Prince turned a storm-soaked Super Bowl XLI halftime into a masterclass: guitar, showmanship, and a setlist built to make history.
Browsing: electric guitar
Rory Gallagher learned blues from the radio, dug deeper than the “Three Kings,” and turned grit, rhythm and truth into a lifelong guitar lesson.
A practical, punchy guide to Albert Collins: his icy tone, capos, minor blues bite, and why legends like Hendrix and Pareles couldn’t ignore him.
B.B. King played like a singer and worked like a freight train – hundreds of one-nighters, oceans of records, and a blues legacy built on pure mileage.
Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode” is rock’s ultimate origin story: a riff, a myth, and a masterclass in guitar-driven ambition.
Joan Jett built punk-pop fire from rejection, DIY grit, and riff-first songwriting. Here’s her story, sound, and lasting impact.
How Bloomfield’s early-60s Chicago grind and key friendships with Butterfield, Bishop, and Gravenites forged a genre-bending guitar legend.
Chuck Berry wasn’t first or flashiest. He was the one who defined what rock-and-roll performers sold: freedom, swagger, cars, and stories.
Jeff Beck loved both the Les Paul and the Stratocaster, but Hendrix pushed him one way. Here is what his choice really says about tone, gear and creativity.








