Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Guitars
  • Guitar Pedals
  • Synths
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Controllers
  • Guitar Amps
  • Drums
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About Us
More
  • Prime Day music deals
  • Alex G
  • Sowing the seeds
  • 95k+ free music samples
  • Roland TR-1000
  • Ozzy mix wisdom
Don't miss these
A PRS McCarty 594 on a hard case
Electric Guitars Best electric guitars 2025: Our pick of guitars to suit all budgets
John McLaughlin
Artists “I don’t have many guitar players’ albums on my iPhone, but Jeff is there”: John McLaughlin on the magic of Jeff Beck
Jackson Pro Origins 1985 San Dimas: these retro S-styles take the high-performance electric guitar brand back to the '80s, offering single and dual-humbucker platforms for shred with the choice of rosewood or maple fingerboards – and what about that "Two-Face" black-and-white finish?
Guitars “These guitars empower metal artists with the authentic, crushing tone that built Jackson’s legendary reputation”: Jackson takes us back to the heyday of shred with the Pro Origins 1985 San Dimas series – and what about that Two Face finish?
Orbit Culture's guitarists
Electric Guitars Orbit Culture show us their ESP guitars – and tell us why the EverTune bridge is a game-changer
Brent Hinds plays a bespoke ESP offset live in Mexico as he performs with Mastodon in 2022.
Artists “My mind’s the most cosmic place I could ever visit. All I have to do is zone out and play the guitar, and before you know it, I’ve visited places unheard of”: Remembering Brent Hinds, the maverick who trampled metal guitar underfoot with Mastodon
Danny Carey
Drummers 6 of the most inspirational drummers of all time
Otoha holds a blue Fender Strat in a staged setting with neon pink and blue lights overhead.
Artists IDLES, Wet Leg and Sam Fender all graduated from the Fender Next programme – meet its Class of 2025
Brian May and Freddie Mercury in 1980
Artists “I have none of that high-speed technical skill of a Steve Vai or a Joe Satriani”: How Brian May plays off instinct
Dickey Betts [left] and Warren Haynes trade licks onstage with the Allman Brothers Band at the 1993 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. Haynes's Strat would soon be stolen in New York.
Artists How Warren Haynes turned to Les Pauls after his favourite Strat was stolen
Electronic drum set pioneers: Neil Peart
Electronic Drums 11 trailblazing players who raised the bar for electronic and hybrid drumming
A composite image of Steve Vai [left] playing his green PIA Ibanez signature guitar onstage with the Satch/Vai band, and right, the late, great Allan Holdsworth playing an S-style with a cigarette smoking wedged on the strings.
Artists Steve Vai on why Allan Holdsworth – the fusion virtuoso who wrote his own rules – was the GOAT
Greg Mackintosh of Paradise Lost plays his custom 7-string V live onstage with red and white stagelights behind him.
Artists Greg Mackintosh on the secrets behind the Paradise Lost sound and why he is still trying to learn Trouble’s tone tricks
Drummers When British rock drumming ruled the world
A Fender Player II Stratocaster and Telecaster on a white piece of wood with lots of holes in it
Electric Guitars Best electric guitars under $1,000/£1,000 in 2025: My top picks for players of all styles
Jackson American Series Rhoads: the Rhoads is now officially being made in the USA again, and is offered with a choice of a hardtail or Floyd Rose, with the hardtail finished in Satin Black and Snow White, and the Floyd in Satin Black, Matte Army Drab and Snow White. Note the reverse headstock.
Guitars All Rhoads lead to California as Jackson brings one of its most-iconic metal guitars home for a high-end upgrade
  1. Artists
  2. Guitarists

The 20 greatest shred guitarists of all time

News
By Total Guitar ( Total Guitar ) published 13 June 2011

The shredders who've defined the genre over the years

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

The 20 greatest shred guitarists of all time

The 20 greatest shred guitarists of all time

Shred cannot be confined to one genre of music: it’s evident in rock, metal, neo-classical, jazz and fusion styles. It’s been around for a long time too, with this countdown of 20 guitarists, courtesy of Total Guitar, covering nearly 40 years of shredding.

One thing’s for certain though, and that’s that all these guys are quintessential guitar heroes. Whether they’ve spent years refining their techniques and learning the essential scales and arpeggios to perfect their shred, or whether they had a natural aptitude for speed and developed their skill without lessons or books, these are 20 of the most inspiring, innovative and technically virtuosic shredders you will ever come across.

Prepare to have your face melted!

Page 1 of 21
Page 1 of 21
Al Di Meola

Al Di Meola

Best shred moment: Race With the Devil On A Spanish Highway

After attending Berklee College of Music in Boston, Al joined the bands Chick Corea and Return To Forever before releasing his first solo album, Land Of The Midnight Sun, in 1976. He is the father of shred guitar, and without his fast and accurate alternate-picking style we may not have guitarists like Yngwie Malmsteen, John Petrucci, Jason Becker, Shawn Lane and countless others. Respect!

Page 2 of 21
Page 2 of 21
John Petrucci

John Petrucci

Best shred moment: In The Name Of God

Dream Theater’s axe wizard is a regular face on the G3 tour alongside Joe Satriani and Steve Vai, and is one of rock’s most respected shredders. As a mark of his influence, you’ll find his guitar instructional video/DVD Rock Discipline on the shelves of countless new

Page 3 of 21
Page 3 of 21
Steve Vai

Steve Vai

Best shred moment: For The Love Of God

An early student of one of the most famous guitarists of all time (Joe Satriani), Steve Vai commands an intimidating technical prowess, cutting his teeth as transcriber and player for Frank Zappa. Vai is nothing if not eclectic and quirky with his shred style, and is often cited as player of the ‘stunt guitar’. Tracks like Bad Horsie and Sisters have done much for instrumental guitar.

Page 4 of 21
Page 4 of 21
Ron Thal

Ron Thal

Best shred moment: Guitars Suck

Having released several albums under the moniker Bumblefoot, Brooklyn-based shredder Ron Thal took over the Guns N’ Roses guitar spot in 2006, replacing Buckethead. A master of almost every aspect and style of guitar playing you can name, Thal is most notable for his playing with a thimble worn on the fourth finger of his picking hand, which he uses to tap notes above and beyond the 24th fret with amazing accuracy.

Page 5 of 21
Page 5 of 21
Paul Gilbert

Paul Gilbert

Best shred moment: Technical Difficulties

While he started out playing air guitar to The Beatles’ songs, Gilbert earned his rep through his über-technical yet melodic style in ‘80s metal legends Racer X, on his revered solo albums and on the G3 tour alongside Satriani and Petrucci.

Page 6 of 21
Page 6 of 21
John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin

Best shred moment: Awakening

John McLaughlin was a household name in the ‘70s and fused jazz and rock guitar with the Mahavishnu Orchestra, packing energy and virtuosity like none before.

His diverse influences (including Jimi Hendrix, jazz musicians Miles Davis and John Coltrane, and Indian guru Sri Chinmoy) led him into Indian music with his quintet Shakti, who were one of the first bands to be labelled ‘world fusion’. You can hear him shredding on acoustic guitar in this group.

Page 7 of 21
Page 7 of 21
Yngwie Malmsteen

Yngwie Malmsteen

Best shred moment: Rising Force

Stockholm’s Yngwie Malmsteen has always been known for his classical influences, even releasing Concerto Suite For Electric Guitar in 1998, which was accompanied by a full orchestra. Listen to Yngwie play and you’ll hear harmonic minor scales and sweep-picked arpeggios aplenty, and all with the flair of virtuoso technique. We wouldn’t expect anything else from the Swedish maestro, whether there’s an orchestra involved or not!

Page 8 of 21
Page 8 of 21
Allan Holdsworth

Allan Holdsworth

Best shred moment: Low Levels, High Stakes

Because of his wacky scales and chords, Allan is ‘too fusion’ to be a standard shredder, but his fast legato, whammy bar work and fret-hand stretches make him an incredible player (just ask fans like EVH or Satch). Early days with prog band UK produced minor classics like In The Dead Of Night, before he went solo with respected albums Road Games, Secrets and None Too Soon. He even backed the guitar synth - the SynthAxe!

Page 9 of 21
Page 9 of 21
Zakk Wylde

Zakk Wylde

Best shred moment: Speedball

Such were the Wylde Thing’s axe skills that he landed the gig as Ozzy Osbourne’s lead guitarist at the tender age of 19. Since then his distinctive speed, wide vibrato and liberal use of pinch harmonics has seen him attain major cred in the shred community. And he’s even awesome on when he plays an acoustic guitar.

Page 10 of 21
Page 10 of 21
Steve Morse

Steve Morse

Best shred moment: Stressfest

First and foremost, Steve Morse is an awesome alternate picker, showcasing his licks with stints in the Dixie Dregs and Kansas. But it is his smooth phrasing and tasteful note choice that have won him fans the world over, elevating him into our most blazin’ shredders list. Legendary rock band Deep Purple obviously agree: Steve is the axeslinger in their current line-up, in place of Ritchie Blackmore.

Page 11 of 21
Page 11 of 21
Jason Becker

Jason Becker

Best shred moment: Serrana

Jason Becker was the Shrapnel label’s early legato and sweep-picking hero. Becker highlights include playing with Marty Friedman on Cacophony’s Go Off!, some tasty solos on the David Lee Roth album A Little Ain’t Enough, and his solo rendition of the Disney classic When You Wish Upon A Star. Sadly, Becker developed ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease) in the early ‘90s, which prevented him from playing. He is still able to compose with the help of a computer.

Page 12 of 21
Page 12 of 21
Mattias Eklundh

Mattias Eklundh

Best shred moment: Smoke On The Water

This madcap widdler fronts Swedish power trio Freak Kitchen and is renowned for his wacky and unconventional guitar style. Technically awesome (his two Freak Guitar solo albums have been released on Steve Vai’s Favored Nations label), Mattias Eklundh has been known to play his Caparison signature Apple Horn model with a range of bizarre objects, the weirdest being a vibrating dildo!

Page 13 of 21
Page 13 of 21
Jeff Loomis

Jeff Loomis

Best shred moment: Enemies Of Reality

You know Nevermore’s Jeff Loomis means business with his Schecter seven-string! With influences ranging from Dimebag Darrell, Yngwie Malmsteen and John Petrucci, Loomis’ playing is jaw-droppingly good. He may have missed out on a slot in Megadeth but, equally able with super-fast legato and sweep-picking approaches, Jeff’s precision and speed marks him several notches above many of his shredding contemporaries.

Page 14 of 21
Page 14 of 21
Shawn Lane

Shawn Lane

Best shred moment: Lane’s Blitz

Initially the ‘secret weapon’ in southern rock band Black Oak Arkansas at the age of just 15, the late Shawn Lane was an ‘80s underground shred hero championed by Paul Gilbert. On his 1992 debut solo album, Powers Of Ten, Lane demonstrated his outrageously fast picking, legato phrases and stretchy fretting skills - try the 12th, 16th and 20th frets… and with no tapping, either! Candidate for the fastest guitarist ever? It’s gotta be close…

Page 15 of 21
Page 15 of 21
Marty Friedman

Marty Friedman

Best shred moment: Tornado Of Souls

Marty Friedman (far right) is best known for being Megadeth’s shredder-in-chief during the ‘90s. Largely self-taught and renowned for his improvisational skills and unconventional picking technique (he favours upstrokes), Friedman’s first Megadeth album, Rust In Peace, is considered to be the band’s best to date - where Marty dared to go beyond traditional scales and fused both Eastern and Western styles in his guitar solos.

Page 16 of 21
Page 16 of 21
Buckethead

Buckethead

Best shred moment: Jump Man

‘Buckethead’, as finger-lickin’ fretmeister Brian Carroll prefers to be called, is probably most famous for his tenure with the second incarnation of Guns N’ Roses. His enigmatic style was first heard on solo album Bucketheadland (1992) and he has released over 30 albums since! His track Jordan is said to be the most feared track by players of Guitar Hero II. Maybe his extraordinary talents have something to do with being brought up by chickens…

Page 17 of 21
Page 17 of 21
Rusty Cooley

Rusty Cooley

Best shred moment: Under The Influence

Hailing from Houston, Texas, Rusty Cooley is one of the most gifted and proficient pickers in the guitar world. He displays his skills on seven and eight-string guitars, which he also uses to lay down some crushing riffs in his band Outworld. His instructional material includes The Art Of Picking, Extreme Pentatonics, and his Shred Guitar Manifesto, which has been cited as an influence by none other than John Petrucci of Dream Theater. If it’s good enough for John…

Page 18 of 21
Page 18 of 21
Fredrik Thordendal

Fredrik Thordendal

Best shred moment: Terminal Illusions

Meshuggah mastermind Thordendal is a seven and eight-string player who combines intense odd-time riffing (eg, playing a 5/4 riff over a 4/4 beat) with occasional über-speed soloing, like a thrash version of jazz player Allan Holdsworth. Thordendal’s playing provides the pivotal foundation to Meshuggah’s aggressive sound - just check out 1:50 of this video. Thordendal is also so committed that when he took over the bass on one tour, he even played the guitar solos on it!

Page 19 of 21
Page 19 of 21
Michael Angelo Batio

Michael Angelo Batio

Best shred moment: No Boundaries

Michael Angelo Batio is revered for his freakish ambidextrous ability to play equally well left- or right-handed. He also has a patented string dampener, which allows him to play harmony parts on both sides of his Dean double-neck guitar simultaneously. He is a close friend of Mark Tremonti and has performed live with Alter Bridge on a number of occasions. He also taught RATM guitarist Tom Morello.

Page 20 of 21
Page 20 of 21
Joe Satriani

Joe Satriani

Best shred moment: Satch Boogie

Satriani’s second album, Surfing With The Alien, sold by the truckload and sparked a rebirth for instrumental guitar music into the early ‘90s. He was previously a guitar teacher, passing on his masterful knowledge of theory and technique to pupils including Steve Vai, Kirk Hammett and Rick Hunolt (Exodus). In 1996, Satch created G3, a tour that has featured the virtuosic talents of John Petrucci, Paul Gilbert, Steve Vai, Eric Johnson and Yngwie Malmsteen, among others.

Liked this? Now read: The 20 Greatest Metal Guitarists Ever

Connect with MusicRadar: via Twitter, Facebook and YouTube

Page 21 of 21
Page 21 of 21
Categories
Guitars
Total Guitar
Total Guitar
Social Links Navigation

Total Guitar is Europe's best-selling guitar magazine.

Every month we feature interviews with the biggest names and hottest new acts in guitar land, plus Guest Lessons from the stars.

Finally, our Rocked & Rated section is the place to go for reviews, round-ups and help setting up your guitars and gear.

Subscribe: http://bit.ly/totalguitar

Stay up to date with the latest gear and tuition. image
Stay up to date with the latest gear and tuition.
Subscribe and save today!
More Info
Read more
A PRS McCarty 594 on a hard case
Best electric guitars 2025: Our pick of guitars to suit all budgets
 
 
John McLaughlin
“I don’t have many guitar players’ albums on my iPhone, but Jeff is there”: John McLaughlin on the magic of Jeff Beck
 
 
Jackson Pro Origins 1985 San Dimas: these retro S-styles take the high-performance electric guitar brand back to the '80s, offering single and dual-humbucker platforms for shred with the choice of rosewood or maple fingerboards – and what about that "Two-Face" black-and-white finish?
“These guitars empower metal artists with the authentic, crushing tone that built Jackson’s legendary reputation”: Jackson takes us back to the heyday of shred with the Pro Origins 1985 San Dimas series – and what about that Two Face finish?
 
 
Orbit Culture's guitarists
Orbit Culture show us their ESP guitars – and tell us why the EverTune bridge is a game-changer
 
 
Brent Hinds plays a bespoke ESP offset live in Mexico as he performs with Mastodon in 2022.
“My mind’s the most cosmic place I could ever visit. All I have to do is zone out and play the guitar, and before you know it, I’ve visited places unheard of”: Remembering Brent Hinds, the maverick who trampled metal guitar underfoot with Mastodon
 
 
Danny Carey
6 of the most inspirational drummers of all time
 
 
Latest in Guitarists
Korn's Brian 'Head' Welch and James 'Munky' Shaffer show off their new Ibanez signature 7-strings
Korn’s Head and Munky unveil new Ibanez 7-strings – and explain how it all comes back to Steve Vai
 
 
Ritchie Blackmore with Rainbow
“I think every serious fan of hard rock music would love Stargazer”: How Ritchie Blackmore created his magnum opus
 
 
Wolfgang Van Halen
“Some riffs have that swing. You hear it in the first Van Halen album”: Wolfgang Van Halen's new song echoes classic VH
 
 
Jeff Beck and Imogen Heap
When Jeff Beck gave Imogen Heap an impromptu guitar lesson she had no idea who he was
 
 
NEW YORK - JULY 11: Mark Ronson performs at the High Line Ballroom on July 11, 2007 in New York City. (Photo by Donna Ward/Getty Images)
Mark Ronson on having to come to terms with the fact that he would never be a great guitar player
 
 
Dave Davis pictured on the left in black-and-white, circa 1964, playing a Guild semi-hollow and singing into the mic; Dave Davies pictured from behind, slashing a speaker to show us how he got the distorted tone on You Really Got Me.
“So, Dave, how do I slash the amp?”: Dave Davies picks up a razor and slashes a speaker on camera to demonstrate how he got the Kinks’ iconic proto-fuzz guitar tone
 
 
Latest in News
Rosanna Arquette and Steve Porcaro
Toto’s Steve Porcaro on the perils of recording live to analogue tape, and what happened if you messed up
 
 
Stone Roses single and cover
“Sounds like four lads trying to get out of Manchester”: The Stone Roses’ debut single to be reissued for charity
 
 
The legendary luthier Ken Parker in his workshop with one of his groundbreaking archtop designs.
Ken Parker, the visionary luthier behind the Parker Fly, has died, aged 73
 
 
Rocktober
Amazon Prime Day is a bust for music makers, but don't worry, the Musician's Friend Rocktober sale is here to save the day with up to 40% off big-name brands
 
 
Ed Sheeran in Netflix's One Shot, performing on a subway
Ed Sheeran announces Adolescence-style single-shot Netflix special
 
 
Guitar Center Guitar-A-Thon sale
Who needs Prime Day when you can indulge in Guitar Center's epic Guitar-A-Thon sale? Save up to $900 on Taylor and up to $500 on Gibson models
 
 

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

  • 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...