Submitted by JustNoodling11 t3_10j1bil in Music
Just asking out of curiosity. I'm pretty sure that Megadeth and the Eagles do, but I don't know much others. Let me know, thanks!
Submitted by JustNoodling11 t3_10j1bil in Music
Just asking out of curiosity. I'm pretty sure that Megadeth and the Eagles do, but I don't know much others. Let me know, thanks!
Maiden
Priest
Scorpions
Skynyrd
Thin Lizzy
Maiden
Allmans
Whitesnake
Loads of them. Hell, even Fleetwood Mac and Kansas and Skynrd
Trivium, Opeth, and Powerglove
Styx
The Beatles (although I think Paul probably did more lead guitar than John)
King Crimson (from the 80s onward)
Opeth
Iron Maiden has 3 lead guitarists now….but albums pre Brave New World it’s 2 leads.
Mando Diao, they are a fantastic swedish band.
Television
Radiohead
If Paul played more lead guitar then John then who played bass and wtf did George do?
Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac
Korn did for awhile.
Also Pearl Jam. Not sure if Smashing Pumpkins count.
Slayer, Morbid Angel, Def Leppard, Cinderella, Megadeth, Boston, Derek and the Dominos, Aerosmith
Versailles Philharmonic Quintet (Japanese Rock Band)
The bass player?
I'm mostly pointing out that the bassist played more lead than the usual rhythm guitarist - of course George did the majority of the leads, especially in the early years. Paul never played lead guitar live with The Beatles, but he does switch to guitar in his solo concerts.
And he did lead in the studio after recording his bass part with the band, or in the later years, John or George sometimes played bass. That's Paul doing lead on Ticket To Ride, Taxman, Back In The USSR and others.
Yes, Paul McCartney, the bassist for The Beatles also played lead guitar parts on albums. They even have a song with Paul, John and George trading solos.
Alexisonfire. They also have three singers each with unique styles.
They had a Squire Bass VI (a six-string bass with a 30 inch scale tuned an octive below a standard guitar with similar string spacing) that John or George sometimes played when Paul took lead quitar.
Unearth
Captain Beefheart - Trout Mask Replica
and
Hampton Grease Band - Music to Eat
King gizzard and da lizard wizard
Outlaws
…lots of metal…
Judas Priest
Iron Maiden
Opeth
Megadeth
Slayer
Testament
[deleted]
[deleted]
Foo Fighters
I always wondered if when live, the scorpions played all the cool harmonies together, or one guy plays the lead and the other play the rhythm....... Also just realized ive never saw them play live in any video. Down the yt rabbit hole we go.....
Heart!
Drive-By Truckers
Queensryche
Hammerfall
Skid Row
Morbid Angel
Deicide
Cannibal Corpse
Eagles for sure.
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Allman Brothers
Wilco, My Morning Jacket
Coheed and Cambria
The woefully underrated Los Lobos with Cesar Rosas and David Hidalgo. Original drummer Louie Perez moved from behind the drum kit to the third guitar option and could handle lead duties in many bands.
The Cars. Ric Ocasek and Benjamin Orr would switch being lead singers, guitar and bass respectively.
Some of the best
Pearl jam
The Black Angels. They have 3 guitarists normally, bur they regularly switch up instruments song to to song, so one of the guitarists will go to the drums and the drummer will play keys and the bassist will get on the drums….in every variation really. They’re fun to see live
Dragonforce
I saw The Strokes open for RHCP last year and was surprised to see that both their guitarists solo'd and led various songs
Beatles
Umphreys McGee
Television is a great example of complex overlapping leads. I love them.
Check out Thin Lizzy & Wishbone Ash especially Argus
Blind Melon
Slayer
Megadeth
The two guitarists of the indie rock band Young the Giant, Eric Cannata and Jacob Tilley alternate between lead and rhythm parts, sometimes even in the same song!
Rolling Stones
The Darkness
Allman Brothers
Sonic Youth
Nemophila.
Smashing pumpkins
Gojira. Saw them live this past summer, Christian was out with an illness and Joe, along with their guitar tech, completely two-part played most of the set. It was actually quite technical and impressive.
The Expendables
judas priest
Beat me to this, probably the first such duo, Green/Danny Kirwan. Other favorites Allman Brothers with Duane and Betts, Betts and Haynes, Trucks and Haynes. Quicksilver Messenger Service mostly forgotten John Cipolina & Gary Duncan. Radiohead Greenwood & O’Brien. Lynard Skynard with Ed King, Allen Collins, Gary Rossington.
Pretty much any Western Swing band, as well.
The Strokes, Arctic Monkeys (where ironically, the vocalist is better at leads than the guitarist), QOTSA
Whippersnapper - America’s Favorite Pastime
Avenged sevenfold
Don't see a mention of Jason Isbell vs Sadler Vaden as the better guitarist when you include the 400 unit.
Cacophony (Marty Friedman and Jason Becker)
Boston has some great guitar battles/harmonies on their first album. An absolute classic.
Thin Lizzy. Classic sound.
slipknot does that a lot, the solos and riffs will occasionally switch between jim and mick. if i recall correctly, psychosocial has a solo from jim and scream has a solo from mick
I think Lynerd Skynerd (sp).
Avatar
Coheed and Cambria
Blue Oyster Cult, Doobie Brothers, Man, Steely Dan
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard
Nels Kline ftw.
sonic youth
syn is the lead guitarist, zacky just harmonizes with some of his solo parts
Are you serious? DragonForce, necrophagist🥳, polyphia. Like any metal band...
CHON
The Strokes
Thin Lizzy kinda made a thing out of that for a while if you missed it.
Opal Ocean, it’s literally just two guitars too no singing etc just huge leads and jams
Testament
James would often play the easier leads.
Even had two drummers for a while.
ISIS and a great many others... Most Metalish music is built around guitar and having 2 or more players playing off each other
First one I thought of. At one point they had Don Felder, Joe Walsh and Glenn Fry.
10cc, both Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman played lead guitar (Gouldman mainly bass though). And during live shows Eric Stewart and Rick Fenn.
F#cked Up
E Street Band.
the rolling stones during the mick Taylor years. Keith played lead rhythm most of the time but would switch roles with Taylor a lot live. Taylor was a better lead but could play fills and rhythm while Keith soloed and vice versa.
Fugazi
There’s a band called Iron Maiden you may want to check out.
Outlaws,Molly Hatchet… southern Rock in general were pioneers with twin or triple lead guitar and guitar solos
How in the world isn’t Def Leppard on here?
Judas Priest and Iron Maiden come to mind.
Black Oak Arkansas
...And You Will Know us by the Trail of Dead
Tons and tons of them.
Thin Lizzy might have done it first, depending on how you're judging 'lead parts', but Scott Gorham and Brian Robertson's intertwining parts are the defining sound of their biggest hits like Jailbreak and The Boys are Back In Town
Lynyrd Skynyrd had 3 or 4 guitarists, I was surprised when I first picked up the instrument to learn that what I called the Sweet Home Alabama riff was actually 3 different parts in sync.
Fleetwood Mac almost always had multiple guitarists carrying leads. The Buckingham/Nicks era might not have, but there's a reason they replaced Lindsey with two (great) guitarists when he left.
The Eagles, Derek and the Dominos, Wishbone Ash, Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Allman Brothers, Blue Oyster Cult, Iron Maiden, Tesla...
Trivium. Both Cory and Matt are animals
My Chemical Romance
Grateful Dead. Jerry of course played lead most of the time but Bob often played the main riffs on songs Jerry sung like Wharf Rat or China Cat Sunflower. Bob played plenty of solos, too
This was one of my first concerts. Go Jim Dandy!
musicman831 t1_j5ht1z4 wrote
You could say Metallica does too. James will occasionally play solos.