Chords for John Frusciante - Dani California (Part 2)
Tempo:
148.9 bpm
Chords used:
Bb
F
Dm
C
B
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
In my opinion, it's such subtleties that go into a treatment like that.
You just can't repeat it twice.
I tried, but I couldn't get exactly.
It was missing something.
So I don't think the third verse one is as good as the first two verses, but it's still fine.
It has its own thing to it.
[N] And then a bunch of guitars come in in harmony, which that's something I figured out in the studio.
I don't even know what I played.
The [D] chords there are [Dm] this
[E]
[B]
I [G] shouldn't have hit that E string so hard.
[Dm]
That's one of those chord progressions [E] I was just really proud of.
[F] [C]
[D] I [E] like this chord with the E in the bass.
You're playing these diminished notes, so you feel [Bb] like it's all right to move up a
minor [E] third, but you retain that E in the bass, and it's just a really good dark.
[F]
[B] And so while that's going on, there's a bunch of [Bbm] guitars playing in harmony with it.
I guess like three different guitars.
[Gm]
[Cm]
[B] And there's like three that play in that group that are basically playing along with
the chords there.
And then we slowed the tape down and played super high notes [Bb] to go like
They kind of count off one, two, three, four to go into the chorus.
And [N] they wouldn't be playable on this guitar, and even if I did know what notes it was that
I played, because we had to slow down the tape and speed it up.
But yeah, there's a lot of things like that on the [Bb] album where
Basically, I've just been exercising my whole part of my brain [N] that understands harmony
and that understands how to create movement with harmony and how to create depth with harmony.
And those parts of my brain were just turned on throughout the writing, so when it came
time to record, it was pretty natural for me to just be [Bb] orchestrating guitar parts in the [F] studio.
Because once you're thinking that way, it's just logic.
It doesn't [Bb] require any real time or any real forethought.
So yeah, all over the album, I did a lot of harmonizing in [Bbm] the studio, which my brain
definitely didn't retain.
[Db]
But leading into that chorus, [Gb] again, there's still the Mellotron coming in, but we really
tried to make it as big as possible with that big buildup with the [Bb] extra chord thrown in
and all the [N] harmonized guitars.
And then that chorus, it's a double chorus, and the first half of it is like the other
ones, which is the double -grim guitar with the Boss Turbo Distortion.
And then [Bb]
a guitar part comes in,
[Gb] two guitar parts come in, [Bb] they're in harmony with each
other, [C] they're going
[F]
[D] [Cm]
This sounds funny right now because it sounds like this is the root, but really [F] [C]
it's
[Dm] [G] [C]
[Bbm] [Bb] And then I [B] had a harmony to that going on, and then three quarters of the way through,
[F] halfway through that part coming in, then two other guitars come in on the right [Am] that
are going like that.
[E]
[G]
Probably it's either [Fm] that part or something like it, and
[Dm] a [F] harmony to that coming [C] on the right.
So you've got a full [Dm] kind of clean [Gm] harmony,
[F] separate [C] groups of [Dm] harmonies going on, [G] one
on the left speaker and one on [F] the right speaker.
[C] [Dm] That's what [Gm] gets fun with harmony, [F] you get one group in one [C] stereo spot and another [Dm] group
in another stereo spot, and you can kind of pioneer to that.
[Bb] [Gb] And [Bb] then we
Eddie Kramer came over, Jimmy Hendrix's engineer, and showed us how
[B] they [Bb] did tape phasing back
in Jimmy's day.
And originally, Ryan and I, we phased Anthony's vocal on the whole song of Danny California,
but we [Bbm] ended up not using the mix that Ryan and I had done that on, [Bb] and so we didn't use
that, but we did use where we did this tape phasing, right going from the last chorus
into the guitar solo, and [Ab] that's actually from another mix.
The song was mixed twice, [Cm] [N] and the part that's being phased is from the earlier mix, and
we didn't know if it was still going to work, but we knew we could never get [Bb] that great
moment again, and because everything's out of phase, the subtle [Ab] differences of one mix
to another didn't end up making any difference, we just edited it right in and [Dm] it worked.
[F] [Fm]
The whole [Bb] solo is doubled, I [D] doubled it a month after I did
The original one was just done when we did the basic tracks, and then the double was
done later, [G] like a month later, and at the very end I'm playing super fast, [B] and there
was really no way to double it.
I [Bb] tried, but it was always going to be a little different, and it just seemed to take away
from the power of [Ab] it, so what I ended up doing was running just that part, the last part
where I'd step on the wah-wah pedal and I'd start playing really fast, [Bb] we put it through
my effectron delay where we just set it to one repeat, and we turned it [B]
so you don't
have any original signal, and we just turned it to a really fast delay, [Bb] and we took the
modulator and just made it [N] so it's modulating so slowly, and at just very little depth,
very little rate, but it makes it so it's not exactly [Bb] a consistent echo, and it ends
up sounding a lot like I'm actually doubling myself, but I'm faking it, and it [A] makes me
[N] sound like a genius who can double his own extremely fast playing, which, [Bb] you know, some
things I can, something like that I could come close, but [G] it starts to depend so much
on [Bb]
[A] chance when it comes [Ab] to something like [Bb] that.
So, [Ab] yeah, I think that covers everything.
[A] [F]
[Bm]
[C] [Am]
[D]
[Em]
You just can't repeat it twice.
I tried, but I couldn't get exactly.
It was missing something.
So I don't think the third verse one is as good as the first two verses, but it's still fine.
It has its own thing to it.
[N] And then a bunch of guitars come in in harmony, which that's something I figured out in the studio.
I don't even know what I played.
The [D] chords there are [Dm] this
[E]
[B]
I [G] shouldn't have hit that E string so hard.
[Dm]
That's one of those chord progressions [E] I was just really proud of.
[F] [C]
[D] I [E] like this chord with the E in the bass.
You're playing these diminished notes, so you feel [Bb] like it's all right to move up a
minor [E] third, but you retain that E in the bass, and it's just a really good dark.
[F]
[B] And so while that's going on, there's a bunch of [Bbm] guitars playing in harmony with it.
I guess like three different guitars.
[Gm]
[Cm]
[B] And there's like three that play in that group that are basically playing along with
the chords there.
And then we slowed the tape down and played super high notes [Bb] to go like
They kind of count off one, two, three, four to go into the chorus.
And [N] they wouldn't be playable on this guitar, and even if I did know what notes it was that
I played, because we had to slow down the tape and speed it up.
But yeah, there's a lot of things like that on the [Bb] album where
Basically, I've just been exercising my whole part of my brain [N] that understands harmony
and that understands how to create movement with harmony and how to create depth with harmony.
And those parts of my brain were just turned on throughout the writing, so when it came
time to record, it was pretty natural for me to just be [Bb] orchestrating guitar parts in the [F] studio.
Because once you're thinking that way, it's just logic.
It doesn't [Bb] require any real time or any real forethought.
So yeah, all over the album, I did a lot of harmonizing in [Bbm] the studio, which my brain
definitely didn't retain.
[Db]
But leading into that chorus, [Gb] again, there's still the Mellotron coming in, but we really
tried to make it as big as possible with that big buildup with the [Bb] extra chord thrown in
and all the [N] harmonized guitars.
And then that chorus, it's a double chorus, and the first half of it is like the other
ones, which is the double -grim guitar with the Boss Turbo Distortion.
And then [Bb]
a guitar part comes in,
[Gb] two guitar parts come in, [Bb] they're in harmony with each
other, [C] they're going
[F]
[D] [Cm]
This sounds funny right now because it sounds like this is the root, but really [F] [C]
it's
[Dm] [G] [C]
[Bbm] [Bb] And then I [B] had a harmony to that going on, and then three quarters of the way through,
[F] halfway through that part coming in, then two other guitars come in on the right [Am] that
are going like that.
[E]
[G]
Probably it's either [Fm] that part or something like it, and
[Dm] a [F] harmony to that coming [C] on the right.
So you've got a full [Dm] kind of clean [Gm] harmony,
[F] separate [C] groups of [Dm] harmonies going on, [G] one
on the left speaker and one on [F] the right speaker.
[C] [Dm] That's what [Gm] gets fun with harmony, [F] you get one group in one [C] stereo spot and another [Dm] group
in another stereo spot, and you can kind of pioneer to that.
[Bb] [Gb] And [Bb] then we
Eddie Kramer came over, Jimmy Hendrix's engineer, and showed us how
[B] they [Bb] did tape phasing back
in Jimmy's day.
And originally, Ryan and I, we phased Anthony's vocal on the whole song of Danny California,
but we [Bbm] ended up not using the mix that Ryan and I had done that on, [Bb] and so we didn't use
that, but we did use where we did this tape phasing, right going from the last chorus
into the guitar solo, and [Ab] that's actually from another mix.
The song was mixed twice, [Cm] [N] and the part that's being phased is from the earlier mix, and
we didn't know if it was still going to work, but we knew we could never get [Bb] that great
moment again, and because everything's out of phase, the subtle [Ab] differences of one mix
to another didn't end up making any difference, we just edited it right in and [Dm] it worked.
[F] [Fm]
The whole [Bb] solo is doubled, I [D] doubled it a month after I did
The original one was just done when we did the basic tracks, and then the double was
done later, [G] like a month later, and at the very end I'm playing super fast, [B] and there
was really no way to double it.
I [Bb] tried, but it was always going to be a little different, and it just seemed to take away
from the power of [Ab] it, so what I ended up doing was running just that part, the last part
where I'd step on the wah-wah pedal and I'd start playing really fast, [Bb] we put it through
my effectron delay where we just set it to one repeat, and we turned it [B]
so you don't
have any original signal, and we just turned it to a really fast delay, [Bb] and we took the
modulator and just made it [N] so it's modulating so slowly, and at just very little depth,
very little rate, but it makes it so it's not exactly [Bb] a consistent echo, and it ends
up sounding a lot like I'm actually doubling myself, but I'm faking it, and it [A] makes me
[N] sound like a genius who can double his own extremely fast playing, which, [Bb] you know, some
things I can, something like that I could come close, but [G] it starts to depend so much
on [Bb]
[A] chance when it comes [Ab] to something like [Bb] that.
So, [Ab] yeah, I think that covers everything.
[A] [F]
[Bm]
[C] [Am]
[D]
[Em]
Key:
Bb
F
Dm
C
B
Bb
F
Dm
_ In my opinion, _ _ _ it's such subtleties that go into _ _ _ _ _ a _ _ treatment like that.
You just can't repeat it twice.
I _ tried, but I couldn't get exactly.
It was missing something.
So I don't think the third verse one is as good as the first two verses, _ but it's still fine.
It has its own thing to it.
[N] And then _ a bunch of guitars come in in harmony, which that's something I figured out in the studio.
I don't even know what I played.
The [D] chords there are [Dm] this_ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [B] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I [G] shouldn't have hit that E string so hard.
_ [Dm] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
That's one of those chord progressions [E] I was just really _ proud of. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
_ [D] _ _ _ I [E] like this chord _ with the E in the bass.
_ _ _ _ _ _ You're playing these _ _ diminished _ notes, so you feel [Bb] like it's all right to move up a
minor [E] third, _ _ _ but you retain that E in the bass, and it's just a really good dark. _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
[B] And so _ _ while that's going on, there's a bunch of [Bbm] guitars playing in harmony with it.
_ _ I guess like three different guitars.
_ [Gm] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _
_ _ [B] _ _ _ _ And there's like three that play in that group that are _ basically playing along with
the chords there.
And then _ we slowed the tape down and played super high notes [Bb] to go _ like_ _ _ _
They kind of count off one, two, three, four to go into the chorus.
_ _ _ _ _ And [N] they wouldn't be playable on this guitar, and even if I did know what notes it was that
I played, _ _ because we had to slow down the tape and speed it up. _
_ _ But yeah, there's a lot of things like that on the [Bb] album where_
_ _ _ Basically, I've just been exercising my whole part of my brain [N] that _ _ understands harmony
and that understands how to create movement with harmony and how to create depth with harmony.
And those parts of my brain _ _ were just turned on throughout the writing, so when it came
time to record, it was pretty natural for me to just be _ _ [Bb] orchestrating guitar parts in the [F] studio.
_ _ _ _ _ Because once you're thinking that way, it's just logic.
_ It doesn't [Bb] require any real time or any real forethought. _ _ _ _
So yeah, all over the album, I did a lot of harmonizing in [Bbm] the studio, which my brain
definitely didn't retain.
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Db] _
_ _ But leading into that chorus, [Gb] again, there's still the Mellotron coming in, but _ _ _ we really
tried to make it as big as possible with that big buildup with the [Bb] extra chord thrown in
and _ _ _ _ all _ the [N] harmonized guitars.
And then _ _ that chorus, it's a double chorus, and the first half of it is like the other
ones, which is the _ _ _ _ double _ _ -grim guitar with the Boss Turbo Distortion. _
_ And then [Bb] _ _ _ _
_ a guitar part comes in, _ _
_ [Gb] two guitar parts come in, [Bb] they're in harmony with each
other, [C] they're going_
_ _ _ _ [F] _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ [Cm] _ _ _
This sounds funny right now because it sounds like this is the root, but really [F] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
it's_
[Dm] _ _ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _
_ [Bbm] _ [Bb] And then _ I [B] had _ a harmony to that going on, and _ then three quarters of the way through,
_ [F] _ _ _ halfway through that part coming in, then two other guitars come in on the right [Am] that
are going like that. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _
Probably it's either [Fm] that part or something like it, and _
[Dm] _ a [F] harmony to that coming [C] on the right.
So you've got a full [Dm] kind of clean _ [Gm] harmony, _
[F] _ separate [C] groups of [Dm] harmonies going on, [G] one
on the left speaker and one on [F] the right speaker. _ _
[C] _ _ _ [Dm] _ That's what [Gm] gets fun with harmony, [F] you get one group in one [C] stereo spot and another [Dm] group
in another stereo spot, and you can kind of pioneer to that.
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ [Gb] And [Bb] then we_
_ _ Eddie Kramer came over, Jimmy Hendrix's engineer, and showed us how _ _
[B] _ they [Bb] did tape phasing back
in Jimmy's day.
_ And _ _ _ _ originally, _ _ Ryan and I, we phased Anthony's vocal on the _ whole song _ of Danny California,
but _ _ _ _ _ _ _ we _ [Bbm] ended up _ _ not using the mix that Ryan and I had done that on, _ [Bb] _ and so _ we _ didn't use
that, _ _ but we _ _ _ _ _ did use where we did this tape phasing, right going from the last chorus
into the guitar solo, and _ [Ab] that's actually from another mix.
The _ _ song was mixed twice, [Cm] _ [N] and the part that's being phased is from the earlier mix, and
we didn't know if it was still going to work, but we knew we could never get [Bb] that great
moment again, and because everything's out of phase, the subtle [Ab] differences of one mix
to another didn't end up making any difference, we just edited it right in and [Dm] it worked.
_ _ _ [F] _ _ [Fm] _ _ _
The whole [Bb] solo _ is doubled, _ I [D] doubled it a month after I did_
The original one was just done when we did the basic tracks, _ _ _ and then the double was
done later, _ _ _ _ _ [G] _ like a month later, and at the very end I'm playing super fast, _ [B] and there
was really no way to double it.
I [Bb] tried, but it was always going to be a little _ different, _ and _ _ it just seemed _ to take away
from the power of [Ab] it, so what I ended up doing was running _ _ _ just that part, the last part
where I'd step on the wah-wah pedal and I'd start playing really fast, [Bb] _ _ _ _ we put it through
my effectron delay where we just set it to one repeat, and we turned it _ [B] _ _ _
_ so you don't
have any original signal, and we just turned it to a really fast delay, [Bb] and we took the
modulator and just made it [N] so it's modulating so _ slowly, and _ _ at just very little depth,
very little rate, _ _ but it makes it so it's not exactly _ [Bb] _ _ _ a _ consistent _ echo, and it ends
up sounding a lot like I'm actually doubling myself, but I'm faking it, _ _ and _ _ it [A] _ makes me
[N] sound like a genius _ _ who can double his own _ _ _ extremely fast playing, which, [Bb] you know, some
things I can, something like that _ I could come close, but [G] it starts to depend so much
on _ [Bb] _
_ _ [A] chance when it comes [Ab] to something like [Bb] that.
_ _ So, _ _ _ [Ab] yeah, _ I think that covers everything.
[A] _ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Bm] _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Em] _ _
You just can't repeat it twice.
I _ tried, but I couldn't get exactly.
It was missing something.
So I don't think the third verse one is as good as the first two verses, _ but it's still fine.
It has its own thing to it.
[N] And then _ a bunch of guitars come in in harmony, which that's something I figured out in the studio.
I don't even know what I played.
The [D] chords there are [Dm] this_ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [E] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ [B] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I [G] shouldn't have hit that E string so hard.
_ [Dm] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
That's one of those chord progressions [E] I was just really _ proud of. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
_ [D] _ _ _ I [E] like this chord _ with the E in the bass.
_ _ _ _ _ _ You're playing these _ _ diminished _ notes, so you feel [Bb] like it's all right to move up a
minor [E] third, _ _ _ but you retain that E in the bass, and it's just a really good dark. _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [F] _ _
[B] And so _ _ while that's going on, there's a bunch of [Bbm] guitars playing in harmony with it.
_ _ I guess like three different guitars.
_ [Gm] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Cm] _ _ _
_ _ [B] _ _ _ _ And there's like three that play in that group that are _ basically playing along with
the chords there.
And then _ we slowed the tape down and played super high notes [Bb] to go _ like_ _ _ _
They kind of count off one, two, three, four to go into the chorus.
_ _ _ _ _ And [N] they wouldn't be playable on this guitar, and even if I did know what notes it was that
I played, _ _ because we had to slow down the tape and speed it up. _
_ _ But yeah, there's a lot of things like that on the [Bb] album where_
_ _ _ Basically, I've just been exercising my whole part of my brain [N] that _ _ understands harmony
and that understands how to create movement with harmony and how to create depth with harmony.
And those parts of my brain _ _ were just turned on throughout the writing, so when it came
time to record, it was pretty natural for me to just be _ _ [Bb] orchestrating guitar parts in the [F] studio.
_ _ _ _ _ Because once you're thinking that way, it's just logic.
_ It doesn't [Bb] require any real time or any real forethought. _ _ _ _
So yeah, all over the album, I did a lot of harmonizing in [Bbm] the studio, which my brain
definitely didn't retain.
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Db] _
_ _ But leading into that chorus, [Gb] again, there's still the Mellotron coming in, but _ _ _ we really
tried to make it as big as possible with that big buildup with the [Bb] extra chord thrown in
and _ _ _ _ all _ the [N] harmonized guitars.
And then _ _ that chorus, it's a double chorus, and the first half of it is like the other
ones, which is the _ _ _ _ double _ _ -grim guitar with the Boss Turbo Distortion. _
_ And then [Bb] _ _ _ _
_ a guitar part comes in, _ _
_ [Gb] two guitar parts come in, [Bb] they're in harmony with each
other, [C] they're going_
_ _ _ _ [F] _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ [Cm] _ _ _
This sounds funny right now because it sounds like this is the root, but really [F] _ _ _ _ [C] _ _
it's_
[Dm] _ _ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _
_ [Bbm] _ [Bb] And then _ I [B] had _ a harmony to that going on, and _ then three quarters of the way through,
_ [F] _ _ _ halfway through that part coming in, then two other guitars come in on the right [Am] that
are going like that. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _
Probably it's either [Fm] that part or something like it, and _
[Dm] _ a [F] harmony to that coming [C] on the right.
So you've got a full [Dm] kind of clean _ [Gm] harmony, _
[F] _ separate [C] groups of [Dm] harmonies going on, [G] one
on the left speaker and one on [F] the right speaker. _ _
[C] _ _ _ [Dm] _ That's what [Gm] gets fun with harmony, [F] you get one group in one [C] stereo spot and another [Dm] group
in another stereo spot, and you can kind of pioneer to that.
_ [Bb] _ _ _ _ [Gb] And [Bb] then we_
_ _ Eddie Kramer came over, Jimmy Hendrix's engineer, and showed us how _ _
[B] _ they [Bb] did tape phasing back
in Jimmy's day.
_ And _ _ _ _ originally, _ _ Ryan and I, we phased Anthony's vocal on the _ whole song _ of Danny California,
but _ _ _ _ _ _ _ we _ [Bbm] ended up _ _ not using the mix that Ryan and I had done that on, _ [Bb] _ and so _ we _ didn't use
that, _ _ but we _ _ _ _ _ did use where we did this tape phasing, right going from the last chorus
into the guitar solo, and _ [Ab] that's actually from another mix.
The _ _ song was mixed twice, [Cm] _ [N] and the part that's being phased is from the earlier mix, and
we didn't know if it was still going to work, but we knew we could never get [Bb] that great
moment again, and because everything's out of phase, the subtle [Ab] differences of one mix
to another didn't end up making any difference, we just edited it right in and [Dm] it worked.
_ _ _ [F] _ _ [Fm] _ _ _
The whole [Bb] solo _ is doubled, _ I [D] doubled it a month after I did_
The original one was just done when we did the basic tracks, _ _ _ and then the double was
done later, _ _ _ _ _ [G] _ like a month later, and at the very end I'm playing super fast, _ [B] and there
was really no way to double it.
I [Bb] tried, but it was always going to be a little _ different, _ and _ _ it just seemed _ to take away
from the power of [Ab] it, so what I ended up doing was running _ _ _ just that part, the last part
where I'd step on the wah-wah pedal and I'd start playing really fast, [Bb] _ _ _ _ we put it through
my effectron delay where we just set it to one repeat, and we turned it _ [B] _ _ _
_ so you don't
have any original signal, and we just turned it to a really fast delay, [Bb] and we took the
modulator and just made it [N] so it's modulating so _ slowly, and _ _ at just very little depth,
very little rate, _ _ but it makes it so it's not exactly _ [Bb] _ _ _ a _ consistent _ echo, and it ends
up sounding a lot like I'm actually doubling myself, but I'm faking it, _ _ and _ _ it [A] _ makes me
[N] sound like a genius _ _ who can double his own _ _ _ extremely fast playing, which, [Bb] you know, some
things I can, something like that _ I could come close, but [G] it starts to depend so much
on _ [Bb] _
_ _ [A] chance when it comes [Ab] to something like [Bb] that.
_ _ So, _ _ _ [Ab] yeah, _ I think that covers everything.
[A] _ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Bm] _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [Em] _ _