Piano Guidance
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What was Jimi Hendrix tuning?

Famously Hendrix nearly always tuned every stt on his guitar down by one semitone. This is also sometimes called a down tuned guitar, being downturned to Eb (E flat), or playing in Eb. What it means in practice is that instead of the strings being in standard tuning EADGBe they are Eb, Ab, Db, Gb, Bb, and Eb.

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The playing style of guitar legend Jimi Hendrix has been analyzed a great deal and as such, there is a huge list of things you can do to replicate his distinctive guitar playing. However, you should always begin with the following 5 core concepts that are absolutely fundamental to his playing. In fact, most other aspects of Hendrix’s playing style you encounter will usually in some way either build upon one of the below five ideas or simply not be possible without it. Here are 5 things at the very heart of his playing style and if you want to get the Hendrix sound, this is the place to begin.

1 – Down tuned Guitar

Famously Hendrix nearly always tuned every stt on his guitar down by one semitone. This is also sometimes called a down tuned guitar, being downturned to Eb (E flat), or playing in Eb. You may have noticed this if you’ve ever tried to play along with one of his songs and wondered why you sound out of tune. Of course, some songs are in standard tuning, various YouTubers have altered recordings and backing tracks into standard tuning – or you could just play one fret lower on your guitar. However, being in Eb, the strings are that little bit looser and slinkier and the resulting sound is more free and lucid with a lower deeper rolling quality. Also, so much guitar music is in the key of E, so being in Eb does differentiate it slightly. It isn’t an absolute essential but if you try it you will notice the difference (and not want to go back)!

2 – Rhythm Guitar Style

Jimi Hendrix is famous for his rhythm guitar playing style fusing elements of rhythm and lead guitar techniques into one articulation. Again a huge amount could be said about this but let’s look at the core essentials: Hendrix wraps his thumb around the neck and uses it to play the bass notes of chord shapes to allow him to play what are effectively bar chords, but in a thumb around the neck position freeing up one or two fingers to add embellishment, slides, legato and fills. This effectively creates a fluid, embellished, padded, expressive rhythm guitar style for which he became very famous and many guitarists have emulated since.

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3 – Fuzz, Octave & Wah-Wah

A guitarist looking to recreate Hendrix has set up would be well advised to make these the first three pedals they acquire. He used the octave effect in isolation to add depth and thickness to melodic lines in a rhythm part, wah-wah for expression in soloing, fuzz for a distinctive lead sound – and even all three pedals in conjunction to create an extremely powerful tone.

4 – Minor pentatonic and natural minor scale soloing

These two scales are by far Hendrix’s most used scales in all his lead guitar parts. Generally speaking he was not somebody who was using more exotic scales, modes or especially complex harmony. His style is more about expression, note choice and delivery. At times he created melodic lines that were simple, but harmonized perfectly with underlying basslines and chords. Other times, he created faster more dynamic, less melodic runs, links and phrases.

5 – Playing with freedom.

Playing expressively, with freedom, loosely, creatively and with a carefree manner are all key descriptors here. But it’s a fine line between that and rough, messy or sloppy guitar playing. Hendrix gave the appearance of playing roughly and loosely and even a bit lazily at times, but his ultra-strong underlying technical ability shone through. So there are two main lessons here. Firstly, there is no substitute for (or shortcut to) excellent technique. And secondly, once you have this foundation you can create a unique style, approach or vibe that makes you a more memorable guitarist, with the technique to back you up.

Alex Bruce is a writer for Guitartricks.com and 30daysinger.com.

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