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
Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of Rush perform live in 2015.
Artists Geddy Lee on honouring Neil Peart and why he and Alex Lifeson are getting back together as Rush
Cliff Burton and James Hetfield
Artists “Lars and I saw him at the Whiskey. ‘Let’s get that guitar player… oh, he’s playing bass!’”: James Hetfield on Cliff Burton
graham
Artists “It was fantastic to have Paul come in every day, and we hung out with him quite a lot as well. The studio was absolutely crammed with our gear and his”: 10cc's Graham Gouldman on working with Paul McCartney at Strawberry Studios
Robben Ford [left] wears a dark suit jacket and v-neck t-shirt as he plays a blonde Telecaster onstage. Photographed in 1975, Joni Mitchell [right] plays her Martin dreadnought live onstage at Wembley Stadium.
Artists Robben Ford reveals the Joni Mitchell tone tricks that helped him nail his guitar sound in the studio
Josh Middleton of Sylosis shreds on his signature ESP/LTD electric guitar.
Artists How Josh Middleton crushed his inner elitist to unleash a brutal Sylosis album for the kids in the pit
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
Vernon Reid cups his hands to his ears to the crowd has he performs live at the at the Fremont Street Experience on April 18, 2025.
Artists Living Colour’s Vernon Reid on NYC epiphanies, unsung heroes and the emotional power of a sample
Paul Gilbert and Joe Satriani jam at the 2012 Marshall 50 Years of Loud Live anniversary concert
Artists Paul Gilbert on why it can be so hard to resist the urge to shred
Josh Middleton takes a solo on his signature ESP / LTD electric guitar during a Sylosis live show in San Francisco, 2025.
Artists “You can have a great amp but if the speaker sucks it won’t sound good”: Sylosis' Josh Middleton on the most important link in your signal chain
Gary Numan and Dave Dupuis
Artists "I honestly don’t think I would keep going if he quit": Gary Numan on the man who makes his live shows tick
Close up of Squier Classic Vibe '50s Telecaster
Electric Guitars Best electric guitars under $500/£500 2026: Affordable electrics
All the best guitar gear from this year's NAMM Show
Guitars The best new guitar gear of NAMM 2026: More effects, more amps, more guitars and more tech than ever
John 'Cougar' Mellencamp
Artists “It was a terrible record to make. The arrangement’s so weird”: How John ‘Cougar’ Mellencamp created a classic '80s No.1
Iron Maiden in 1986
Artists “I haven’t written anything on the new album. Bang go my royalties!”: When Bruce Dickinson was Iron Maiden’s odd man out
Billy Corgan holds his picking hand to his head as he holds a note on his Reverend signature model
Artists Billy Corgan says virtuosic guitar solos mean nothing in the social media age – and argues guitar influencers need to make a bigger impact on popular music
More
  • Sly and Survivor
  • In My Life
  • 95k+ free music samples
  • One chord Diamond
  1. Guitars

Airbourne's Joel O’Keeffe: the 5 guitar solos that changed the way I play

News
By Rich Chamberlain published 9 November 2017

Aussie rocker on Angus, Hammett and Skynyrd

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

“I can’t piece a solo together. It’s like a machine gun shooting everything."

“I can’t piece a solo together. It’s like a machine gun shooting everything."

Having been raised on a diet of classic rock, it’s little surprise that Joel O’Keeffe holds the art of the guitar solo close to his heart.

Not only is he possibly one of the world’s leading authorities on the guitar solos of Angus Young (plenty more on that later), but he has also tracked a few belting lead lines in his time with Airbourne.

“There’s a solo in a song called Thin The Blood,” he says, dissecting his own back catalogue of solos.

“That’s a real fast mover with a lot of moving parts and little licks in there. That was one of my favourite solos to track because it was so fast-paced. I had to be on it and had a bunch of Red Bulls. It’s got a bit of blues in it so I was dabbling deep in the blues and then was bringing the crazy, fast rock ‘n’ roll stuff as well.”

Downing the energy drinks and going at it until he’s got it seems to be Joel’s approach of choice. He certainly isn’t one for creating the perfect solo on a laptop.

“I can’t piece a solo together. It’s like a machine gun shooting everything. I will record everything and listen back and go, ‘Okay, if I play the first bit of the third take and the middle bit of the fifth take and play the last bit of the 200th take that is my solo.’ Then I’ll sit and learn it. 

Don't Miss

(Image credit: Jarle H. Moe/Hell Gate Media/REX/Shutterstock)

Airbourne's Joel O'Keeffe: the 10 records that changed my life

“When we’re in the studio all of the vocals and music will be done and we do the solos last. I sit there and make it up on the spot. We’ll do 20 takes. Sometimes I get it on the third take and they’ll say, ‘I don’t know what you did there Joel, but we’re keeping that.’ 

“And I’ll say I can do it better and I’ll try but I’ll be thinking about it whereas on that third take I was just rockin’. Sometimes I’ll do 200 takes and have to go home and come back the next day.”

After discussing his own process of tracking solos, we’re eager to find out about some of the guitar solos that turned Joel onto a life as a hard-touring Aussie rocker. Here he presents his five life-changing solos, and we start with a very familiar choice.

Airbourne tour the UK this month, starting in Bristol on Saturday 11 November.

Page 1 of 6
Page 1 of 6
1. AC/DC - Let There Be Rock

1. AC/DC - Let There Be Rock

“Live, this solo is always awesome but the album version is right on its edge. He’s really giving it there. 

“It’s one of those things where when you hear it it makes you want to be better at playing guitar. Live on that one he goes all over the place, right around the stadium. It’s fuckin’ rockin’. 

“He wrote a good solo that day. It’s a big solo and he has a lot of little in-between lead bits before he even gets to the solo.

I love the mad energy that Angus has. It’s the frenetic energy. It’s like he has lightning in his fingers

“I love the mad energy that Angus has. It’s the frenetic energy. It’s like he has lightning in his fingers. It’s like he doesn’t really know what he’s going to do until it comes out and the rest of the band go, ‘Fuckin’ hell Ang, that one’s a keeper, you can go have a cup of tea now.’

“Mal and Phil, and of course with Cliff, that is the definition of an engine room with Malcolm as the band leader. If you look at the live footage of them playing together, watch who they look to when they finish the song. They look at Angus to see when he’s going to jump in the air, but they look at Mal for what they’re going to do next. He is the concrete, he’s the anchor. AC/DC today is a train that just does not stop. If you’re on the tracks you will get ran over.”

Page 2 of 6
Page 2 of 6
2. AC/DC - Whole Lotta Rosie

2. AC/DC - Whole Lotta Rosie

“Also from the Let There Be Rock album I have to choose the Whole Lotta Rosie solo. That solo is rockin’. 

“It’s steaming all the way to the end when he brings it right out and finishes it. Angus is one of those guys that is right on the edge all of the time. There could be a bum note coming but he just skates through. He’s like Indiana Jones where he rolls under and reaches back under and gets his hat.

"It’s one of those moments where you go, ‘Fuck Ang, you nailed that one.’ That album is the definitive guitar solo album. I won’t pick any more off that album because I really could, I could pick a top five just from that album.”

Page 3 of 6
Page 3 of 6
3. Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freebird

3. Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freebird

“When they did Freebird, the ending of the song is like a five-minute guitar solo. 

“They’ve got three guitarists up there and you can learn almost every cool guitar lick out there just from that one solo. 

“I remember as a kid trying to learn to play it. I don’t know if I have ADD, but I have trouble focusing on things and I have trouble trying to read something to learn it; I’m much better listening and learning and that’s what I tried to do with that solo. 

You can learn almost every cool guitar lick out there just from that one solo

“The Lynyrd Skynyrd legacy is incredible. They have had some fantastic guitarists. It’s always so clean and the tone is always great. You can always hear the South in there. Skynyrd are one of those bands where are they country rock, are they rock ‘n’ roll, what are they?

“We played on the same bill as them a few years ago and they came out and did two hours, then they had this big bald American eagle draped in the American flag and they came out and did Freebird.

“It was like they saved half of the PA just for Freebird at the end. It was like having your ears sliced off, but in a really good way.

“I love Rickey Medlocke. He’s been there a long time. Being an Explorer man myself, him having an Explorer was something I picked up on as a kid. I learned those little licks that he played, he is very meticulous but also very laid back.”

Page 4 of 6
Page 4 of 6
4. AC/DC - Thunderstruck

4. AC/DC - Thunderstruck

“Let me see, anything guitar solo that I love… fuck, they’re all AC/DC! 

“The solo in Thunderstruck is one of the greatest, and he does the duck walk when he does it live, but it is one of the greatest guitar pentatonic box shape solos in B. There’s not many solos that you find in B, it’s that kind of key. 

“He does the duck walk live and that is awesome. That song changed my life. It came on the TV when I was a kid and I forgot about anything else I might have liked and going to school completely changed. 

“I saw that in Grade One and from then on I just couldn’t listen to teachers. I know they were trying to help me and do a good job, but I really couldn’t listen; I just drew AC/DC, Black Sabbath and Metallica logos all over my textbooks.”

Page 5 of 6
Page 5 of 6
5. Metallica - The Unforgiven

5. Metallica - The Unforgiven

“We should finish with Metallica. The Unforgiven solo where there’s the video of him in the studio with Bob Rock. Kirk finally gets that solo and nails it and it is a fuckin’ ripper. 

Don't Miss

(Image credit: Jarle H. Moe/Hell Gate Media/REX/Shutterstock)

Airbourne's Joel O'Keeffe: the 10 records that changed my life

“For a slow, ballad-y song, it is a real ripper, especially having seen the videos on the making of the Black Album. Kirk gets some of the respect he deserves as a guitarist because he’s the lead guitarist, but James Hetfield doesn’t.

“I think that’s because he’s the singer but he can slay. On that note of guys that don’t get their guitar cred, here’s a big one, Bruce Springsteen. Have a look at him slay. People see him just as The Boss, but when he starts playing he is a fast mover, man. You don’t think of him as a guitar slayer, but he is great.”

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
Angus Young, live onstage at the Los Angeles Colisseum in 1984
“The sound of his guitar has got that hard edge to it. It’s not clean – it’s nasty!”: Angus Young's guitar heroes
 
 
Mark Tremonti throws the horns and points to something during a live performance with Creed. His signature PRS singlecut is strapped on his shoulder.
“I had no idea that he was that good”: Mark Tremonti on Alter Bridge’s “secret weapon” and his soloing strategies
 
 
Mark Tremonti grimaces (or smiles?) as he plays a solo during a 2025 live show with his PRS signature guitar.
"It’s just the most emotive piece of music": Alter Bridge's Mark Tremonti on the greatest guitar solo of all time
 
 
Steve Morse poses in the studio with his Ernie Ball Music Man signature model – not the guitar synth at the bridge.
“Nobody can play better than that guy, man!”: Steve Morse on the supernatural powers of Petrucci, Johnson and Blackmore
 
 
Billy Corgan holds his picking hand to his head as he holds a note on his Reverend signature model
Billy Corgan says virtuosic guitar solos mean nothing in the social media age – and argues guitar influencers need to make a bigger impact on popular music
 
 
Miles Davis
“Miles said, ‘Play it like you don’t know how to play the guitar!’”: John McLaughlin's baptism of fire with Miles Davis
 
 
Latest in Guitars
Deals of the week logo
MusicRadar deals of the week: Score $140 off a Yamaha Stage Custom, $200 off a Fender Tele, and hundreds off PA and live gear
 
 
Robben Ford [left] wears a dark suit jacket and v-neck t-shirt as he plays a blonde Telecaster onstage. Photographed in 1975, Joni Mitchell [right] plays her Martin dreadnought live onstage at Wembley Stadium.
Robben Ford reveals the Joni Mitchell tone tricks that helped him nail his guitar sound in the studio
 
 
Gibson Mark Ronson Les Paul Custom
Gibson unveils Murphy Lab replica of Mick Ronson’s Bowie-era 1968 Les Paul Custom
 
 
Harley Benton ST-Modern Carlos Asensio
“An absolute steal when it comes to quality and value for money”: Harley Benton ST-Modern Carlos Asensio CGM review
 
 
Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of Rush perform live in 2015.
Geddy Lee on honouring Neil Peart and why he and Alex Lifeson are getting back together as Rush
 
 
Wampler Golden Jubilee: the sparkly-green stompbox has gold anodized dials and two channels of drive to play with, placing classic Plexi and Mesa-style sounds into a compact housing.
Love hotrodded Plexi crunch and Mesa high-gain drive? Wampler’s Golden Jubilee serves up both in one sparkly green stompbox
 
 
Latest in News
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - AUGUST 01: Ravyn Lenae performs onstage during Lollapalooza at Grant Park on August 01, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Joshua Applegate/WireImage)
How a warped sample and some Anderson .Paak magic helped Ravyn Lenae to create Love Me Not, her viral hit
 
 
tembo
Tembo is a kid-friendly magnetic drum machine and sampler that promises "unforgettable family jam sessions"
 
 
Thomann compo poster - a man, woman and child playing music
Thomann are on the look out for customers of theirs whose stories “move people and spark inspiration”
 
 
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 31: Laufey performs onstage during the 68th GRAMMY Awards Pre-GRAMMY Gala & GRAMMY Salute to Industry Icons Honoring Avery Lipman & Monte Lipman on January 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)
In an era of loudness, Laufey is flying the flag for "the lost art of dynamics"
 
 
keystep 37 mk2
"Spark ideas in your DAW, pilot any synth or patch modular without breaking your flow": Arturia unveils KeyStep 37 Mk2 with redesigned interface, extended connectivity and generative tools
 
 
Suno text prompt
“The hijacking of the world’s entire treasure-trove of music”: Artists’ pressure group launches Say No To Suno campaign
 
 

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
  • 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...