![]() Blackmore was distinguished by his use of complex arpeggios and harmonic minor scales. ![]() ![]() Songs like " Highway Star" and " Burn" from Deep Purple and " Gates of Babylon" from Rainbow are examples of early shred. He founded Deep Purple in 1968 and combined elements of blues, jazz and classical into his high speed, virtuosic rock guitar playing. Ritchie Blackmore, best known as the guitarist of Deep Purple and Rainbow, was an early shredder. Towards the end of the 1960s, the development of guitar technique, in the context of rock, was taken even further by notable musicians such as Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck. Les Paul's song, " How High the Moon" contained sweep picking, one of the earliest recordings of the technique. Many jazz guitarists in the 1950s such as Les Paul, Barney Kessel and Tal Farlow used an improvised technique by raking the pick across the strings to play a rapid succession of notes, today known as sweep picking. The term "shred" is also used outside the metal idiom, particularly by bluegrass musicians and jazz-rock fusion electric guitarists. The term is sometimes used with reference to virtuoso playing by instrumentalists other than guitarists, as well. It is commonly used in heavy metal, where guitarists use the electric guitar with a guitar amplifier and a range of electronic effects such as distortion, which create a more sustained guitar tone and facilitate guitar feedback effects. Shred guitar includes fast alternate picking, sweep-picked arpeggios, diminished and harmonic scales, finger- tapping and whammy bar use. Shred guitar or shredding is a virtuoso style of playing the electric guitar, based on various advanced and complex playing techniques, particularly rapid passages and advanced performance effects. Virtuoso lead guitar solo playing style Joe Satriani, Steve Vai and John Petrucci at the G3 (tour) in December 2006
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