With today’s unveiling of the Top 10 Most Revolutionary Artists of the Past 100 Years, Gibson.com’s latest list is complete. The full Top 50 are below, but if you’d like to check out an in-depth profile on each entry, click here for #50-40, #40-31, #30-21, #20-11 and #10-1.
Further down the page you can also see the Top 25 entries on the Gibson.com readers poll.
We’d like to send out special thanks to all of the Gibson fans who contributed to the final tally, as well as our Gibson.com editorial and writing staff.
- Bob Dylan
- The Beatles
- Jimi Hendrix
- Elvis Presley
- Les Paul
- Miles Davis
- Chuck Berry
- John Coltrane
- George Gershwin
- Muddy Waters
- Frank Zappa
- Hank Williams
- David Bowie
- Brian Wilson
- John Lennon
- Frank Sinatra
- Bill Monroe
- Robert Johnson
- John Cage
- Buddy Holly
- Bob Marley
- Ray Charles
- James Brown
- Nirvana
- Sex Pistols
- Madonna
- The Velvet Underground
- Little Richard
- Prince
- Django Reinhardt
- Cole Porter
- Charlie Christian
- Michael Jackson
- Eddie Van Halen
- Led Zeppelin
- Radiohead
- Brian Eno
- The Carter Family
- Run-DMC
- Jimmy Page
- Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five
- Eric Clapton
- Johnny Cash
- Charlie Patton
- Louis Armstrong
- Metallica
- Stevie Wonder
- Charlie Parker
- Sam Cooke
- The Stooges
Gibson.com Readers Poll – Top 25 Most Revolutionary Artists
Although many of the fans’ picks made the final Top 50 list, the readers poll results aren’t without their share of surprises. Votes for Pete Townshend, U2, Jack White, the Allman Brothers and Jon Lord weren’t enough to get those amazing musicians on the Top 50. Perhaps most surprising (although very deserving) choice was the readers’ top vote-getter – the Father of Bluegrass, Bill Monroe.
- Bill Monroe
- Les Paul
- Jimmy Page
- The Beatles
- Jimi Hendrix
- Iron Maiden
- Bob Dylan
- Frank Zappa
- Chuck Berry
- Angus Young
- Led Zeppelin
- John Lennon
- The Allman Brothers Band
- Jack White
- Robert Johnson
- Eric Clapton
- Elvis Presley
- Pete Townshend
- U2
- Eddie Van Halen
- Miles Davis
- Leonard Bernstein
- Duane Allman
- Kurt Cobain
- Jon Lord
http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/Features/top-50-full-1210/
Maybe this shows some serious ignorance on my part, but I had no idea. I always thought that, at least in Europe, the Grateful Dead were well-known. Although, now that I think about it, their whole thing was that they were the spiritual soundtrack to an American generational movement. They were the band that spoke for this hippie subculture that sprung up in the US in the 60’s, and they also spoke for a lot of outlaw/drifter types, but I guess their music is uniquely American. That’s usually how I classify a lot of their tunes actually: Americana Folk music.