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All the Hendrix
Way to “Ladyland”
q ore than two decades after his tunes overtly modeled after
clean-toned
death, Jimi Hendrix’s remark- Hendrix classics lie “Castles Made
Of Sand”
able rhythm guitar style still and “One Rainy Wish,” while
navigating the
grips the souls and fingers of contemporary sultry voicings of
“Little Wing” remains a rite
players. Steve Vai, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eric of passage for
aspiring rock players, even
Johnson, and others have recorded original those born well after
Jimi’s demise.
1 HOW TO PLAY GUITAR / BLUES 63
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The Hendrix rhythm style shatters the frozen structures of
standard barre chord voicings into a thousand melodic shards.
Rhythm and lead become one. By deftly jug- gling these harmonic
fragments, the player can create intricate webs of moving lines
that reinforce the underlying chordal skele- ton-an indispensable
skill for playing in situations where there’s no keyboard or sec-
ond guitar to hold down the harmonic fort.
Hendrix didn’t invent these techniques: like most aspects of his
music, their roots lie in African-American blues and R&B tradi-
tions. (Jimi owed a particular debt to Curtis Mayfield-just listen
to the Impressions’ “People Get Ready.“) But Hendrix introduced
more flexible harmonic schemes, new added-note sonorities, and an
unprecedent- ed fluidity of execution. He twisted R&B’s
somewhat standardized vocal accompani- ment techniques into weird
new shapes. Chordal ideas that might have generated an entire song
were toyed with and abandoned in seconds as he hopscotched from
idea to idea without tangling the musical thread.
Hummers and pulls Before diving into the “(Have You Ever Been
To) Electric Ladyland” transcription, test the waters with these
rhythm etudes. Ex. 1, derived from the familiar E-type barre chord,
demonstrates a key technique: replacing a fixed-position chord with
two- and three- note voicings, freeing a finger or two to play
added melodic figures. The example moves through different
inversions of the A chord, adding a hammered-on non-chord tone at
each stage. You can’t play it with a flxed slx- note barre;
instead, barre the top two strings for the first two beats. Shift
your 1st finger to the 6th fret of the third string for beat 3, and
then barre the fourth and fifth strings at the 7th fret for beat 4
before returning your 1st finger to the 5th fret for the final
chord. This is labor-intensive stuff-three position shifts in one
bar.
Finger the chord diagram shown above Ex. 2 by fretting the bass
note with your thumb in true Hendrix fashion. Raising and lowering
your 3rd finger introduces an added note (B, the 9 of A) situated
below the stan- dard barred A position. Now try the example.
(Again, you can’t just hold down the chord in the diagram: you must
continually modify
Ex. 1 ” I
Ex. 3 ,,
Ex. 5 ,x
64 HOW TO PLAY GUITAR / BLUES
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Ex. 6
Ex.
Ex. 10
your left-hand position.) Compare these added-note voicings to
those in Bx. 1 and try scrambling the two exercises.
Ex. 3 transports the same idea to anoth- er fretboard location.
(Slide the chord in the diagram down two frets to open position-
you’ll see that it’s based on a barred version of an open-position
G chord.) Like the previ-
ous examples, Ex. 3 is based on the A major pentatonic scale.
But pentatonic scales are
harmonically ambiguous: the first measure of Ex. 3 can imply A
major or F# minor- compare the two endings. (If you don’t
understand the relationship of these two keys, consult a good
theory text or teacher.)
We don’t have to restrict ourselves to pen- tatonic scales, of
course. Ex. 4 encompasses every degree of the A major scale. (That
G#/A crunch is lovely, ain’t it?) The voicing on the fourth beat of
bar 1 is a stretch, but it sounds great. You’ll find it in bar 9 of
“Electric Ladyland” and in the intro to the live version of
“LittleWing” on TheJimi Hendrix Concerts.
Ex. 5 shows the same idea in yet another position, one that
corresponds to a C-type barre chord at the 9th fret. Again, the
diatonic motion can imply either A major or F# minor.
Slip sliding So much for hammer-ons and pull-offs- what about
the sliding harmonies that make Jimi’s rhythm work sound so liquid?
The slid- ing fourths in Ex. 6 are as old as blues guitar itself
(older, probably-they sound distinctly African). At any rate,
they’re an R&B staple.
The sliding fourths in Ex. 7 are situated higher on the neck.
Ex. 6 and Bx. 7 are 100% pentatonic, so they suit many chord
sequences in both A major and F#’ minor. ‘By playing them over
these progressions: A-D, A7-D7,A-F#m, F#m-D7, and F#m7-Bm7.
The sliding fifths in Ex. 8 sound a bit weirder. Try replicating
them in other posi- tions and across three strings (for example,
play the first notes of the example at the first string, 12th fret
and third string, 14th fret, damping the second string).
Jimi often fattened these open fifths with lower notes. Adding a
lower third creates the minor 7th chord fragments shown in Ex. 9.
The Bm7 and F#m7 are built from the same harmony, but situated on
diierent strings. Play the low F# with your thumb. (This voic- ing
appears in bar 7 of “Electric Ladyland.“)
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Now things get curiouser and curiouser. Adding a fifth below the
fifth creates a sonorous, but harmonically ambiguous, structure-the
first chord in Ex. 10 can imply Gudd9, Em1 1, C13, Amll, and other
chords. (A favorite of Andy Summers, this stack-o’-fifths powered
many a Police hit.) Hendrix often reinforced the lowest note by
fretting it an octave below with his thumb, sometimes adding an
open third-string drone, as shown in the second measure. Slide this
chord up and down the neck- you’ll be playing the “Castles Made Of
Sand” intro before you know it.
You’ll find all these techniques in
“Electric Ladyland,” a tune that contains some of Hendrix’s most
bizarre extensions of these concepts. Harmonic, rhythmic, and
melodic weirdness abounds: The chord pro- gression sidles though
several keys via clever enharmonic tricks; the rhythms often imply
3/4 time (though it’s notated in strict 4/4 for simplicity’s sake):
and the oddball solo emphasizes the dissonant 7th more than the
tonic. The falsetto vocals are a zonked-out tip of the hat to the
Impressions, and the twin guitars do-s&do from foreground to
background (though most of the techniques
we’ve covered are played by the first guitar). It’s notated in
A, but Jimi tuned down a half-
step to Ab. Chords that are merely implied are indicated in
parentheses.
The transcription comes from Hal Leonard Publications’ Electric
Ladyland transcription book, which, together with their Are You
Experienced? and Axis, Bold As Love volumes are the finest Hendrix
tran- scriptions available (despite a shocking number of music
typos). Finally, don’t miss the solo guitar version of “Electric
Ladyland” on Hal Leonard’s ]imi Hendrix: Rhythm instructional CD.
Have at it. l
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...” . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . * . . . . . . . . . . . . . * . . . . . . **.
Joe Gore is the Senior Editor of Guitar Player
“(Have You Ever Been To) Electric Ladyland” By Jimi
Hendrix/Transcribed by Jeff Jones
Gtr. 1 A G#W (G#mV
I Gtr. 2 I i‘ I I
D G#m7) (Bm7) BmlE A (C#m7) G#m7
0 1968 Bella Godiva Music, Inc. This arrangement 0 1990 Bella
Godiva Music. Inc. AU rights reserved. International copyright
secured. Used by permission of Hal Leonard Publishing Corp.
66 HOW TO PLAY GUITAR / BLUES I
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G(add9) D (C#m) Bm7 Bm7lE
Am7(add4)
G(add9)
R.H.
I HOW TO PLAY GUITAR / BLUES 67
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Bm7/E
n,nn _ ____ In 7 7 7 7 m-l I T --- - - -
n I I -
G(add9)
palm mute 7
(C#m) G#m7 G(add9) D C#m7 Bm7
eJ C3’U f I
I \-I I I I
B R
I I
68 HOW TO PLAY GUITAR / BLUES I
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Bm7lE A G#m? (G#W G(add9)
B B R
0 G#m7) Em7 Bm7/E Am7(add4)
I HOW TO PLAY GUITAR / BLUES 69
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B 1 B 1 B
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