Songfacts®: You can leave comments about the song at the bottom of the page.
This song was inspired by the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, a concert held during 3 days of the "Summer of Love" (1967) featuring The Who, The Byrds, Janis Joplin, and many others. Attended by about 200,000 music fans, it happened 2 years before Woodstock. Jimi wrote about the atmosphere at the festival as if it was a girl. He described the feeling as "Everybody really flying and in a nice mood." He named it "Little Wing" because he thought it could just fly away.
The guitar on the song is played in a very unique style. Jimi frets the roots of chords with his thumb, and then elaborates on them. It often involves shifts of quartile to tertian harmony and vice versa. In theory it is quite similar to the Jazz style of chord melody.
The song is particularly revered among guitar players. Tom Morello wrote in this 2011 tribute to Hendrix in Rolling Stone: "It's just this gorgeous song that, as a guitar player, you can study your whole life and not get down, never get inside it the way that he does. He seamlessly weaves chords and single-note runs together and uses chord voicings that don't appear in any music books." (thanks, Ken - Tigard, OR)
The percussion instrument that sounds like a xylophone is a glockenspiel, an instrument popular in marching bands containing steel bars that are stuck with hammers to produce notes.
Jimi ran his guitar through a Leslie speaker to create an unusual sound. The Leslie speaker was designed for organs and contains a rotating paddle that distorts the sound.
In 1963 Jimi recorded a song that may have been a precursor to this. The song "Fox," which was one of his first recordings was played with sax player Lonnie Youngblood and sounded very similar to this.
This is one of the songs that had to be remixed just before the album was released when one of the master tapes went missing. No one ever found out what happened to the original tape but its been speculated that Jimi either accidentally left the tape in a taxi or purposely disposed of the tape because he wasn't satisfied with its sound.
This song, along with "Spanish Castle Magic," are the only songs Hendrix ever performed in concert from his Axis: Bold as Love album. He played this live only 8 times. (thanks, Bertrand - Paris, France)
Hendrix has described this as being one of the few he likes from this album. He said "Little Wing" is "like one of those beautiful girls that come around sometimes." Hendrix enjoyed writing slow songs because it was easier to put emotion into them.
The same day they recorded "
Layla," Eric Clapton and Duane Allman recorded this as a tribute to Jimi, who was one of their guitar heroes. Hendrix died 9 days later. He never heard their version of his song, which was released in 1970 on the Derek and the Dominos album,
Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs.
Irish pop band The Corrs covered this on their Live Unplugged album. (thanks, Nick - Cambridge, England)
Comments (101):
Amy Grant
The top Contemporary Christian artist of all time on song inspirations and what she learned from Johnny Carson.
Al Jourgensen of Ministry
In the name of song explanation, Al talks about scoring heroin for William Burroughs, and that's not even the most shocking story in this one.
Dino Cazares of Fear Factory
The guitarist/songwriter explains how he came up with his signature sound, and deconstructs some classic Fear Factory songs.
Michael Glabicki of Rusted Root
Michael tells the story of "Send Me On My Way," and explains why some of the words in the song don't have a literal meaning.
LOVE THIS SONG!!!
Concerts LP/CD.
Stevie Ray Vaughan gave it the full treatment on the posthumously released "The Sky is Crying" album, turning in a rather raw 8+ minute scorcher.
SRV was probably the only guitarist worthy of holding Jimi's jockstrap.
;-)
ther wouldn't be nothing if Jimi didn't wrote it. it's easy to improve such a beautiful song, but it's impossible to write anything quite good as little wing. why doesn't steve Rai or satriani don't have anything close to something as beautiful as this.
Now we do it with acoustic guitar in the original key but with a blue grass ending. Very fast at the end. So good to know what he wrote it about and the feeling he had. Thankyou
Steve, Albany N.Y
SRV's version was the killer. I usually listened to it by turning off the lamps first. Joe Satriani performed it live in tribute to SRV - and not to Jimi.
And what's stupid is that Sting covered this one's live and somehow he - and the band - DID NOT play the intro! It wouldn't be Little Wing without the intro, man. I hated Sting ever since (Okay, I never liked that guy anyway, but THAT made me dislike him even more)
Peace, out.
P.S.: Van Halen version? The 8:02 version? It's a SRV version rip-off w/lyrics!!!!! (I hope it's not Eddie who plays, I think it's actually the old G3) Monte Montgomery's version is quite good, despite it's an excuse for improvisation too!
dont even mention the intro :D
thanks
Both versions of the song are some of the most memorable recordings ever. I think Stevie's version is one of the best "from the heart" songs I've ever heard.
p.s
The movie "Once were warriors has an interesting instrumental version in the soundtrack"
Awesome performance!
Have a good search.