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Friday, 21 August 2009

POST # 157 Johnny Smith on Vertical Voicing on Guitar

"I’m influenced by the way piano players voice chords and by vertically spaced harmony. This means a chord is voiced with the melody note on the top; each subsequent chord tone is written directly below. This results in very close harmony. Vertical voicings on guitar require large stretches. For example, here’s a vertical C6chord. Most guitarists play with a dropped tone, but I play vertical voicings because that’s the way I hear them—they sound natural to my ear. Vertical chord voicings are very common and basic to piano, but not to guitar. That’s why my sound is easily identifiable. It’s always been easy for me to reach vertical chords. But since I lost a small part of my left 3rd fingertip around 1963—it got caught in an airplane seat—these chords have been more difficult. Luckily, a doctor was able to graft a chunk of skin from my palm onto the fingertip. The finger is a little shorter than it was, but I’m fortunate I can use it at all." - Johnny Smith

( Johnny Smith plays his trademark vertical voicings in Moonlight in Vermont followed by a beautiful solo and harp harmonics to boot! Losing his fingertip in an airplane seat, ouch! - Ed)

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