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Danko Jones - Not much for flashy playing but a solid rhythm and riff player.

Ian Blurton - Great hard rock tone and riff player.

Kevin Keegan - Played in Barn Burner and Dead Quiet. Awesome riffs and some cool solos.

Les Godfrey - Was in Tchort and The Illuminati. Great player and loved the style. He currently makes some very cool looking guitars.
 
Let's talk about the great Canadian guitar players that are or have been on the scene. There are a lot of them, some that we might not be aware of, and some that we are aware of but are underrated or unnoticed in the music world in general.
I'll start with Brian Smith of Trooper, Colin James, Pat Travers, Kim Mitchell, Brian MacLeod (sadly RIP), Gerry Doucette, throw some names in if you please...
Of course we all know about Randy Bachman and Alex Lifeson and the more famous ones, but I just wanted to start this thread to make myself and others out there more aware of some of our great talented players that we should listen to and appreciate. Feel free to give us those names of some other Canuck axemen that we should check out!
-Mikey
Justin Bieber, seriously
 
Was mentioned back in 2007 in this thread, but bears being repeated ...

... THIS guy ...

He does a lot for music & guitar, and am sure i don't know the half of it.
(edit - and he's kinda handsome, in an ugly sort of a way)
Image
 
His '59 LP with the added gold foil pup for the bass strings.
Image
 
I'll mention a Montreal guitarist that nobody knows. He was the guitarist for the short-lived, trio band in the 70s, called Moonquake. They only had two albums, the first album had a bit of airplay in Montreal with their song, Remember.
The second album had less airplay, if any.
The bassist Jack August (Geisinger) was with Walter Rossi in two bands called, Influence, and Charlee and he played with Buddy Miles.
Moonquake, along with some other Montreal musicians, were associated with Michel Pagliaro often being his backing band when he played live.

The guitarist's name is Hovaness (John) Hagopian.
I saw Moonquake play at a Sunday In The Park festival in Montreal in the early 70s when they released the first album.
It's not a bad album but there are a bit too many drug-related topics in the lyrics for the songs to have become "hits".
I played it a lot.
"If only they had different lyrics", i used to think.
If you want to hear an old, rare album that has been available on YouTube for a while already, i suggest you check it out.

"I recommend it" - for whatever that means to any of you, coming from "me".
Check it out, and if you want, let me know if you liked it.
Here is the full album
 
In no particular order...

Phil x - his old fretted americana demo videos are awesome 🤣 well worth a YouTube search

Ian Thornley- probably mentioned already

Neil Young might be onto something if he sticks with it

And because I was just listening to some tea party Jeff Martin is an interesting player...
 
This is a guitarist's type of guitar music. Inn'it?

Charlee biography | Last.fm
"Charlee was a Canadian progressive/hard rock band from the early 1970's.

Their album, which got a U.S. release on Mind Dust four years after its initial Canadian exposure, is full of good pulsating hard rock numbers featuring lots of superb guitar work from the hands of Walter Rossi.

The instrumental opening cut, Wizard, sets the tone and driving hard rockers like Lord Knows I've Won, the imaginative Just You And Me and Wheel Of Fortune. Let's Keep Silent is notable for lots of fuzz guitar work and A Way To Die is a slower song featuring lots of Rossi's fine guitar work. All bar one cut were penned by Rossi (four were co-written with Danny Ippersiel). An album well worth checking out.
Before forming this great band, Canadian guitar wizzard Walter Rossi had cut his teeth in the late 60s with some pretty big names like, Wilson Picket, and The Buddy Miles Express. He even turned down offers from Three Dog Night and Janis Joplin. Walter also had the pleasure of jamming with Jimi Hendrix and Buddy Miles on several occassions during their Band of Gypsies days.
Then back in Canada, Walter co-founded the progressive rock band Influence in 1969.
After being signed by ABC records, they went on tour opening for The Doors and Steppenwolf. In 1971 he formed Charlee. This is heavy rock at it's very best! This lost, virtually unheard album from the early 70's is absolutely amazing and essential to anyone interested in metal. It ranks up there with Montrose, Sad Wings of Destiny and early Trower.
This one and only album by Charlee is a stone dead classic. I've only known one person who ever owned it but back then we all made tapes and cherished it as the great lost classic of rock that it still is".
 
Band: Influence
Members:
Andrew Keiller - Vocals
Louis (Crazy Legs) McKelvey - Guitar, vocals
Walter Rossi - Guitar, vocals
Bobo Island (Bob Parkins) - Keyboards, vocals
Jack (Jacky Gee) Geisinger - Bass, vocals (AKA Jack August)
Dave Wynne - Drums

Wiki has this information.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Influence_(band)

And someone posted this under one of their YouTube videos.
"Formed as a quartet in late 1966, this act have an interesting and almost global pedigree.

English-born singer Andrew Keiller moved firstly to South Africa in 1964 and together with Irish-born guitarist Louis Campbell McKelvey played in the Johannesburg R&B outfit The Upsetters.
McKelvey left this act in late '65, to join The A-Cads, although he was too late to appear on their album, despite being pictured on the sleeve.
Andrew Keiller too left The Upsetters, recording a solo album in late 1965 before moving to Montreal in late 1966, along with McKelvey and fellow A-cad, Hank Squires.
In Canada, Squires moved into production working with The Haunted, amongst others, and McKelvey briefly played with Les Sinners and Our Generation before reuniting with Keiller in Influence.
Czech-born bass player Geisinger came in from the Soul Mates and English-born drummer Dave Wynne was recruited from The Haunted. To complete the line-up, two other former Soul Mates, Rossi and Island joined after playing on a Wilson Pickett tour in June 1967. The band then relocated to the US... David Wynne recalls:

- "We played Montreal in the Spring of '67, then went to Toronto Village and played one of the clubs there until September when we went to New York and cut the album with ABC. McKelvey was involved in production. Afterwards we were offered another deal by Columbia which was turned down by the band, and at that point I left and went back to Canada and school. You were right about the album, but it may have had a little impact. Our publicist at ABC was dating Peter Townshend and reportedly he liked the opera idea. As musicians and artists the Influence really outclassed anything else around - Walter Rossi as I said was a superb guitarist. You should have heard us live. The entire band except me had done hard time with mature audiences. Not many Canadian musicians had had the experience of recording in or touring the U.S. as Wally, Jack and Bobo had with Wilson Pickett. They were also all seasoned musicians. (I heard, from Buddy Miles I think, that Steve Cropper had said he thought Wally the better guitarist). It was also innovative, and had confidence that it was cutting edge and could compete on any stage. Toronto Village in Summer 1967 was great - lots of talent and a real buzz. The imbalance in the band was that we had two front men, Bobo and Andy, and while it was never pushed I think after I left that it became an issue - I bridged both sides and may have helped keep some of it together. At the time there seemed enough room for everyone, but it was really an amalgam of two bands in one - the Wally, Jack, Bobo and Louis and Andy. Yum Yum who replaced me was definitely associated with the former group. I had started the band with Louis, but felt much more at home musically with Wally, Jack and Bobo. I was not a fan of British drummers (Baker, Moon) but American black funk and jazz drummers. I think I mentioned the time at the Barrel, where watching and talking to Rashid Ali (Coltrane's second drummer with Elvin Jones) and hearing new wave drumming was a priceless clinic..."

Their album makes it easy to understand why they chose their name, as it is more or less a hodgepodge of styles without much consistency. Many satirical elements betray the strong influence of Zappa, on whom they clearly lean too heavily.

Nevertheless their love of discordant riffs and 'wrong' modulations works brilliantly on at least two tracks: We Are Here, a sour masterpiece on lost love and Natural Impulse. Lyrically Zappa is omnipresent as becomes hearable in the choice of admittedly transitional subject-matter such as sodomy (on County Fair) and the longing of the gentry to mingle with the peasants (on Sir Archibald).
Parodies on The Marcels, Little Richard and the hippie-movement in general sound dated, although they probably were modern in 1968. Worth trying, but don't pay too much.

After Influence broke up, McKelvey and Geisinger played in the Canadian band Milkwood. Geisinger later left Milkwood for Luke and The Apostles.
Rossi meanwhile, played with The Buddy Miles Express briefly before joining Geisinger in Luke and The Apostles. Walter Rossi later played with Charlee, Moonquake and Bombers.
Jack Geisinger also later played with Moonquake, Rockers and Crescent Street Singers.
Bob Parkin committed suicide in 1970.
Walter Rossi is also rumoured to have played on an album by Thee Muffins in 1966."
~ Someone's comments on youtube.

 
Frank Marino

From a land where Dragons stood
A young boy dared what no man could
Born of fire, and ice and wood, he came here full of life
Well he loved and laughed and floated past
the echoes of a velvet mind, that whispered fairy tales untold
that kissed his mind, caressed his soul

Well times they've changed and things rearranged
and a young man stood alone
But he decided to keep those echoes goin'
and ascended the mighty throne

He was a child of a novelty and he took 'em by surprise
he made them feel that he was real
he worked magic, magic..magic, before their eyes

solo

As time went on, they said he'd done
what no man had done before
But he claimed that he was a child of a novelty
and nothin' more
Well, he tried to cry out how he felt
and they answered, "It's a lie!"
But by this time this novel child had squeezed his soul bone dry

He was a child of a novelty and he took them by surprise
he made them feel that he was real
He worked magic, magic..magic
oh, he worked magic, magic..magic
oh, sweet magic, magic...magic before their eyes

end solos
 
Frank Marino

Strange Universe
May I kiss your breeze
Your beautiful statement reaches
Beyond my lonely seas
Gently morning shines
It's rays of emotional decree
As my Gods voice speaks to me
Of how it all must be
Silver beauty, shine on endlessly
Mysterious knowledge, eternally
Your music on a wave of light
Inspires visions, of a silvery night
Where trumpets sound your vast expanse
Where I have walked in a dreamlike trance
Brainchild of God, you peacefully lie
And await the glory of the Kingdom of the Most High,
Forever may you sleep... peacefully...
 
Hard rock Montreal band, Corbeau, from the past.
The singer's name is, Marjo.
She is a judge for the French Voice TV show in Quebec, these days.
She was awesome back in the day, wasn't she?
  • Donald Hince: guitar
  • Jean Millaire: guitar
Corbeau was a popular 1970s Quebecois rock group. The group was formed in 1977 by the film-maker, lyricist and singer Pierre Harel, with Michel "Willie" Lamothe on bass guitar, Jean Millaire on guitar, Roger "Wézo" Belval on drums (all previously members of the group Offenbach) and Donald Hince on guitars. Harel was the lead singer until the arrival of Marjolène Morin; the two shared the role until the departure of Harel just before the 1979 launch of their first album Corbeau. Corbeau broke up in 1984 after the departure of Marjo and Jean Millaire.

In 2009 the original members re-united to record one track for Marjo's new album, Marjo et ses hommes. Corbeau re-recorded the track Demain.
 
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