The Etiology of the Jangle
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
I always associate JANGLE with strummed passages or dense arpeggios. -and artists with a tendency to leave their pinky on the E string/3rd fret.
Jangle songs:
'Almost With You' - the Church
'Needles and Pins' - the Searchers
Rics have been likened to 'strumming bells'. This I like.
CHIME is the clear, ringing brightness of a single note -or the presence of defined individual notes withing a chord. Ric's and their crystalline, clarion chime.
Chime song? hmmm
'The Bitterest Pill' - the Jam
Of course, the Zombies 'Leave Me Be' does both with aplomb.
cheers, Noel
Jangle songs:
'Almost With You' - the Church
'Needles and Pins' - the Searchers
Rics have been likened to 'strumming bells'. This I like.
CHIME is the clear, ringing brightness of a single note -or the presence of defined individual notes withing a chord. Ric's and their crystalline, clarion chime.
Chime song? hmmm
'The Bitterest Pill' - the Jam
Of course, the Zombies 'Leave Me Be' does both with aplomb.
cheers, Noel
Shaking the floor of Heaven
I always considered the jangle or jingle tab stuck on the sound of Ricks purely through coincidence/adoption of Dylan's Mr. Tambourine Man lyrics, "in the jingle jangle morning..." and the Byrds soaring (excuse the pun) to overnight success with the song. I think the term 'jangle' was even used on the liner notes of the Byrds first album in reference to their sound. Call it jangle, jingle, crisp, clean or just sweet, any could fit a Rick.
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Music is too important to be left to professionals.
Music is too important to be left to professionals.
Noel: I know exactly what you mean about folks who "leave their pinky on the E string, 3rd fret". That describes a major facet of my self-taught guitar style. I wanted to jingle/jangle like The Byrds back as a teenager, but I couldn't afford a Rickenbacker 12-string, so I started augmenting my 6-string chords with my pinky. There's probably a proper term for what I'm doing, but I don't know what it is. Adding that ring to certain chords is second nature for me now.
- tony_carey
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Mitch, I believe that Ric CRW strings WILL add to the 'J' factor! My new 330 came with pyramids on & I find them much less chimey & jangly than all my other Rics which are strung with CRW's. I am definately not a flatwound pyramid fan & my playing & sound suffered at their hands! Strings make an incredible difference to your sound. I get through 2-3 sets of strings a week & would LOVE to buy cheaper strings. Fact is, Ric strings help to give me 'that' Ric sound that I love so much.
'Rickenbacker'...what a name! After all these years, it still thrills me.
compression, EQ, and chord voicings w/open strings, octaves, or doubled notes.
Check out my arrangement of an original tune that's nearing completion. Tons of jangle, and nary a rick in sight (well, the bass is a v63).
http://andymcrory.com/doingallright1.mp3
-a
Check out my arrangement of an original tune that's nearing completion. Tons of jangle, and nary a rick in sight (well, the bass is a v63).
http://andymcrory.com/doingallright1.mp3
-a
No matter how bad it gets, there are always songs.
- tony_carey
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 2055
- Joined: Thu Oct 28, 2004 6:00 am
- Contact:
I'm also a bassist, and, as this is pop, there are no altered chords (alt meaning b5b9 or #9 or b13, etc.). You're hearing a garden-variety major-to-minor change (Dmaj to Dm) -- the Beatles do that all the time, as do other pop groups (Hall & Oates used that trick a lot, as in "Your Kiss is on my List"). Once Paul-ish thing I did on that part is walk from the D to the F, accentuating the minor 3rd.
-a
-a
No matter how bad it gets, there are always songs.
