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Guitar moves

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Guitar moves are moves or stunts, which are done involving (most commonly) an electric guitar or bass guitar. These moves exist as pieces of stage flair used by band members to either emphasize a climax to a song or as a piece of visual entertainment to impress the audience.

Contents

[edit] Windmill

Made famous by The Who's guitarist Pete Townshend.[1] Townshend claimed he first saw it performed by Keith Richards, who was warming up before a concert. After the concert Pete asked Keith if he could use the move, Keith had no recollection of doing it. The windmill involves holding the guitar in a chord position while rotating the fully extended picking arm quickly and hitting the strings, thereby striking the chord. Townshend performed the windmill with such force that at a show in Tacoma, Washington in 1989, he actually drove the guitar's tremolo bar through his picking hand and needed to be rushed to the hospital. [2]

[edit] Duck walk

Possibly done first by T-Bone Walker but made famous by Chuck Berry and later Angus Young of the hard rock group AC/DC, The Duck Walk, is a guitar move that consists of jumping on one leg and moving the other in a back-and-forth motion, which looks vaguely like the awkward waddle of a duck.

[edit] Playing with teeth

A move said to have been first done by T-Bone Walker and later Buddy Guy, popularized by Jimi Hendrix[3] that involves plucking strings with the upper teeth. Because it doesn't allow much dexterity, it normally either accompanies a fairly simple part of a solo or is faked.

[edit] Playing behind head (or back)

It is said that Charley Patton was one of the first to do this move and later guitarists such as T-Bone Walker would also perform this move. However, it was popularized by Jimi Hendrix, it was also often used by Stevie Ray Vaughan[4] that involved playing with the guitar body resting on his neck behind his head. Vaughan was known to make this signature move by taking off his hat at the climax of a show and setting it on his microphone, and then pull his guitar over his head while continuing to play intricate solo work. This is a more difficult position to play in than merely shifting the guitar around behind your back, which is a more common version of this move, but both require playing solo work without being able to see either hand's action on the strings.

[edit] Over-shoulder throw

An equally flamboyant move used most notably by Yngwie Malmsteen[5]. The move entails literally throwing the electric guitar over the shoulder of the guitarist's fretting arm (the left on a right-handed player) so that it swivels around the back of the player, coming to rest in its normal position.

[edit] Setting guitar on fire

A move usually credited to Jimi Hendrix,[6] involves literally setting the guitar on fire and burning it partially or fully, sometimes playing it during the process, sometimes with an outcome of injury. Setting the guitar on fire is often also followed by smashing it to pieces. Jimi Hendrix is known to have performed this trick on at least three occasions with his Fender Stratocaster guitars:

[edit] Guitar smashing

Another move popularized by Pete Townshend, guitar smashing is just as the name suggests, smashing the guitar, usually at the climax of a set.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ thewho.net FAQ describes "windmill" style
  2. ^ Mike Walkerson, "Amazing Journey"
  3. ^ A video of Hendrix playing Hey Joe with his teeth
  4. ^ An article about SRV's unique playing style
  5. ^ A video of "Evil Eye" from the DVD "G3: Live In Denver".
  6. ^ CNN.com - 'Flaming' Hendrix guitar for sale - August 29, 2002
  7. ^ Jimi Hendrix biography
  8. ^ Hendrix's lost 1965 Stratocaster
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