I think a lot of really good musicians gravitated to country music simply because other venues were all but killed off by the radio stations. Country players use a lot of rather tricky melodic bends and open string licks not found in other music. That is what attracted me to it.
Don't confuse lack of skill with not understanding the venue. A lot of rockers are just as skilled as the average country picker. It may only boil down to a lack of understanding of the composition rather than the lack of skill. Most country pickers working clubs would fail miserably if thrown into a rock band. There are cats that are good for one venue only, and a few that would fit in anywhere. You need to hear them doing their own thing.
Most of the pickers that I hang with are rockers. We have a mutual respect for each other. As far as rock vs country.... when you call that one up you are dissing many of the the really skilled players. Those being classical guitarists, jazz guitarists, blues guitarists and the pop guys who have more than their fair share of guitar monsters.
Today many of the guitar players in even the most popular bands suck. They are bands manufactured by suits and a big publicity machine. They are at best only moderately "skilled" musicians that have gravitated form garage rock bands into pseudo country.
The "New Country" isn't country at all. And a good many of those pickers are hacks who couldn't pick their way out of a paper bag. Most of their efforts go into making guitar faces and guitar poses while they bang away at a couple of overly dramatized notes.
The studio cats are another story. They can play most anything and do it well. And I am opinionated. I was there when rock and roll began. The merging of country music and blues. It was called Rock A Billy. Todays "Country music" is just an imitation of that for the most part.
