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Yep I will go along with that one!
it was certainly used in jazz long before rock.
There is nothing new under the sun. Rockers just added a cooler sort of attitude to the whole thing
bluesers always had "I'm bending this note with emotion" it just didn't look like it hurt... and seven minutes into an extended solo, the audience want to believe the guitarist is suffering.. they are
also there's the looking at another member of the band - to show connection. Metal took this to new heights with men in animal print leotards leaning against one another but the "wtf we doing" and "ama rully feeling this" look belong in rock.
Seriously: If you value it, take/fetch it yourself
But undeniably, the 'sonics' of the electric guitar have been widened by rock players.
I think part of the point of the Discussion is that a lot of the obvious ones pre date rock music - tapping goes back to the 1930's at least, tremolo picking goes back to at least Surf, if you don't count that as rock.
I think this is a good point, the "sonics" are one of the major differences between all musical styles and Rock. Yes we have had distorted tones, effects etc in country mainly back in late 50's early 60's but it's the way they have been used that has created the excitement and the dynamics etc.
Bucky Pizarelli - Jazz Guitarist
Jack Teagarden - Jazz Trombonist ... oh all right for guitar:
Probably came from Blues Slide guitarists like Blind Willie Brown.
You mean as in the Classical Spanish technique?
seriously all the techniques Rock introduced really stem from the guitars interaction with the amp or recording equipment (multi-tracking artefacts creating phasing, flanging, chorus etc .. and Les Paul made the first 4 tracks and loopers in a sense)... jazz guitarist