This is a list of notable left-handed musicians who play their instruments naturally. This does not include left-handed people who play (or played) right-handed, such as Joe Perry, Mark Knopfler, and Gary Moore.
Guitarists and bassists
Left-handed people play guitar or electric bass in one of the following ways: (1) play the instrument truly right-handed, (2) play the instrument truly left-handed, (3) altering a right-handed instrument to play left-handed, or (4) turning a right-handed instrument upside down to pick with the left hand, but not altering the strings – leaving them reversed from the normal order. (The fingering is the same for methods 2 and 3.) Any style of picking with the left hand (flatpicking or fingerstyle guitar) is considered playing left-handed.
Guitarists
Left-handed with normal stringing
Guitarists in this category pick with their left hand and have the strings in the conventional order for a left-handed player (i.e. the low string on the top side of the neck). They either have true left-handed guitars or have right-handed guitars altered so the strings are correct for a left-handed player. Some guitarists in this category (e.g. Paul McCartney) play both genuine left-handed instruments and right-handed instruments altered for left-handed playing.
Changing the strings on a right-handed guitar involves several things. The nut of the guitar has to be changed to accommodate the string widths. The bridge needs to be changed to make the lower-note (thicker) strings longer than the higher-note (thinner) strings for correct intonation. On almost all acoustic guitars the bracing is non-symmetrical. On electric guitars altered this way, the controls will be backwards.
Notable players
Left-handed with strings backwards
These are left-handed players who play naturally, but with the strings organized to emulate an unaltered right-handed guitar, thus the strings are backwards for a left-handed player. The guitar is held left-handed with the high string on the top side of the neck (e.g. Bob Geldof). Some players in this category (e.g. Dick Dale and Albert King) had left-handed guitars with the strings as on a right-handed guitar, since they had learned to play that way.
Notable players
Amber Bain (The Japanese House)
Babyface
Dywane Thomas Jr.
Cormac Battle (Kerbdog)
Buddy Miles
Wallis Bird
Doyle Bramhall II
Chase Bryant
Glen Burtnik (Styx/solo)
Eddy Clearwater
Junior Campbell
Michael Card
Jimmy Cliff
Elizabeth Cotten (Ruggere 1980:48ff)
Andrew Cox (The Fauves)
Dick Dale
Ed Deane
Cheick Hamala Diabate (RH instruments with original stringing and custom LH instruments with backwards stringing) also banjo and ngoni
Lefty Dizz
Eric Gales (naturally right-handed, but plays left-handed. His left-handed brother taught him that way.)
Bob Geldof (The Boomtown Rats)
Jimi Goodwin (Doves)
Ed Harcourt
Benn Jordan
Jacek Kaczmarski
Andy Kerr
Albert King
Little Jimmy King
Peter LeMarc
Anika Moa
Barry Winslow (The Royal Guardsmen)
Morgan
Coco Montoya
Malina Moye
Mic Murphy, (The System)
Kurt Nilsen (Winner of the World Idol competition after winning the first season of the Norwegian Idol series)
Paul Raymond
Nicolas Reyes
Gruff Rhys
Kris Roe (The Ataris)
Jim Rooney
Doctor Isaiah Ross
Otis Rush
Graham Russell (Air Supply)
Lætitia Sadier (McCarthy, Monade, Stereolab)
Evie Sands
Seal
Dan Seals
Bill Staines
Dan Swanö (Bloodbath, Edge of Sanity, Nightingale, Ribspreader; plays drums right-handed)
Wayman Tisdale
Dave Wakeling (The English Beat, General Public) (right-handed, but learned to play left-handed)
Karl Wallinger (World Party)
Bobby Womack
Melvin Williams
Unclassified left-handed players
Bassists
Drummers
A drum kit for a left-handed person is set up so that percussion instruments drummers would normally play with their right hand (ride cymbal, floor tom, etc.) are played with the left hand. The bass drum and hi-hat configurations are also set up so that the drummer plays the bass drum with their left foot, and operate the hi-hat (or, if using two bass drums, plays the second bass drum) with their right foot. Some drummers however have been known to play right-handed kits, but play leading with their left hand (e.g. playing open-handed on the hi-hat). This list does not include drummers who are naturally left-handed while playing drums purely right-handed such as Ringo Starr, Stewart Copeland, Dave Lombardo, Travis Barker, Eric Carr, and Chris Adler.
Violinists
The violin can be learned in either hand, and most left-handed players hold the violin under the left side of their jaw, the same as right-handed players. This allows all violinists to sit together in an orchestra.
Richard Barth
Paavo Berglund (A well known Finnish left-handed conductor who also played violin, often joining orchestra players for chamber music just for fun. Due to the value of his violin collection he did not want to change his instruments and had trained himself to play left-handed on violins with a standard set-up.)
Charlie Chaplin (wrote right-handed)
Ornette Coleman
Rudolf Kolisch
Ashley MacIsaac
Ukulele
Paul McCartney
Tiny Tim (played guitar right handed)
Ian Whitcomb
Trumpet
Sharkey Bonano
Freddie 'Posey' Jenkins
Wingy Manone
Paul McCartney
Trombone
Slide Hampton
Banjo
Elizabeth Cotten
Cheick Hamala Diabate
Paul McCartney
Mandolin
Cheyenne Kimball
Paul McCartney
Bansuri
Hariprasad Chaurasia, right-handed, started his career playing the bansuri, a side-blown flute, right-handed, and switched to left-handed playing
References
Bibliography
Cross, Charles (2005), Room Full of Mirrors: A Biography of Jimi Hendrix, Hyperion, ISBN 0-87930-662-9
Babiuk, Andy (2001), Beatles Gear, Backbeat Books, ISBN 978-0-7868-8841-2
Ferguson, Jim, ed. (1979), The Guitar Player Book, GPI Publications, ISBN 0-394-17169-1
Ruggere, Steve (1980). "Left-Handed Guitar: A Look at the Players, Problems, & Products". Guitar Player. 14 (5 (May 1980)): 48–50.
Stetin, Troy (2001), Left-Handed Guitar: The Complete Method, Hal Leonard, ISBN 978-0-7935-8788-9
Engel, John (2006), Uncommon Sound: The Left-Handed Guitar Players Who Changed Music, Left Field Ventures, ISBN 2-9600614-0-3, archived from the original on 2007-02-08