Legendary guitarist Nuno Bettencourt has publicly praised Yngwie Malmsteen, defending the Swedish virtuoso against a widespread misunderstanding about what truly makes him a guitar icon. In a heartfelt tribute shared on Instagram, Bettencourt emphasized that Malmsteen’s genius extends far beyond technical speed. It’s rooted in raw emotion and passion.
“One of the greatest players of all time. One of my biggest influences. A true guitar hero of mine,” Bettencourt declared, reflecting on a recent encounter with Malmsteen. He explained that many guitarists who came after Malmsteen attempted to replicate his speed and technique but fundamentally missed the point of his artistry.
“Those who came after him in his genre of classically driven guitar tried for his speed, his technique, and his insane vibrato. While they were all trying to do it faster, cleaner, and imitating his true arpeggios with sweeps playing it perfectly and clean with precision,” Bettencourt noted. However, he stressed that this approach misses the essence of what made Malmsteen revolutionary.
The core of Bettencourt’s message challenges a persistent misconception in the guitar world: that Malmsteen’s technical prowess is his defining characteristic. “They misunderstood that Yngwie’s technical prowess was not his super power. It was the fire you could feel with every phrase, the passion and emotion with every bend as if the string was always gonna burst. It was dangerous, not precise. It was dirty, not clean,” Bettencourt explained. He described how the same lick could “violently rip your face off” or “send chills,” demonstrating the emotional range Malmsteen brings to his playing.
Bettencourt credited Malmsteen’s 1984 debut album Rising Force as a transformative moment in his own musical journey. “I was first blown away by the solo in JET TO JET by Alcatraz. I must have rewound that solo on cassette 300 times trying to understand what I had just heard,” he recalled. He compared Malmsteen’s impact to that of Eddie Van Halen but noted that Malmsteen achieved it “in a completely different way.” The Rising Force album, in particular, changed everything for Bettencourt. “Jaw dropping. Still. Unreachable like that guitar he’s looking up at till this day in his genre.”
Bettencourt concluded his tribute by addressing the common dismissal of Malmsteen’s style as “just shredding.” For him, Malmsteen’s true innovation was demonstrating that shredding and emotion are not mutually exclusive. “Some will say it’s just shredding. But for me it was when I realized you CAN shred whilst having emotion,” he stated. Having shared the stage with Malmsteen and now calling him a friend, Bettencourt expressed that this collaboration represents a childhood dream fulfilled.
Bettencourt’s defense of Malmsteen’s artistry gains deeper context when examining the guitarist’s broader influence on modern metal. Yngwie Malmsteen is widely credited with shaping neoclassical metal shredding by fusing classical-style harmony and phrasing with high-speed rock guitar technique, according to Premier Guitar. His approach fundamentally transformed how guitarists approached the instrument, introducing a vocabulary that had previously been reserved for classical and orchestral music.
The technical foundation of Malmsteen’s style relies on specific musical elements that have become hallmarks of neoclassical metal. His signature sound incorporates fast arpeggios, harmonic minor and Phrygian-dominant scales, pedal-point riffs, and a mixed picking approach combining alternate picking, legato, and economy-style movement, as detailed by Premier Guitar. Rather than relying on strict alternate picking alone, Malmsteen developed a fluid technique that allowed him to execute rapid passages with unprecedented clarity and musicality.
One of Malmsteen’s most significant contributions to guitar playing was bringing classical vocabulary into hard rock and metal. Malmsteen introduced violin- and keyboard-like scalar runs and arpeggios into the rock and metal genres, helping define the neoclassical shred sound that countless guitarists have since attempted to master, as documented by Guitar21. This fusion of classical sophistication with rock aggression created an entirely new sonic landscape.
The impact of this classical influence extends beyond mere technique. Malmsteen’s picking approach blends alternate picking, legato, and economy picking to create fluid, rapid passages that sound effortless at very high tempos, according to Guitar21’s instructional resources. This mechanical sophistication, combined with his choice of scales and harmonic language, allowed Malmsteen to achieve both speed and musicality simultaneously. Something that had rarely been accomplished in rock music before his emergence.
