11 guitarists that Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour said he likes

David GilmourDavid Gilmour

David Gilmour joined Pink Floyd in the late 1960s as a support for Syd Barrett but soon became the band’s lead guitarist and vocalist. His unique style and tone were essential to the band’s iconic sound, helping Pink Floyd become one of the best-selling and most influential bands in music history.

Over the years, Gilmour has inspired countless musicians and also shared which guitarists influenced him. Rock and Roll Garage selected 11 guitar players that David Gilmour has praised, along with his thoughts on why he admires them.

11 guitarists that Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour said he likes

Jeff Beck

The first guitarist is the late Jeff Beck, who Gilmour said was is his favorite guitar player of all time. “I have lots of favorite guitar players. Probably the person who I have admired the longest and the most consistent is Jeff Beck, in the guitar playing stakes. A lovely guy,” David Gilmour said on his official Youtube channel when asked who was his favorite guitarist.

They were good friends and the Pink Floyd member had the chance to perform with Beck a couple of times over the decades. For example, Gilmour was a special guest at Beck’s concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London back in 2009. On the documentary “Jeff Beck: Still On The Run”, the Progressive Rock guitarist called Beck a “maverick” player. “He is a maverick. A maverick guitar player who doesn’t like to repeat himself. Who takes big risks all the time and has done all the way throughout his career,” David Gilmour said.

He is a big fan of Jeff Beck’s first albums, especially “Blow By Blow”, that he told Guitar Tricks Insider in 2017, that was one of his favorites. The famous record has tracks like “Cause We’ve Ended as Lovers” and it reached number 4 American Billboard charts. Curiously, when Pink Floyd decided it was necessary to get a new guitar player due to Syd Barrett’s erratic behavior, they had Jeff Beck in mind before inviting Gilmour.

Pink Floyd wanted to hire Jeff Beck

He is aware of that story and talked about in an interview with French Guitarist magazine back in 2002. (Translated by Rock and Roll Garage): “Yes that’s right. I’m not sure they contacted him. But they considered calling him (Note: Meanwhile, Rick Wright confirmed that there had been contact but Beck seemed too good to go).”

“They always said they would have loved to recruit Jeff. He’s an amazing guitarist. But I don’t know if he would have been perfect for this job. We’ll never know. But the story would have been quite different,” David Gilmour said.

Beck passed away suddenly in 2023 at the age of 78 and Gilmour shared a special message on his social media, saying Jeff was his hero and friend. “I am devastated to hear the news of the death of my friend and hero Jeff Beck, whose music has thrilled and inspired me and countless others for so many years. Polly‘s and my thoughts go out to his lovely wife Sandra. He will be forever in our hearts,” David Gilmour said.

Jimi Hendrix

Jimi Hendrix is an obvious name in every list of the greatest guitarists of all time and Gilmour is also a big fan of his work. He actually became a fan of the American guitarist long before he was Hendrix, because he first had the chance to see him playing live when Hendrix was still a sideman for other artists.

In an interview with French Guitarist and Bass magazine back in 2009, the guitar player talked about his influences and revealed that it was Jimi Hendrix, who died only a few years after he joined Pink Floyd, which was his major influence. Curiously, the Progressive Rock band was Hendrix‘s opening act during a small tour across England before Gilmour joined them.

He told this story in an interview with BBC’s “Tracks Of My Years” in 2006 (Transcribed by Rock and Roll Garage) after revealing “The Wind Cries Mary” was one of the songs he liked the most. “Jimi Hendrix, fantastic. I went to a club in south Kensington in 1966. This kid got on stage with Brian Auger and the Trinity. (He started to play) the guitar with the other way around (upside down) and started playing. Myself and the whole place was with their jaws hanging open.”

David Gilmour continued:

“I went to the next day to record shops. I said ‘You’ve got anything by this guy Jimi Hendrix?’ They said ‘Well, we’ve got a James Hendrix’. He hadn’t yet done anything. So I became rather an avid fan waiting for his first release. Also this is one of his beautiful ballads that I really love,” David Gilmour said.

“A few years later, in 1970, when Hendrix was already a successful act with his band, Gilmour accidentally ended up helping to mix the sound for his show at the Isle of Wight Festival. He happened to be at the festival that day and was asked by a friend to help.

Pete Townshend (The Who)

Gilmour is a good friend and fan of The Who’s guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend. He had the chance to see The Who live in the early days of their career and said that Pete has always been his hero. Pete has always been one of my heroes. When I was very young, I hitchhiked from Cambridge to London to see him play at the Marquee Club. It was the very beginnings of the Who. He is incredible. He rarely plays lead, well, he could very well do …”

“We played back when he had very serious problems with his eardrums. The doctors had recommended him not to play with an amp. So he took an acoustic guitar and hired me to play his usual role. He couldn’t play the loud parts and he gave them to me. He is doing much better today and he went back to electric without problem. So much the better! I can’t imagine Pete without being able to do the mill on his guitar,” David Gilmour told  French Guitarist.

He wrote and recorded with Pete

Besides playing together live several times, Gilmour was one of the few musicians with who Pete collaborated with. They wrote together two tracks which were part of David’s solo album “About a Face” (1984). He told Mojo that he was “dumbstruck” during the sessions. “We’d done some recording for ‘The Final Cut’ (Pink Floyd album) at the Eel Pie Studiso (Owned by Townshend) and Pete had told me he had really liked my first (solo) album.”

“I was dumbstruck, but he said he was having difficulty writing music, but had loads of words. I sent over two or three tracks and he came back with lyrics for ‘Love On The Air’ (Released on the 1984 Gilmour solo album “About Face”), ‘All Lovers Are Deranged’ (Also released on Gilmour’s “About Face” and re-recorded by Townshend on his 2001 compilation album “Scoop 3”) and a third one, ‘White City Fighting’, which ended up on his next album,” David Gilmour said.

Eddie Van Halen

Although Gilmour was never recorded heavier music, he liked Eddie Van Halen. He even told Guitar Classics magazine in 1985 that Eddie was one of the guitarists that influenced him during that era.“These days I don’t listen to other people with the objective of trying to steal their licks. Although I’ve got no objections to stealing them if that seems like a good idea. I’m sure that I’m still influenced by Mark Knopfler and Eddie Van Halen as well.”

“I can’t play like Eddie Van Halen, I wish I could. I sat down to try some of those ideas and I can’t do it. (But) I don’t know if I could ever get any of that stuff together. Sometimes I think I should work at the guitar more. I play every day but I don’t consciously practice scales or anything in particular,” David Gilmour said.

Although he liked Eddie, Gilmour admited to Guitar Player magazine in 2009 that he didn’t really listened to the band Van Halen that much. “I have to confess I don’t listen to an awful lot of Van Halen, but Eddie is fantastic. His moments of sheer, unbridled, joyful playing- as he did on the Michael Jackson track – can’t help but make you want to jump around on a dance floor.”

“He was a major influence on a lot of people, wasn’t he? He changed Rock music. (Eddie) made a lot of very average players think they were a lot better than they actually were!” David Gilmour said. Eddie passed after years battling cancer back in 2020 at the age of 65.

B.B. King

Another Blues player Gilmour loves is the late B.B. King, who was also a fan of David’s guitar playing. They had the chance to perform together in 1998 at the Jools Holland show on BBC Two. They performed the track “Eyesight To The Blind”.

“He’s a lovely chap. His early stuff was stupendous, and he’s just kept going. I first met him in New York. He came up to me and said, ‘Hey, boy, are you sure you weren’t born in Mississippi?’ I’ve played with him a couple of times since, on a Later With Jools Holland session and on one of his albums.”

“When he’s in the dressing room, he spends all his time writing lyrics. There are some guitar players who are instantly recognisable, and then there are all the rest,” David Gilmour told The Guardian in 2006.

One of the most important Blues artists, B.B. King died back in 2015  at the age of 89.

Mark Knopfler

David Gilmour and Mark Knopfler are really good friends and the Pink Floyd singer/guitarist was quite impressed when he first heard Dire Straits in the late 70s. He listed in an interview with Guitar Tricks Insider their self-titled debut album, released in 1977, as one of his favorites of all time

That Dire Straits album had the number 1 hit “Sultans of Swing”, that really showed the world who they were. The group sold an estimated amount of more than 100 million records woldwide. The band came to an end in 1995 when Mark said he had enough of the success and the size of the tours they were doing.

Since then Mark is focused on his solo career and already released 10 studio albums. The most recent one is “One Deep River”, released in 2024.

Steve Lukather

Gilmour also admires Dire Straits, the praised Toto and session guitarist. He praised him still back in the 80s, in an interview with Guitar World magazine in 1988. “Steve Lukather is great. I really love his playing. I love a lot of people’s playing, but I mostly tend to like some of the old guys, you know? Eric, Jeff Beck, people like that. They’re more to my taste,” David Gilmour said.

Although he achieved fame with Toto, Steve Lukather continued his work as a session guitarist. He collaborated over the decades with many incredible artists. Some of them are Alice Cooper, America, Michael Jackson, Elton John and Lionel Richie. Curiously, he was part of Roger Waters’ solo album “Amused to Death”, released in 1992.

His late bandmate, the drummer Jeff Porcaro, was the one who played the drums on Pink Floyd’s “Mother”.

Eric Clapton

A big fan of the Blues, Eric Clapton is another guitar player that Gilmour admires. He was one of his first influences and he is a big fan of the record he made with John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers in the 60s.

““All of those guys (like Clapton) were incredible and I spent time trying to learn how to play their licks perfectly. I would suggest any young player should try to sit down and do that. You will wind up knowing how to play their stuff quite well but eventually you will find your own style form that. It forces its way out of the copying,” David Gilmour said.

Known as “the beano” album too, “Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton” (1966) curiously also featured the bassist John McVie (Fleetwood Mac) and the bassist/singer Jack Bruce (Cream).

Peter Green (Fleetwood Mac)

Gilmour is also a big fan of the late Peter Green, an important part of Fleetwood Mac‘s early days. He co-wrote many classic songs from that era of the group, which were a huge influence for Rock musicians over the years.

The Pink Floyd member paid tribute to Green performing at a special show that paid tribute to his legacy a few months before his death in 2020 at the age of 73.

Gilmour was part of a posthumous Peter Green/Fleetwood Mac unreleased song called “Need Your Love So Bad”. The version with Green’s vocals and Gilmour’s guitar parts, was released with a new book about the late guitarist called “Peter Green – The Albatross Man”.

Roy Buchanan

Maybe the less-known guitarist from this list, Roy Buchanan is also a guitarist Gilmour admires. He already mentioned the late American musicians as one of his favorite Blues players. Curiously, they had the chance to meet each and even jam. That happened when both Roy and Pink Floyd were touring in Australia.

As the late guitarist recalled in an interview with Steve Newton, the Progressive Rock band invited him to play together one night. “They got in touch with the guy who was booking us there and said they wanted to play with me. So, I worked at this club the night before and I liked the acoustic there. So I (ask him to) tell them we would meet there. We did, we jammed for like 40, 50 minutes and the place was just packed. They let me call the shots (about what we were playing). (David Gilmour) I think he is great, incredible player,” Roy Buchanan said.

Although he was an influential artist, Roy never had the level of commercial success some of his peers had back then. He started his musical career in 1955 and only would release his debut record in 1971. During his career, he released 11 studio albums until his tragic death at the age of 48 in 1987.

Hank Marvin (The Shadows)

The Shadows guitarist Hank Marvin is also a really important guitarist for David Gilmour, since he was one of his main influences when growing up. “The way I play melodies is connected to things like Hank Marvin and The Shadows. That style of guitar playing where people can recognise a melody with some beef to it,” he told Music Radar in 2006.

In an 1981 video interview, the Pink Floyd member mentioned Marvin as one of his early influences. ”He was the first major electric sort of guitar hero for us Brits”. Gilmour also said he had the chance see Marvin play live several times and said he was brilliant.

One of the most important British guitarist of all time, Hank Marvin started his career back in 1958. Other musicians influenced by him are Ritchei Blackmore, Brian May, Tony Iommi, Mark Knopfler and Neil Young.

Rafael Polcaro: I'm a Brazilian journalist who always loved Classic Rock and Heavy Metal music. That passion inspired me to create Rock and Roll Garage over 6 years ago. Music has always been a part of my life, helping me through tough times and being a support to celebrate the good ones. When I became a journalist, I knew I wanted to write about my passions. After graduating in journalism from the Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais, I pursued a postgraduate degree in digital communication at the same institution. The studies and experience in the field helped me improve the website and always bring the best of classic rock to the world! MTB: 0021377/MG
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