Decoding Hendrix: RJ Ronquillo on the Sound Behind the Legend
PodcastA Strat, a Twist, and the Feel Before the Pedals
RJ starts where Hendrix really starts: the guitar.
At Carter Vintage, he picks up a ’62-style Strat with a reverse-angled bridge pickup — the same effect Hendrix got from flipping a right-handed guitar upside down. It changes everything: tighter, sharper lows and rounder highs.
He tunes down a half step, keeps the string gauges slinky, and shows how those choices alone push the tone toward Hendrix even before a single pedal comes on.
The Pedal Chain That Gets You in the Ballpark
From there, RJ walks through the classic Hendrix palette:
- Wah
- Fuzz Face–style fuzz
- Octave fuzz (sometimes)
- Uni-Vibe modulation
He runs everything into a clean Deluxe Reverb and uses a transparent overdrive after the fuzz to mimic a cranked amp. That small trick smooths the highs, thickens the note, and unlocks the touch-sensitive feel Hendrix relied on.
Most of the tone shaping comes from the guitar’s volume knob, not the pedals.
The Vocabulary: Bends, Feel, and the Human Element
RJ breaks down a signature Hendrix move — that bend/catch/release idea drawn from the minor pentatonic. But he’s clear: the magic isn’t the lick.
It’s the timing, attack, and looseness Hendrix brings to it.
The more you over-analyze it, the more you drift away from what actually makes it feel alive.
Rhythm Guitar as Drumming
One of RJ’s biggest insights: Hendrix played rhythm like a drummer.
- Low strings = kick
- High strings = snare
- Picking hand = steady 16th-note engine
Accents, mutes, and releases create the groove. RJ calls it one of Hendrix’s real superpowers — and proof that learning drums can make your guitar rhythm stronger.
Thumb Over the Neck: The Hidden Technique
RJ zooms in on Hendrix’s left hand: thumb over the top, freeing the other fingers for fills, double-stops, and chord embellishments.
It’s the secret to all those sliding shapes and melodic movements baked into his rhythm parts.
A Favorite Moment: The “Freedom” Riff
RJ highlights a bridge from “Freedom,” where Hendrix stacks harmonized lines in a way that feels powerful without turning muddy. Pickup position and note choice work together — another small detail that shapes the whole feel.
Finding Hendrix for Yourself
RJ suggests two starting points:
- Axis: Bold as Love — the arranged, textural side
- Band of Gypsys — raw, live improvisation at its peak
Together, they show the full range of Hendrix’s voice.
Why This Episode Fits the Sonora Mindset
RJ doesn’t treat tone as gear math. He ties together touch, tuning, rhythm, feel, and listening — the real building blocks behind Hendrix’s sound.
That’s the kind of holistic, musician-first thinking we try to nurture in the Sonora community: curiosity, craft, and understanding the “why” behind the sounds that move us.


