Guitar & Bass Tabs
Jimi Hendrix
About Jimi Hendrix
Jimi Hendrix redefined rock guitar in the late 1960s, fusing blues fire with psychedelic experimentation and virtuosic improvisation into a sound that still reverberates through the genre. A fearless tone architect, he turned feedback into a musical voice and expanded what a guitarist could express with a single instrument. Born Johnny Allen Hendrix in Seattle in 1942, he navigated blues and R&B scenes before exploding onto the world stage after crossing to London in 1966, forming the Jimi Hendrix Experience with Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell. The trio unleashed Are You Experienced and Axis: Bold as Love in 1967, then pushed studio technique on Electric Ladyland while his blistering live performances demonstrated guitar as both instrument and theater. Hendrix’s career, though brief (primarily active 1966–1970 with the Experience), reshaped rock and inspired generations to explore noise, nuance, and fearless innovation.
Hendrix’s influence extends beyond stunning solos: he popularized the use of controlled feedback, cut through conventional blues forms with daring phrasing, and elevated the guitar to a voice capable of singing, shouting, and whispering. His Monterey Pop Festival appearance in 1967, Woodstock in 1969, and a succession of iconic recordings left an indelible blueprint for how a guitarist could channel raw emotion through tone, dynamics, and improvisation. His posthumous legacy includes a lasting impact on hard rock, psych-rock, funk-influenced rock, and beyond, earning him a permanent place in the annals of rock history and a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in 1992.
🎸 Want to know what gear Jimi Hendrix used, their playing style, and fun facts? Scroll below the lessons!
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The Wind Cries Mary
Jimi Hendrix
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Purple Haze
Jimi Hendrix
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Little Wing
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All Along The Watchtower
Jimi Hendrix
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Hey Joe
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Castles Made Of Sand
Jimi Hendrix
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Fire
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Bold As Love
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Spanish Castle Magic
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Manic Depression
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Foxey Lady
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Red House
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One Rainy Wish
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Crosstown Traffic
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Long Hot Summer Night
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Gypsy Eyes
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Burning Of The Midnight Lamp
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Wait Until Tomorrow
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If 6 Was 9
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Red House
Jimi Hendrix
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Jimi Hendrix’s playing style fused blues vocabulary with psychedelic textures and fearless improvisation. He treated the guitar as a voice, bending notes with a singing vibrato, weaving rapid-fire runs with expressive pauses, and using controlled feedback to sculpt melodic lines and signatures on top of heavy riffs. His approach blends classic blues scales with blues-rock phrasing, modal touches, and daring octave ideas, all delivered with dynamic nuance from whispering cleans to roaring sustain. Live, he built conversations between guitar and rhythm section, layering textures and pushing tone into uncharted territory through aggressive picking, hybrid picking when needed, and inventive use of tone-shaping devices to paint sonic landscapes that feel both intimate and cosmic.
🎸 Gear & Equipment
Hendrix’s iconic setup centered on a Fender Stratocaster (often left-handed and flipped for his style), plugged into loud Marshall amps to deliver searing, saturated tones. His pedalboard and signal chain featured Roger Mayer Octavia for octave-up fuzz, the Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face for raw, expressive fuzz, the Cry Baby wah for vocal sweeps, and a Uni-Vibe to create shimmering, swirling textures. In the studio, he experimented with tape delay and other effects to craft otherworldly textures that complemented his live aggression and melodic inventiveness.
Why Learn Jimi Hendrix Songs?
Learning Jimi Hendrix’s repertoire on guitar is a fast track to developing core rock skills: expressive bending, precise vibrato, dynamic phrasing, and confident tone shaping. These tracks blend blues-based riffs with bold lead lines, teaching you how to balance rhythm and melody, control sustain, and use effects tastefully to color your playing. The collection spans approachable blues-rock licks to more advanced, improvisational passages, offering a progressive path that builds foundational skills while encouraging fearless experimentation and stage-ready confidence.
Did You Know?
- 1Hendrix played a right-handed Fender Stratocaster flipped upside down to suit his left-handed playing style.
- 2He briefly served in the U.S. Army before pursuing a full-time music career.
- 3The octave-up fuzz pedal Octavia (by Roger Mayer) helped shape his signature Purple Haze tone.
- 4His 1967 Monterey Pop Festival performance is widely regarded as one of the defining moments in rock history.
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