Biography
Keith Richards is the architect of the open-G tuning riff style that defines some of the most beloved recordings in rock history, unlocking a rhythmic, percussive approach to guitar that drew on the open-tuned country blues of Robert Johnson and Charley Patton and fused it with Chicago electric drive. By removing the low E string and tuning to an open G chord, he freed his playing hand to explore riff patterns that feel both primally ancient and utterly contemporary, "Brown Sugar," "Start Me Up," and "Honky Tonk Women" were all born from this approach. His intertwining guitar relationship with fellow Stone Ronnie Wood defines the rolling, horn-like guitar weave that has been a Stones signature for five decades. Richards' genius is not flash or speed but feel and economy: the ability to lock into a groove and make every note feel inevitable.
Legendary Performance
Rolling Stones at Madison Square Garden
July 26, 1972 · Madison Square Garden, New York City
The Rolling Stones' 1972 North American tour, the "Exile on Main St." tour, was the band's first major American tour as the biggest rock and roll band in the world, following the commercial triumph of an album that had been received with critical ambivalence on release but had already begun its revaluation. The Madison Square Garden show on July 26 was among the most widely covered concerts of the year: the guest list included Carly Simon, James Taylor, Woody Allen, Bob Dylan, and Truman Capote, and the performance itself was filmed for what would become the "Ladies and Gentlemen, the Rolling Stones" documentary.
Keith Richards's guitar playing in this period, primarily on his 1954 Telecaster "Micawber," tuned to open G and played with five strings after the removal of the low E, defined what rhythm guitar meant in rock music for the generation that grew up on it. His parts on "Tumbling Dice," "Happy," and "Rip This Joint" are not the most technically demanding guitar playing of the era, but they are among the most structurally essential: without Richards's rhythm guitar, the Stones' music has no centre of gravity. The 1972 tour documentation is the most complete record of this contribution in its most fully developed form.
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"Micawber", 1954 Fender Telecaster (5-string, open G) (1954)
Known for: "Brown Sugar", "Honky Tonk Women", "Start Me Up"
"Micawber" is a 1954 Fender Telecaster that Keith Richards has played in modified form since approximately 1970: the low E string is removed, leaving five strings, and the guitar is tuned to open G, G-D-G-B-D from low to high. This configuration, which Richards did not invent but has popularised beyond any other player, produces a specific harmonic character: the open G chord rings with three strings unstretched, giving the chord a resonance and sustain that standard-tuned playing cannot equal. The five-string configuration simplifies the fingering required, allowing Richards to play full chord voicings with fewer fretting-hand fingers, and produces the driving rhythmic quality that defines his playing.
The riffs on "Start Me Up," "Brown Sugar," "Honky Tonk Women," and "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" were all written and recorded in open G on five strings. Richards has said that removing the low E string clarified the harmonic picture for him, the remaining strings produce the chord tones he needs without the bass register complication that the sixth string introduces. The technique has influenced more rhythm guitarists than any other single approach in rock music.
Fender Twins & Various British Amps
Known for: Rolling Stones studio and live recordings
Richards's amplification has varied across his career but has consistently favoured clean headroom over driven saturation: Fender Twin Reverbs for the clean, even frequency response that lets the open-G chord voicings ring without compression, and various British amplifiers, including Marshalls and Vox AC30s, for sessions where a warmer, slightly driven character suited the material.
His approach to amplification is the same as his approach to the guitar: the equipment serves the part, and the part serves the song. He has resisted the association of tonal identity with specific equipment that many guitarists cultivate, his tone is produced by the combination of open-G tuning, the Telecaster's character, and his right hand's specific attack, none of which is replicable through equipment choices alone.
Signature Technique
Open-G Five-String & Drone-Based Rhythm
Keith Richards removes the low E string and tunes the remaining five strings to open G, GDGBD, then capos at the second fret to play in A. This arrangement means that the open strings form a G major chord without any fretting, and any pair of adjacent strings produces a meaningful harmonic interval from the home chord. The result is a tuning system that makes rhythm guitar a fundamentally different experience: instead of constructing chords note by note, Richards works with the drone of open strings against moving melody notes, creating a layered, constantly resonating texture that sounds simultaneously loose and locked-in. The music feels like it is breathing.
The legendary riffs that came from this setup, "Start Me Up," "Brown Sugar," "Honky Tonk Women," "Tumbling Dice", are essentially accidents of the tuning's natural resonance. Richards has said that he finds the riffs rather than writes them: the open-G guitar in his hands tends toward certain shapes, and the shapes that feel right under his fingers happen to be the shapes that become Rolling Stones songs. His rhythm playing is not technically demanding in the conventional sense, but it is irreproducible in the deepest sense, it requires not just the tuning but the exact physical and musical relationship with the instrument that he has spent sixty years developing.










