
2 minute read
In Deep
COLUMNS IN DEEP
by Andy Aledort
For video of this lesson, go to guitarworld.com/december2022
IN THE OPEN
Incorporating open-string drones into an improvised solo
IN THE PREVIOUS two columns, we looked at the basic elements that make up Muddy Waters’ rhythm guitar playing and approach to single-note lines and solos on his blues classic, “Rollin’ Stone.” This month, we’ll add another essential element to the mix, which is the inclusion of open-string drones.
On guitar, a drone is most often played as an open string that is sounded and allowed to ring along with the performance of an additional melodic line. One of the reasons the key of E is used so often in blues guitar music is that both the open low and high E strings can conveniently be used as drones in order to fill out the sound while also serving to emphasize the tonic, or home key, of E. Let’s look at some examples.
In FIGURE 1, I fingerpick the open high E string with my ring finger while playing, on the lower strings, an improvised melody based on the E minor scale pentatonic (E, G, A, B, D). In bar 1, I attain unison high E notes by hammering-on from D to E on the B string while additionally fingerpicking the open high E. In bar 2, I drop this idea down an octave as I hammer-on from the open D string to E at the 2nd fret while fingerpicking the open high E string.
This technique can easily be applied to both melodies and solo ideas. In FIGURE 2, the song’s melody is approximated and sounded on the lower strings with the open high E drone added to the majority of the melodic line. FIGURE 3 presents another approach to a vocal-like melody, this time filled out with the inclusion of both the open B and high E strings.
As I mentioned in the previous two columns, Jimi Hendrix and Johnny Winter both recorded fantastic versions of “Rollin’ Stone,” dubbed, “Catfish Blues” by both of them, and — of course — both Jimi and Johnny added a barrage of brilliant musical ideas to the basic Muddy template. For example, Jimi would often craft phrases along the lines of FIGURE 4, repeatedly sliding up to B and D on the G and B strings while adding the open high E-string drone and additionally developing more complex rhythmic syncopations along the way, such as those in bar 3.
FIG. 1
FIG. 2
FIG. 4
FIG. 5 FIG. 3
During the “chorus” of “Rollin’ Stone,” Muddy adds an unusual syncopation to his vocal melody, which he mimics on the guitar. FIGURE 5 exemplifies this type of phrasing.
You’ll find many more twists on this stylistic approach to blues guitar in the playing of other essential artists like Lightnin’ Hopkins, John Lee Hooker and Robert Johnson, all of whom were huge influences on Jimi and Johnny, as well as every blues and blues-rock guitarist that followed and helped to develop and push the genre forward. All of the “first generation” blues guitar giants will continue to inspire for generations to come, so be sure to listen to them all, as every recording illuminates what blues guitar is all about.