When fans and critics debate the greatest guitar solos in rock history

When fans and critics debate the greatest guitar solos in rock history, Jimmy Page’s transcendent solo on “Stairway to Heaven” almost always tops the list. Its lyrical phrasing, emotional crescendo, and technical brilliance have become a benchmark not only for Led Zeppelin fans but for guitarists around the world. Yet, surprisingly, Page himself never saw that solo as his ultimate triumph. For him, the real peak came from a different place—less celebrated, more complex, and born from a moment of total creative immersion.

The song in question is “Achilles Last Stand,” the opening track on Led Zeppelin’s 1976 album Presence. Clocking in at over ten minutes, it’s a thunderous, galloping epic that few expected from a band under pressure. At the time, Robert Plant was recovering from a near-fatal car accident, and much of the album was recorded in a blur of physical pain, emotional strain, and tight deadlines. Page, already battling personal demons, took it upon himself to shoulder much of the workload. “Achilles Last Stand” became his battlefield—and his masterpiece.

The solo he delivered on the track wasn’t just fast or flashy—it was a sprawling, layered journey. It had urgency, grit, and a relentless energy that matched John Bonham’s furious drumming and John Paul Jones’s intricate bass lines. The song’s galloping rhythm, inspired in part by Middle Eastern and North African travel motifs, provided a vast canvas. Page recorded the guitar parts during a single intense session in Munich, working late into the night. He later described it as one of the most demanding and satisfying moments of his career.

What puzzled the band was the sheer density and ambition of what Page was attempting. Even Plant, known for his poetic insight, admitted he didn’t fully understand where Page was going with it—until he heard the finished product. The result was a song that defied conventional structure and showcased what Page could achieve when he pushed himself to the brink.

In retrospect, “Achilles Last Stand” might not have the universal acclaim of “Stairway to Heaven,” but to Jimmy Page, it represents something deeper. It was about overcoming adversity, pushing technical boundaries, and creating something intensely personal. In his own words, the song was “a triumph of will”—and perhaps that’s why, for the man behind the guitar, this was the true summit of his playing.

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