the chance to be its best": How to clean and polish your guitar frets a better way
 
 
Latest in News
christopher cross
Samples SampleRadar: 142 free yacht rock samples
 
 
John Oates and Michael Jackson
Artists John Oates agrees with Daryl Hall that I Can’t Go For That was the inspiration for Billie Jean
 
 
Dio, 1983: Ronnie James Dio, Vinny Appice, Jimmy Bain, Viv Campbell
Drummers "We were just having a great time”: Vinny Appice remembers his time with Ronnie James Dio
 
 
Thundercat performs at Aviva Studios on March 27, 2026 in Manchester, England
Singles And Albums “Mac’s death was a traumatic experience for me”: Thundercat on how losing Mac Miller made him change his life
 
 
session cards
Music Theory And Songwriting Can this $149 deck of cards help you write better songs?
 
 
Taylor Swift sings the National Anthem as the Detroit Lions host the Miami Dolphins in a Thanksgiving Day game at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan on November 23, 2006.  (Photo by Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images)
Artists Back in 2006, Taylor Swift took a hands-on approach to getting her music played on the radio
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...