Tag Archives: hendrix

4274 Hendrix hooks & Root 5 chord

Hey! It’s time for a swim and we’re jumping in at the deep end so grab your water wings…

Today we’re going to have a look at a couple of Jimi Hendrix techniques courtesy of Song Pond tv that combine slides with hammer ons and pull offs. That might actually sound complicated but in fact is a simple and approachable way to build a much more “lyrical” and expressive approach to simple chord shapes.  I’m also going to take this opportunity to introduce you to some basic aspects of music theory.

In this lesson Ben shows you how to play these techniques on top of the ROOT FIVE chord but you can take the basic idea anywhere you want and experiment with different chord shapes.

The reason this chord is called a root five is because it contains only the ROOT note and a note a FIFTH interval above it. To build a MAJOR CHORD we take the FIRST, the THIRD and the FIFTH notes of the D Major SCALE – in this context we would use a D an F# and a A to build a Dmajor chord.
In today’s example we are breaking down a D major chord (D F# A) and removing the third -  the F# to play a DIAD, a two note chord.  The chord will be made up of only D and A, the 1st and 5th  therefore making it neither major nor minor but modal.

Here is a diagram to help explain that relationship.

root5 Hendrix hooks & Root 5 chord

Roman Numerals are conventionally used to identify each chord within any given key; so starting with a D we also play the fifth, an A. If this is beginning to sound a little like rocket science rather than music DONT PANIC; all will become clear in due time. For the moment, study the diagram and try to understand how the interrelationships between the scale, the chords and the fretted notes work. If it seems a little complex and confusing DONT PANIC; it’s just a small step forward on the route to greater understanding and don’t put yourself under any pressure!

On Hendrix’ second sophomore album Axis:Bold as Love Jimi takes the compositional skills first illuminated on Wind Cries Mary into a new dimension with an increasing emphasis upon lyricism over the acid soaked rock of his first release. Songs such as Castles made of Sand, the exceptional title cut, Bold as Love and the inspirational love song Little Wing bear testament to this progression away from rock simplicity towards lyrical complexity.

“Little Wing” is played using the unique chord/melody guitar style that Hendrix developed during his early career in rhythm and blues bands with Little Richard, Curtis Knight and the Isley brothers. In this style, the guitar sounds as though it is playing two parts. This is done by simultaneously playing complementary notes, often parts of chords, to create a melodic effect. The beginning of these techniques are shown here below, by Ben.

I would just like to add that if you would like to play the sliding, legato Hendrix chord you can even drop a note and simply play it this way – it resonates just a little bit more!

hendrix chord1 Hendrix hooks & Root 5 chord

This is the chord heard at the end of Castles Made of Sand! GROOVY!
If you`re interested in working your way through Jimi Hendrix’ classic song Little Wing, which perfectly embodies and encapsulates the full breadth of this style and approach to lyricism then have a look at our SONG POND site.

Cheers everybody!

Jake Edwards.

Today we’re going to try very, very hard not to smash and burn our guitars because we’re looking at the unique approach of uber-talent and tastemaster extroadinaire Eric Johnson and…he is rather good….

Eric is from Texas. And while there’s definitely something in the water in Texas it`s affected Eric a little differently because his approach to the guitar is somewhat idiosyncratic. Besides, it must be talent, melody or some kind of mystical otherworldly pan-galactic musical goodness flowing from those southern taps and Eric Johnson is definitely drinking it.

Man, I’m thirsty this morning.

gatdrink Eric Johnson

EricJohnson 300x196 Eric Johnson

By the time Johnson released his Capitol Records debut Ah Via Musicom in 1990, he was regularly winning awards for his musicianship in the guitar press. During this period, Eric Johnson was also drawing recognition for the rich, violin-like tone he coaxed from his vintage Fender Stratocaster.

The instrumental “Cliffs of Dover” exemplified his unique sound and won Johnson a 1991 Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. The album Ah Via Musicom was a crossover hit, and was soon certified platinum. Here`s Eric playing “S.R.V.” an undoubted piece of absolute fretboard excellence…

Johnson`s approach to sound tends to blend clean, highly melodic and dramatic guitar runs, licks and arpeggios with a fusion of eastern and world approaches to tone such as koto like string effects and bends with subtle tapping and harmonics fuelled by a devastatingly precise and accurate picking technique and  knowledge of the fretboard washed down with bucketloads of talent and a hint of psychedelia. What’s highly noticeable about Eric J.’s approach is that he likes to literally “think outside the (scale) box”:

I tend to stay away from the box fingerings a bit. Instead, I kind of connect different things together and try to be a little bit methodical in my approach. I jump around as per the string tension and the kind of sound and tonality I want.

To re-iterate whereas some players tend to play up or down a scale using almost predictable scales and licks Eric makes a conscious effort to jump across wider intervals and bridge uncommon scales & elements  and in doing so create a whole new ultra-fresh guitar sound.

If you`re thinking of taking the guitar to a new part of the melodic galaxy unfettered from the chains of the blues-rock tradition then Eric’s music is a great place to look for inspiration. DON’T, no; DON’T allow the complexities of Eric’s style phase you out though – adopt a less is more approach and think about the more classical elements in the playing. A touch of reverb won’t go amiss here people! It’s a heady mix of influences from Wes Montgomery to Jimi Hendrix to Jeff Beck with maybe a touch of Bach or Paganini thrown in.

Eric fuses a more classical sense of melody with a highly accomplished and adult sonic palette blending vibrato, bends, scales and tones in a way that avoids the hair-metal neo-classical plagiarism of guitar for guitar’s sake and the time honoured cliches of the ‘been there, done that’ blues-rock guitar cannon.

Here he is playing “Manhattan” – so, listen up and listen good because it’s said that Eric can tell the aural difference between the brands of batteries in his effects pedals.

So where does this leave the rest of us, down here on the ground? Absolutely Nowhere! But fear not the awesome and versatile koto string bending technique is available for us mere mortals down here on earth and here is how you can learn to do it.

Fret a note with your picking hand index finger.  Pick right behind your index finger with your picking hand thumb. These two steps occurs almost simultaneously.  Next you can choose to bend this note by stretching the string with your fretting hand.  Then you can pull off from your picking hand index finger to your fretting hand.

G DEC

Eric has also got together with Fender to endorse the G-DEC practice amplifier.

The G-DEC is a guitar practice amplifier which incorporates:

  1. A modelling amp, which can sound like any of 17 different amplifiers
  2. A digital effects processor containing 29 effects (many in stereo) so you can add reverb, phasing, flanging, wah, etc.
  3. An on-board General MIDI synthesizer with MIDI In and Out jacks on the front panel
  4. 50 preset and 50 user-definable presets combination backing tracks
  5. A 14 second phrase sampler, so you can record licks and practice against them
  6. Auxiliary input for CD or mp3 player
  7. Phones jack can be used with stereo headphones or as a stereo Line Out jack
  8. A second input jack on the rear panel
  9. A chromatic tuner

There’s a great interview here for those who’d like to find out a little more about Eric’s approach to the guitar.

echoplex3 296x300 Eric Johnson

Several years back I walked into Guitar Village in the U.K. to have a look at an Echoplex they had acquired.
Yeah!
The sales assistant was gushing with enthusiasm because this baby had been previously owned by none other than Eric Johnson himself. When he started the machine we heard  Eric’s instantly recogniseable tone and playing coming off the tape.

Wow! “How much is it?” I asked.

I think he said it was somewhere around the 800 pound mark! Phew!
I decided to save a massive 783 pounds- and go and buy one of Eric’s C.D’s instead – smooth.

Have great weekend!

Cheers,

Jake Edwards

SO whats the deal with being lefthanded. Left-handedness is relatively uncommon; 90 to 93 percent of the adult population is right-handed.  Chris McManus of University College London argues that the proportion of left-handers is rising and left-handed people as a group have historically produced an above-average quota of high achievers.cobain1 212x300 Southpaw Lefty guitarists

He says that left-handers’ brains are structured differently in a way that widens their range of abilities, and the genes that determine left-handedness also govern development of the language centres of the brain.

jimi hendrix buddy miles Southpaw Lefty guitarists

Most guitars are designed to be played right-handed and  although a right-handed guitar may be converted for left-handed playing (as was most notably done by Jimi Hendrix, Paul McCartney, and Kurt Cobain), this always requires replacing the bridge and nut for the strings to fit and the intonation to be correct.

This quick alternative to getting a “real” left handed guitar has only been necessary due to a considerable lack of true left handed instruments, manufactured specifically for the left handed player.

paul mc cartney Southpaw Lefty guitarists

Gaskell Guitars is an Australian guitar manufacturer that makes production and custom left handed electric guitars that are not available (or not made any more) in left hand option by original manufacturers.

Left handed guitarists the world over have always had few options regarding availability of left handed guitars. This has always been the case, but in recent times several major guitar manufacturers have completely turned their backs on left handed guitarists and have stopped making left handed guitars altogether. When you do find a left handed guitar in a shop somewhere it is normally priced 10-20 percent extra! What is that really? A “penalty fee” for being a left handed guitarist? Not acceptable!

Even if you can’t look beyond the southpaw prejudice of the guitar manufacturing giants there`s just no excuse letting it get in the way of your playing. Here`s some great south paw lefty’s in the shape and form of Elizabeth Cotton, Kurt Cobain, Jimi Hendrix and Albert King showing exactly just how to “get real”!

Luckily with the increasing popularity of the guitar there seem to be plenty of manufacturers around with an interest in catering to the southpaw!

Take it easy & cheers,

Jake Edwards

Back in the late 60`s things were so psychedelic even the guitars freaked out on Dr. Ugs.

Here`s Bakersfield California based company Mosrite proving that they too have been drinking the Electric Cool Aid. These guitars were made for the psychedelic Los Angeles band Strawberry Alarm Clock.

The DeVillain Centrefold is a folding electric guitar – the strings roll into the body when it’s folded, and when it is straightened out it’s ready to play. We’ll see about that – guitars tend to lose tuning if the temperature changes.

It was invented by SAS airline pilot Fredrik Johansson sick of damaging normal guitars whilst travelling. The bracket mechanism is made from aircraft grade aluminum, a great idea, although the DeVillain website is currently out of action – whot down somewhere over Korea.

Finally Gibson have made an exact replica of  the hand painted Flying V that Hendrix used on tour in Europe in 1967 and 1968, and features exact reproductions of Hendrix’s own hand-painted designs from the original.

If anyone would like a copy of the 1988 Guitar World issue featuring Hendrix and the V on the cover signed by none other than guitar legend RobinTrower write in, with your price in EUROS.

Obviously, in the world of guitar legend one man stands alone, head and shoulders above his peers; distorting time and space whilst achieving transcendental oneness with his guitar in a zen like reverie of Amerindian shamanism, Free love, sex, politics, feedback, fire and death.
.

If there was ever a sacrifice made to the guitar gods, it was Hendrix himself…exploding into flame at Monterey, Hendrix burnt away in a three year vapour trail of drugs, touring, alcohol, invention, and innovation – notwithstanding the management, money and mafia troubles that followed in his wake.

hendrixPA1609 468x513 Hendrix

For those of you who are baffled by the countless re-iterations and compilations floating endlessly around; the remixes and terrible bastardisations such as the “Midnight Lightning”album, or “Loose Ends” (which clearly showcase an industry’s shallow greed in selling the out-takes from the cutting room floor and even using hired modern musicians to remake tracks), add to this the blatent misbranding of Hendrix’ work with Curtis Knight and many more – to help you in avoiding these shark infested pools of the Hendrix legacy here are 6 albums that I can wholeheartedly recommend.

jimi Hendrix

    1.Are you Experienced – 1st album – in one word: FIRE

Hendrix first album fuses gritty rock, psychedelia and feedback in a blistering journey to the centre of the cosmos. This is as close to ‘classic’ rock as Hendrix gets with pumping riffs, weird guitar solo`s (purple haze) and a lyricism that combines Dylanesque surrealism with the hip acid talk of the American Summer of Love. This album is filled with the triumphant feelings of revolution, victory and optimism. It`s a fervent and heady mix of grass roots psychedelia and Hendrix earthy hands on approach to guitar tone exploration.

jimi hendrix 996 Hendrix

    2.Axis Bold As Love – 2nd album -in one word: WATER

The second album leans more heavily towards a lyrical mysticism and the lucid poeticism of songwriting with meaning and  intent as opposed to the hard rock rattle and hum immediacy of its feedback soaked predecessor. Hendrix begins to blend the jazz and funk influences of his days on the circuit with the science fiction, metaphysics and exploratory lyricism of his imagination with a more refined approach to instrumentation and more nuanced style. The final title track is possibly one of the greatest arrangements of lyrical metaphor, melodic rhythm guitar and majestic lead ever written or recorded.

jimi hendrix Hendrix

    3. Electric Ladyland – 3rd album – in one word: TRANSCENDENTAL

Take the previous two albums and throw in some voodoo space-blues, low down groove, funk, rock and roll, orchestration and then blend into a transcendental masterpiece of songwriting, guitar playing prowess, musical exploration, ufology, time travel and the foreboding sense that the world si coming to an end. The sheer emotional intent of the guitar playing alone on this double album  absolutely shines through as Hendrix delivers masterpiece after expressive masterpiece.

HENDRIX004 693x1024 Hendrix

4. Nine to the Universe – studio jams – rare jazz-blues improvisations – awesome and tight

Hendrix rocks into the studio to have a jam and the sonic results are absolutely off the hook. With more of a leaning towards  a modal approach to the guitar Jimi proves that literally everything is in his hands as he manipulates his stratocaster and amp to deliver a huge tonal range within the context of progressive jazz-blues fusion jam session. If you are new to Hendrix this might be a little too abstract for you but if you’re looking to expand your musical expression on the guitar without resorting to gratuitous effects and cheap tricks this is a great place to start.

hendrix31 Hendrix

5. Band of Gypsys – live – the once in a lifetime guitar mastery of epic sonic genius that is machine gun

After disbanding the original experience Hendrix returns to New York with Buddy Miles and Billy Cox to deliver a more loosely organised series of extended songs and groovy hooks centred around the opposing themes of war and peace. Never to be underestimated, Hendrix quite simply recreates the sonic palette and experience of the Vietnam war on Machine Gun, producing some of the most mesmerising guitar tones in the history of rock in an astonishingly complete performance. Hendrix touts acres of sustain and feedback, combined with tremelo induced ufology and science fiction sounds in an engaging live performance that proves EXACTLY why he is history’s most mind blowing rock instrumentalist.  Hendrix’  intent though is not only to transport you into a world of complete sonic guitar mastery but also to inspire spiritually through the kyuss of great hooks, timing and melody (Power to Love).

JIMI HENDRIX 4 NYC th Hendrix

6. The Jimi Hendrix Concerts – a great compilation of live recordings

This collection of recordings showcases the original experience at their best and includes the absolutely monumentous tonal mastery and feedback genius of Are You Experienced live on eof the greatest moments in guitar history. This has to be heard to be believed. This is what the Experience sound like live on a great night and theyre absolutely burning it up. If you cant get this disc then get the LIVE AT WINTERLAND album instead.

600full jimi hendrix Hendrix

7. Beautiful People  – If 60`s were 90`s -

Some old friends of mine Duncan, Phil, Dave and Luke remixing Hendrix for the early 90`s chillaxation-house scene. It’s groovy and Eric Clapton’s nephew digs it too. If you like the idea of Hendrix with “modern” beats then this might be right up your street. The stand out cuts are “Get Your Mind Together” and “Sea Eventually”. Remixes with PM Dawn sounded incredible but never officially materialised. If you want your Hendrix licks and melodies served up in a dreamy, groovy back-beat sauce with a focus upon the nouvelle cuisine sampling of a chillaxed club mix then this is the h’ors d’oeuvre you’re after. Rilly Groovy.

hendrix4 Hendrix

There is alot more to Hendrix’ reputation than his guitar sonics, IMHO, and if you`d like to explore a more historical and multifaceted approach to understanding Hendrix as a songwriter, creative and political force then please click here.
Cheers,

Jake Edwards