Game-changers, taste-makers and trend-setters: here are 2023’s guitarists of the year
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With 2023 drawing to its inevitable conclusion, itâs about time we reflect on what has been a pretty stellar 12 months of guitar playing, and tip our hats to some of the players that made our world such a joy this year.
Weâre talking about the game-changers, taste-makers and trend-setters of the electric guitar world â those who went above and beyond both on the fretboard and off it â delivering defining guitar music and reaching all-new heights, and whose achievements weâll be talking about for years to come.Â
Without further ado, here the 2023 guitarists of the yearâŠ
Nuno Bettencourt
(Image credit: Neil Lupin/Redferns)In April of this year, an always gunslinging, Washburn N4-brandishing, unapologetically candid Nuno Bettencourt told Guitar World, âAs I was doing the album [2023âs Six], I was re-inspired to kind of go for blood again. I basically said, âI want to bring guitar playing back,ââ before adding, âI just wanted to make [guitar] fun again.â Well, as we round out the year, itâs safe to say that Nuno clearly understood his self-imposed assignment.
Since late 2020, weâve suffered from a lack of Edward Van Halen. Then our despair grew deeper when we lost Jeff Beck at the start of 2023. But with a flick of his magic wand and no warning, Nuno stood in the shadows alongside Rihanna during the halftime show for Super Bowl LVII. Then and there, Nuno had us; we were transfixed, thinking, âWas that Nuno Bettencourt?â before saying, âOK, yes, it was. But what now?âÂ
Turns out that beneath piles of 15-years-in-the-making fairy dust was Rise, featuring a God-like solo that transported us back to Nunoâs 1992 MVP year, aka the year of his last Guitar World cover (until his August 2023 cover, that is). How about that?Â
Sure, back when Nuno was 26, it was obvious that heâd not only be on a GW cover but be crowned the MVP. But entering 2023, especially seeing as Extreme hadnât been heard from in 15 years, Bettencourt was mostly thought of as just another guitarist within screaming distance of 60. We guess Nuno didnât get the memo, as he curb-stomped his way through 2023 with the same balls-to-the-wall guts that made him famous back when More Than Words was a thing.
And so, is Nuno still the MVP? Absolutely. Has he inherited the throne from EVH? Probably. And yes, Nuno did bring guitar back to the forefront. But Nuno isnât just an MVP or the heir to the throne; heâs a no-brainer as a 2023 GOTY.
Wolfgang Van Halen
(Image credit: Andraia Allsop)After debuting on our GOTY list and the January 2023 cover of Guitar World, Wolfgang Van Halen reclaims a top spot with the release of his second Mammoth WVH album, Mammoth II, support slots on tour with Metallica and Alter Bridge, a collaboration with Slash on Iâm Just Ken, as featured on the soundtrack to Barbie â and his first headline tour with support from returning GOTY, Nita Strauss.Â
Guitar solos are more prominent and plentiful on Mammoth II than they were on the debut album, showcasing Wolfgangâs impressive chops and emerging distinctive voice. The highlight is his 90-second solo on Take a Bow â a strong contender for solo of the year â where moody, bluesy bends build up to a frenzied fury of fretboard tapping.Â
Wolf recorded the solo playing his dadâs legendary Frankenstein guitar and ânumber oneâ Marshall. âIt was a very emotional moment for me to play that solo with Popâs guitar and amp,â he says. âIt was like he was there with me in the studio.âÂ
While weâre at it, next year looks even bigger for Wolfgang. In addition to Mammoth WVHâs ongoing headline tour, his band will open several shows on the Foo Fightersâ Everything Or Nothing At All stadium tour this summer.
But the most exciting news is the upcoming, long-awaited release of the very first EVH guitar model developed completely under his own input and direction, the EVH SA-126 semi-acoustic electric.Â
Josh Klinghoffer
(Image credit: Jim Bennett/Getty Images)Since parting ways with the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 2019, Josh Klinghoffer has worked non-stop, touring with Pearl Jam as opening act and band member, with Eddie Vedderâs solo project, guesting onstage with Janeâs Addiction, joining the band to sub for a recuperating Dave Navarro and working with Iggy Pop.Â
He also records solo projects as Pluralone, releasing three albums to date: To Be One with You, I Donât Feel Well and his latest, This Is the Show. Â
Speaking with Guitar World, Klinghoffer offered some thoughts about his playing, range of opportunities and bosses who seemingly just canât get enough of him. âI think itâs a combination of a lot of things,â he said. âSome of itâs pure luck and timing, but I also think it might have something to do with my thirst for musical knowledge. I love other peopleâs music, but I donât try to emulate anybodyâs playing.Â
âIâve never lost this sense that Iâm a beginner, and I think that gives me a more primal approach to the guitar, and perhaps that makes my playing sound individualistic. Also, I never really lost the fan side of me⊠I think thatâs part of what carries me through.â
Andrew Watt
(Image credit: Adam DeGross)Ever since Ozzy Osbourneâs 2020 album, Ordinary Man, Andrew Watt has been in consistently high demand as a side musician and producer. Among his latest accomplishments: producing new albums by Pearl Jam, the Rolling Stones and Iggy Pop, and performing with the all-star Iggy Pop and the Losers â Josh Klinghoffer, Duff McKagan and Chad Smith â on Jimmy Kimmel Live.Â
âIâve been very lucky to get together with people that take me for who I am,â Watt told us in 2020, when he appeared next to Ozzy on our May 2020 cover. âThey let me play guitar and they let me come in with a guitar playerâs mentality and sit down with them and write in that way.Â
âAnd when Iâm approaching a song in general, it always starts with a guitar for me, because thatâs just how itâs always been. I count my lucky blessings that Iâm still making music the exact same way I was making it when I was 10.âÂ
How do the artists he works with feel about him? â[Watt] brought in exactly what we needed,â the Stonesâ Keith Richards recently told Guitar Player. âHe knew our stuff back to front, and I think he had a ball making the Stonesâ record. It was fun to make, very quick, compared to a lot of our records. We did most of it in a month or two. I enjoyed working with him.â
The Rolling Stones
(Image credit: Jason Koerner/WireImage)Speaking of Richards, in October the Rolling Stones released Hackney Diamonds, their first album of original material since 2005âs A Bigger Bang. The band â with that Andrew Watt guy at the helm â tracked at Henson Recording Studios in Los Angeles, Metropolis in London, Sanctuary Studios in Nassau, Bahamas, Electric Lady Studios and The Hit Factory/Germano Studios in New York City.Â
The interesting thing about the album is, itâs pretty damn good, as evidenced by tracks like Get Close, Tell Me Straight and Sweet Sounds of Heaven, the latter of which features a completely unexpected (and completely awesome) guest appearance by Lady Gaga. (âSheâs one of the Stones now,â Richards told Guitar Player).
The album also features appearances by Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Paul McCartney, Bill Wyman and, of course, the late Charlie Watts.
John 5
(Image credit: John 5/YouTube)As a few of you, um, might have heard by now, John 5 joined Mötley CrĂŒe this year â adding to an already diverse resume that includes Rob Zombie, Marilyn Manson, David Lee Roth, Rod Stewart and k.d. lang.Â
Basically, this is as momentous â and as exciting for the person involved â as Noel Gallagher being asked to join the Anthology-era Beatles in 1994. âI envision staying with Mötley CrĂŒe,â John told Guitar World (when he earned his first bona fide GW cover appearance). âAs long as Mötley CrĂŒe are around, I donât plan on leaving â and I hope I never get fired.Â
âItâs such a wonderful band to be in. It really is a dream to be playing with your friends. Itâs something I never envisioned, but Iâm so thankful itâs happened. I know every single song. Thatâs the other thing; I didnât have to learn any songs. I know them all. To get a new chapter, a new beginning in your life â what a gift it is. Itâs hard to explain. Itâs such an epiphany to receive a gift like this, to go, âOK, here we go.ââÂ
Mr. 5 also introduced his latest Fender signature model, the limited-edition Ghost Tele.
Cory Wong
(Image credit: Douglas Mason/Getty Images)With so much going on â a YouTube variety show, his Wong Notes podcast, being a member of the Fearless Flyers, recording almost a dozen solo albums, teaching online and maybe getting some sleep â Cory Wong found time to introduce another signature Fender Stratocaster in 2023.Â
âIâve wanted to release my Stratocaster in other colors since the original Sapphire Blue Transparent version was released in 2021,â Wong said in a PR statement.
âIâm a visual person and I believe the look of a guitar can affect the approach one takes to playing it. With the release of these two new colors, my goal was to provide players with a guitar that exudes a bright, fun energy.âÂ
âFun energyâ is key in Wongâs playing. As he told Total Guitar, âMy right hand is constantly going like the pistons running in an engine. No matter what, Iâm always going down and up in 16ths, and my hand is always moving, whether I hit any notes or not. I never have to think about the strumming pattern; I think about the rhythm. Thatâs what dictates how I play the pattern.âÂ
Whatever heâs doing, itâs clearly working. This year saw Wong embark on the biggest international shows of his career, visiting legendary venues like the 5,300-capacity Eventim Apollo in London with his solo band Vulfpeck, the funk collective who arguably helped launch him into the spotlight.
Sophie Lloyd
(Image credit: Sam Cahill)Lloyd spent her year touring the U.S. and Europe with Machine Gun Kelly, recording and releasing a new solo album, Imposter Syndrome, and earning a cover story â including an actual cover â in Guitar World. âItâs interesting that Iâve been able to enter touring at such a high level,â she told GWâs Joe Bosso. âPeople always say, âYou havenât paid your dues,â but I feel as though Iâve done that in a different way.âÂ
To which GW Editor-in-Chief Damian Fanelli replied (in the September 2023 Woodshed column), âI very much agree. And what does âpaying your duesâ even mean in 2023? Isnât building a massive online following over the course of several years paying your dues? Isnât somehow shifting from the digital empire onto major stages like MSG, Wembley Arena and the weirdly named KFC Yum! Center paying your dues?Â
âLloydâs is definitely a unique story, and although I have zero inside information, I can promise you that her ongoing stint with Machine Gun Kelly is still just the beginning.â
Nita Strauss
(Image credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for iHeartRadio)Nita Strauss enjoyed a banner 2023. She picked up right where she left off in Alice Cooperâs band following a stint with Demi Lovato, released and toured a new solo album, The Call of the Void, and wrapped things up on the road with Mammoth WVH.Â
She also found herself on the cover of practically every guitar magazine, including, once again, Guitar World. The Call of the Void marked a departure for Strauss, taking her from solely instrumental work to collaborations with a variety of vocalists. As for its final track, Surfacing, she roped in ex-Megadeth and Cacophony legend Marty Friedman.
âTalk about a storyteller!â she said. âIâve learned so much from Marty over the years. He knows what he wants. This collaboration was such an education for me, as a sort-of young guitar player at the foot of the master! The first metal song I ever heard had Marty playing guitar on it. I wanted him to critique me⊠He would tell me how I could make melodies better and what notes I should use instead of the ones Iâd initially chosen.Â
âI came out the other side a better player. He sent pages of detailed notes and through him I learned you have to know what your story is and what youâre trying to say or convey. Pick phrases that help tell the story. Resist the temptation to use your songs to show off your fastest licks.â
Zakk Wylde
(Image credit: Future / Dustin Jack)Many of this yearâs GOTYs could easily qualify for a 2023 âWrath of the Internetâ list. Zakk Wylde is no stranger to the pack since taking on guitar duties as part of what some call a Pantera and/or Dimebag Darrell tribute/celebration tour and others call a variety of other names unsuitable for print.Â
For Wylde, bringing Panteraâs legacy to old and new fans is a responsibility not taken lightly. âAt the end of the day, Iâm far beyond honored that I got asked to help to celebrate the incredible greatness of Saint Dime and Saint Vinnie,â he told Guitar World.
âI guess you could say Iâm on a mission from God, just like Jake and Elwood! Joking aside, weâre just four friends celebrating our buddiesâ memory and the amazing thing they created that brings so many people joy and happiness â just like their heroes did.Â
âThatâs why we still listen to Randy, Eddie, Sabbath, Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix and Pantera â because it brings you to your happy place. Itâs a beautiful thing and to me, every show weâve done in honor of Dime and Vinnie has been beyond special. Far beyondâŠâÂ
That would be enough to keep most guitar players busy, but not Wylde. MXR celebrated their 20-year relationship with the Ozzy Osbourne gunslinger by releasing an updated line of his signature pedals. He also resurrected tribute band Zakk Sabbath, who began their first tour in three years just before the holiday season.
And he announced one of the most striking Wylde Audio designs yet in the IronWorks Barbarian, which â at least to our eyes â looks like the hellborn love child of a Zemaitis and an SG. Like we said, the man just doesnât stop.
Buddy Guy
(Image credit: Terry Wyatt/Getty Images)At 87 years of age, blues icon Buddy Guy is still going strong, performing 150 shows every year, making guest appearances and recording new music. Last yearâs The Blues Donât Lie is his 34th studio album, following 2018âs Grammy-winning The Blues Is Alive and Well.Â
This year, Guy joined Eric Claptonâs Crossroads Guitar Festival all-star lineup and announced his farewell tour. âI donât want to cheat people,â he told Guitar World. âI have a reputation for giving 100 percent, but Iâm 87 now, and I canât kick my leg as high as I did when I was 27. Iâll still do blues festivals and one-offs, but I canât tour the world anymore. Iâm too old to be jumpinâ from town to town on a bus.Â
âIâll still be playing guitar; Iâll do that until I canât. And Iâll keep making music, but Iâm at the age where my heroes passed away. Iâve gotta keep that in mind⊠I remember listening to some of my heroes when they got older and thinking it wasnât the same. I donât want someone coming away from my show thinking, âHe doesnât sound any good.ââ
Periphery
(Image credit: Ekaterina Gorbacheva)Periphery, featuring guitar triple-threat Misha Mansoor, Jake Bowen and Mark Holcomb, released their first album in four years. Titled Periphery V: Djent Is Not a Genre, the nine tracks were produced by the band and released via their 3DOT Recording label.Â
Speaking with Total Guitar, the trio dug into the bandâs approach to songwriting and recording, as well as the challenges they faced to surpass their own high expectations following 2019âs Periphery IV: Hail Stan.Â
âWeâve written a lot of stuff and the bar gets raised. Weâd like to elevate that every time,â Mansoor said. âI was personally very proud of Periphery IV, so much so that I didnât know how we were going to beat that.âÂ
Mansoor also composed, assembled talent and performed in the mind-boggling âThe Virtuoso Mega Shred,â a promotional track and video for Jackson Guitarsâ latest American Series model, the Virtuoso. He was joined by Marty Friedman, Revocatonâs Dave Davidson, Heriotâs Debbie Gough and Erraâs Clint Tustin.
Steve Lacy
(Image credit: Fender)Steve Lacy has an A-to-Z list of studio musician and producer credits, including Kendrick Lamar, Thundercat, Vampire Weekend, Calvin Harris, Solange Knowles and Tyler, the Creator. Thatâs in addition to a pair of solo albums â 2019âs Apollo XXI and 2022âs Gemini Rights â plus a Grammy win for last yearâs work and a hit single, Bad Habit.
He also introduced his signature Fender Stratocaster, the People Pleaser, which we reviewed back in the summer.Â
Asked by GuitarWorld.com about the key to getting so many callbacks, Lacy noted, âI think itâs about being able to read the room. Itâs an intuitive thing to keep the energy flow going and make people feel comfortable, as well as having a little bit or enough talent to hold your own and present new ideas.Â
âYou need to find compatibility and some type of synergy together. Thatâs what keeps me going! I [also] think my openness helps. Iâm not too afraid to present something or try something completely different. Thatâs what I love about being a producer.â
Vernon Reid
(Image credit: Scott Legato/Getty Images)Living Colour may still be working on the follow-up to their 2017 album Shade, but that wasnât enough to keep guitarist Vernon Reid quiet for the duration of 2023. The band were chosen to support Extreme on their big comeback tour, making it even more of a top-drawer event for rock enthusiasts and guitar lovers across the U.S.Â
Reid also actively campaigned for under-appreciated six-string legends like Robin Trower, Robert Cray and Mike Stern to gain more recognition on the social media platform X.
âThis situation is unacceptable,â he wrote, while also observing how âTrower didnât have to play fast to be interesting or emotionally effective,â and ultimately made you âfeel the narrativeâ in an era where âvibrato has been practically abandoned as expressive ornamentation in favor of scalar exotica.â
Joe Bonamassa
(Image credit: Kit Wood)Blues ambassador Joe Bonamassa was everywhere in 2023.
A partial overview: he performed at the Crossroads Festival, appeared with Black Country Communion bandmate Glenn Hughes at the Saban Theater in Beverly Hills, collaborated again with Scary Pockets for a cover of Madonnaâs Like a Prayer, jammed with Brad Paisley at the Nashville Let Freedom Sing July 4 celebration, debuted another Epiphone signature guitar, hosted his âLive from Nerdvilleâ podcast, created his âTales from Nerdvilleâ columns for Guitar World, maintained his two nonprofits (Keeping the Blues Alive and Fueling Musicians), joined Eric Gales, Christone âKingfishâ Ingram and Marcus King at Bluesfest in Australia, teamed with Joanne Shaw Taylor, Carmen Vandenberg and Josh Smith for a cover of B.B. Kingâs Ainât Nobody Home, and released a new album, Blues Deluxe Vol. 2, an homage to his milestone third studio album, Blues Deluxe, which turned 20 this year.Â
âIf you had told me 20 years ago my career would last long enough to see the 20th anniversary of this little record called Blues Deluxe, Iâm sure I would have laughed,â he said. âBlues Deluxe was my last shot after being dropped by two major record labels and my booking agent.Â
âIt was then that my manager, Roy Weisman, had his first âall inâ moment. We would go back into the studio and record a record that would hopefully define the direction of whatever future career I might haveâŠâ
Tom DeLonge
(Image credit: Fender)Tom DeLone’s meaty, concert hall â and sonic spectrum â filling riffs speak to an entire generation, proving yet again that one need not be a virtuoso (subjective and overused term that it has become) in order to be a guitar âheroâ⊠or to land on a GOTY list.Â
Late last year, Blink-182 fansâ wishes and hopes came true when the band announced DeLongeâs return to the fold, following months of speculation. The official word was followed by the release of Edging, their first song as a trio in more than a decade, and One More Time⊠â their ninth studio album.Â
They began a world tour that keeps them on the road through early 2024. Summer 2023 also saw the reissue (and quick sell-out) of DeLongeâs in-demand signature Strat. The guitar was discontinued in 2004, leading to a cult following and peak prices on the resale market, particularly on the heels of his reunion with the band.
John Osborne
(Image credit: Evan Mattingly)This year saw the release of a much-anticipated fourth album from Brothers Osborne. The self-titled project is their first since 2020âs Skeletons. Drawing from rock, blues, country and bluegrass, the duoâs sound is defined by rhythm guitarist T.J. Osborneâs vocals and John Osborne playing lead.Â
In 2020, he told Guitar World, âItâs very gratifying to know that guitarists are paying attention, but I canât think about blowing them away when I come up with a solo. Thatâs a little like wagging the dog. I try to think big-picture when weâre in the studio.âÂ
The simplicity of the Telecaster allows you to find your voice. Itâs a desert island guitar
Integral to those solos, and the overall sound, is his guitar of choice: the Telecaster. âAs simple of a design as the Telecaster is, itâs the most versatile guitar out there,â he told Guitarist. âIt just works with any style, any amp, any pedal you put in front of it. The Telecaster works so well because itâs just a guitar.Â
âWhen you add switches and knobs that do crazy things, you start getting away from the actual point of an electric guitar, which was to be loud enough to be heard over drums.Â
âSome guitars push you in a direction, and when you fight against it, it doesnât work as well. But the simplicity of the Telecaster allows you to find your voice. Itâs a desert island guitar.â
Synyster Gates
(Image credit: Ollie Millington/Getty Images )Life Is But a Dream⊠is Avenged Sevenfoldâs first studio recording since 2016âs The Stage. In addition to a long-awaited comeback, the album showcases why Synyster Gates ranks among the 100 greatest guitarists of all time.
Gates is also prolific in classical and jazz guitar technique and theory. In an interview with Minneapolis-based 93X Radio, he said, âWhen I was 30 I picked up a gypsy jazz guitar and I didnât put it down⊠Four years after that, when I was 34, I went fucking berserk and downloaded, absorbed, just consumed mass amounts of guitar nerd content.Â
âI did that for a few years there where I had a guitar in hand, even when I was on the road, from the minute I woke up until I went to the show and went to bed⊠I went down gnarly rabbit holes online, just trying to get my hands on every piece of technique, every piece of theory, every piece of songwriting â it was always very much from songwriting. I didnât stop playing guitar for three years.â
Graham Coxon
(Image credit: Lorne Thomson/Redferns via Getty)Chosen as one of Total Guitarâs 100 greatest guitarists of all time, Graham Coxon once told that publication, âI think Iâm more in the free-jazz world when it comes to lead playing, and I play physically. I like the sound of a guitar being thumped! Iâd hear other people making rock albums that sounded really polished, but my records always sound like me: slightly shambolic and about to break. I cover my lack of technical ability with weird noises!âÂ
This year was a mixture of old and new for Coxon: massive reunion shows from Blur (not to mention a brand-new Blur album, The Ballad of Darren) and a debut album from his new project, the WAEVE, with musical partner Rose Elinor Dougal.Â
As to the future of Blur, âAlthough we donât talk that much now when we get together, itâs still very intuitive,â he told GuitarWorld.com. âIâm not sure Iâll ever be able to put my finger on the dynamic of Blur and I donât know if other sorts of musicians talk that much about what theyâre bringing into the music, especially if they are intuitive players and not hugely technical musicians.Â
âBut I think we make it up as we go along. Itâs always been a bit more instinctive because I donât know any scales or anything; itâs action painting for me. I donât really know what Iâm gonna do from one moment to the next when it comes to Blur; I just let it happen as it will.â
QOTSA’s Josh Homme and Troy Van Leeuwen
(Image credit: Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images)Queens of the Stone Ageâs Josh Homme and Troy Van Leeuwen made it onto the GOTY list together with a new album, In Times New Roman⊠â the bandâs eighth full-length studio album and their first since 2017âs Villains.Â
For Homme, the period between albums was particularly challenging, as he faced cancer, divorce, rehab, grief and legal issues, all of which played into songwriting and recording.Â
Speaking with NME, he said, âThatâs what this is. You start dropping the armor that protects you from your insecurities, and once you drop a piece of that armor you canât put it back on. I think on this journey of Queens of the Stone Age, thereâs no armor left. Itâs only about walking deeper into the darkness.â
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