I Tried Jimi Hendrix's Practice Routine #shorts

preview_player
Показать описание
#guitar #music #guitarist #shorts
yessir. trying out slim Jim Hendrix's practice routine. who's routine should I try next? dig it.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Also, Hendrix always made sure to film his practice routine for his tiktok account

raphcourte
Автор

Part of it was surf music too. He use to hang out at Dick Dale's store. Dale was an early Stratocaster pioneer. When Jimi wrote that line, "you'll never heard surf music again", it was a reference to Dale being diagnosed with cancer. Jimi was into the R&B scene up in the NW.

harvey
Автор

Let's not forget amazing natural ability and creativity. He wasn't just "good". He changed the way the guitar sounded, the way it was played, and opened up new doors. He even changed the way people THOUGHT about the guitar. It's been over 50 years since his death and guitarists are still building on his work.

nitroxsam
Автор

Jamming, then learning a song on the Radio seems like the most minimalist, casual practise schedule. And it still brought big results

sherwintavarez
Автор

I wanted to play like Hendrix. I did exactly this. I looked into his influences. Same with Clapton. I went back and learned early blues stuff by ear. Then one day I was able to guess Little Wing by ear in one shot because everything about it just made sense from all the old blues stuff I learned.

Early blues is incredibly good to learn for anyone looking to learn modern music because it is the foundation everything else is built on. Very little is difficult after learning that stuff.

TheDilligan
Автор

At 10 y.o. I started my lifelong (66 yrs) guitar journey, and Jimi was at the center of it all. You listen and listen and LISTEN, just because you LOVE it and it makes you high, makes you feel things that are amazing. Eventually it is so ingrained in your heart and musical sensibilities that you naturally emulate and “channel” (sorry but it’s a pretty good word lol) the essence. You play a lick so many times that you know that it sounds and *feels* just like how Jimi played it. Kudos to this young man - Sharing HIS journey with Jimi Hendrix with us. This is how his generation does it. Yes, he’s blasting it to the internet. So what? Bottom line is - this kid is spending hour upon hour, day after day, absorbing the heart and soul and *back story* to Jimi’s playing. *Good for you brother! Keep carrying the torch and bringing our hero into the next generation!* 🫡✌🏼

sgvincent
Автор

Tbh I don’t think you stated how heavily hendrix was connected to his guitar. He carried it to the bathroom with him, he brought it EVERYWHERE he went. It was his life and everything he did and it’s really hard to get that part across

lillykoroluk
Автор

Nice little clip! I've been obsessed with studying and learning all of Hendrix work, techniques, equipment and so on for 20+ years now. I'm very familiar with the quotes from Hendrix in this video and have applied them to myself. I find both aspects (playing to records and "jamming") are extremely useful. Sitting with a record will grow and develop your ear Imensely compared to tabs or instructional videos etc... Using your ears is so beneficial I can't stress it enough. Then take all the licks, progression, chords and ideas you've learned from the records and just spend hours jamming on them by yourself, learn them inside and out. A major trait in Jimi's riffing is he would play a lot of licks forward then repeat it backwards, this is essential in his lead work. It's not always present but it's one of those little details that are signature to his sound.

One aspects that is nearly impossible to duplicate in Jimi's playing is the effortless creativity he had. Music would pour out of him like a faucet and it was always sounding fresh and unique. The craziest aspect of Jimi is how rooted he was in the pentatonic. He rarely steps outside of it yet could make it sound fresh and original constantly. Learn Jimi's songs and lead work, most of it is the same chords and the same scales for EVERY song. The amount of diversity he could pull out of his pentatonic runs is mind blowing. I still get blown away today when I step back and just analyze the notes and it's literally just the same top half of the pentatonic. It's hard to describe but I'm sure anyone that has studied Jimi's technique even at a glance will see this.

Jimi has inspired me for 21 years since I first picked up the guitar and still inspires me every day. I still learn something new every day from Jimi and I've spent so much time studying him that it feels as if he was/is my teacher.

I love seeing Jimi continue to inspire, I see myself in nearly all guitarist that become infatuated with him, seeing them go thru and learn like I did in my Jimi obsession.

I'm hoping to start a channel to share the wealth of information I've learned and to share my perspective and my 'Experience' studying Jimi's work obsessively for so long.

Peace love and happiness ✌

VoodooChile
Автор

I love how SRV is playing in the background lol

jshgaming
Автор

I think the best/fastest way to become a top notch guitarist is to play with as many other guitarists as possible. Preferably guys that are better than yourself. That’s what Jimi meant about jamming.

sttvbn
Автор

It's not about effort. It's about finding something that truly brings you joy to the point where eventually people notice. People who don't practice or find it difficult, simply don't enjoy it enough to get good.
Hendrix was born to play. He was lucky enough to get noticed and make it big.

gordon
Автор

you're already as good a player as JH most likely. Thing with Hendrix is he was the og. Wrote it all, amazing performer, and it was groundbreaking.

scottthompson
Автор

Man I am the biggest Hendrix fan and dude what an amazing guitar player no one was soo complex and showed so much emotion through a guitar than him always will be the greatest guitarist that steeped on earth

itssslashhere
Автор

I think jamming along to music is essential for improv, plus it’s a fun way to practice. But I also think it’s useful to have some fundamentals in your practice routine, like chop building. If I want to play faster, the easiest way to build speed is with a metronome and some chop building exercises, usually variations of scales.

winklenator
Автор

Hendrix was a genius that still cannot be copied.

thiosemicarbizidebenzoylal
Автор

You literally opened a new pathway of learning for me 😀

adrielrebello
Автор

You saved me from self destruction. Your videos saved me from killing myself one day. I was practicing right after work and I couldn't seem to create anything. I was already on the edge of losing it all. I picked up my knife and held it to my throat.

A notification came on and your video. How to play like Hendrix came up. That video changed my whole perspective on life and even made me popular with my own style of videos.

How to sound like Kurt Cobain. Blew up. And it's all because of you. Thank you for saving my life and many others

OriginalKingRichTv
Автор

Love how you got the video starting explaining the basis, and then Stevie Ray Vaughn in the background. Always felt like he was the followup, the American Jimi Hendrix. Both great artists, both with similarities and differences. Love em both and loved this short. Good sh!t man

TheKobra
Автор

Tip for every musician: Don’t only use sheet music to learn songs, listen only sometimes. That’s what Jimi did

qwerty.
Автор

I never realized in that picture of Hendrix as a young kid that he’s rocking a Dano, so cool!!

haonyoass