I forgot to link this:
a 'Ladies Only Edition' of the Addicted to Love video!
I could go on and on about (women) guitarists I like, but off the top of my head.. Kristin Hersh and Tanya Donelly, half-sisters, who were half of the original lineup of Throwing Muses, one of my favourite bands, and the former is one of my musical s/heroes. They each played lead or rhythm, depending on whose song it was.
Leslie Langston, the original bassist, was also brilliant, and indeed, with David Narcizo on drums, that lineup is one of the best of any band ever, in my view. (Releasing material of general brilliance, from 1986 to early 1990s:
https://www.discogs.com/master/283881-Th...A-Doghouse
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_a_Doghouse )
The German band Can is one of few other bands, where every member is outstanding.
Tanya Donelly might be more widely known for bands of which she was part, outside Throwing Muses, as
an early member of The Breeders, alongside Kim Deal, one of the original members of the Pixies, subsequently joined by her sister Kelley, and her own band, Belly.
I'm not necessarily a fan of guitarists who are virtuosic for its own sake.
I find Carlos Santana and Jeff Beck tedious, generally, and aesthetically barren.
Albeit, I was stunned in recent years, to discover that Santana had made an album (a very good one) with another of my musical s/heroes, Alice Coltrane, and I do like a number of Yardbirds singles, some or all of which probably feature Beck, and he might be in the lineup that appears in the film Blow Up.
Nonetheless, I think it's a tragedy that Can guitarist Michael Karoli, is much lesser known than Santana.
I can't really understand why anyone would rather listen to Santana or Beck, than Can or Frank Zappa, or free improvisation guitarist Derek Bailey, or many others, male and female, and not necessarily as 'obscure' as Caspar Brotzmann.
To conclude, on a 'non-virtuosic' note, another of my favourite bands is the Slits, (whose first, outstanding album, 'Cut', was produced by
Dennis Bovell who I've previously mentioned in relation to his band Matumbi:
https://www.babeshows.co.uk/showthread.p...pid2683829 and he also produced another classic 'post-punk' album
'Y' by the Pop Group whose singer, and wider pivotal figure, Mark Stewart, sadly died recently,) and their guitar-playing by Viv Albertine, is mostly rhythm, and another 'post-punk' band, with whom they 'shared' a drummer, the Raincoats, has guitar-playing I really rate, especially on their second album, 'Odyshape', and lastly (for now!) Bilinda Butcher, who plays rhythm alongside another of my guitar heroes, Kevin Shields, in another of my favourite bands, My Bloody Valentine.