The 10 Guitar Riffs Almost Every Guitarist Fails the First Time (Can You Play Them?)

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If you’ve been playing electric guitar for a while, you probably know the feeling…

You sit down thinking:
“Yeah, I got this riff.”

Then 10 seconds later your fingers completely betray you.

Some guitar riffs sound simple — until you actually try to play them correctly with timing, articulation, muting, speed, and feel.

And honestly?
That’s what makes them legendary.

Today we’re diving into 10 iconic electric guitar riffs that humble almost every guitarist the first time they try them.

Whether you’re into rock, metal, blues, shred, or classic guitar heroes… this list is guaranteed to test your hands.

1. “Crazy Train” — Ozzy Osbourne

Crazy Train
Ozzy Osbourne

At first, the opening riff sounds easy.

Until you realize the picking consistency and timing need to be PERFECT.

Most players rush it.
Others lose synchronization between both hands.

And if your muting technique is weak…
the riff instantly sounds messy.

Why it’s difficult:

  • Tight alternate picking
  • Fast synchronization
  • Palm muting precision
  • Stamina

2. “Eruption” — Van Halen

Eruption
Eddie Van Halen

This solo changed guitar forever.

Before Eddie, most players weren’t using two-hand tapping in mainstream rock like this.

After Eddie?
Every guitarist on Earth wanted to tap.

Most fail because:
they focus on speed…
instead of accuracy and rhythm.

3. “Master of Puppets” — Metallica

Master of Puppets
Metallica

This riff destroys forearms.

The downpicking endurance alone is brutal.

You can know every note…
and STILL fail because your picking hand simply gives up halfway through.

The real challenge:

  • Aggressive downpicking
  • Endurance
  • Tight rhythm control
  • Consistency at high speed

4. “Cliffs of Dover” — Eric Johnson

Cliffs of Dover
Eric Johnson

One of the smoothest sounding guitar instrumentals ever recorded.

But beneath that beautiful tone?
Absolute technical chaos.

Slides, hybrid picking, legato, string skipping, timing shifts…

This song exposes every weakness in your technique.

5. “Neon” — John Mayer

Neon
John Mayer

People underestimate this song constantly.

Then they try the thumb technique.

And suddenly their hands stop functioning.

This isn’t just a guitar riff —
it’s a full-body coordination exercise.

6. “Through the Fire and Flames” — DragonForce

Through the Fire and Flames
DragonForce

Internet guitar culture made this song legendary.

It’s fast.
Ridiculously fast.

Most players don’t fail because of the notes…

They fail because tension builds up too quickly.

Key problem:

Trying to play relaxed at insane speed.

7. “Little Wing” — Jimi Hendrix

Little Wing
Jimi Hendrix

This song proves something important:

You don’t need insane speed to create an impossible guitar part.

The challenge here is FEEL.

Dynamics.
Expression.
Touch.
Timing.

Hendrix made the guitar sing.

And that’s harder than playing fast.

8. “Technical Difficulties” — Racer X

Technical Difficulties
Paul Gilbert

Even the name warns you.

This is pure alternate-picking insanity.

Most guitarists discover very quickly that:
there’s a massive difference between “playing fast”
and “playing CLEAN.”

9. “Sultans of Swing” — Dire Straits

Sultans of Swing
Mark Knopfler

Fingerstyle electric guitar at its finest.

The phrasing looks relaxed…
but reproducing Knopfler’s touch is incredibly difficult.

Especially the dynamics and articulation.

This is one of those songs that separates players from musicians.

10. “Tornado of Souls” — Megadeth

Tornado of Souls
Megadeth

That solo.

Every guitarist knows the solo.

And every guitarist eventually discovers:
it’s WAY harder than it sounds.

Fast runs.
String skipping.
Precise bends.
Insane control.

A true rite of passage for metal players.

Why Guitarists Keep Chasing Difficult Riffs

Here’s the truth:

Most players don’t practice difficult songs because they expect to master them instantly.

They practice them because:
every impossible riff unlocks a new level.

One riff improves your picking.
Another improves your timing.
Another improves your feel.

That’s how great guitarists are built.

One frustrating riff at a time.

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Final Question

Which riff destroyed you the FIRST time you tried it?

Comment below and share this with another guitarist who thinks they can play anything. 🎸

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