Premier Guitar features affiliate links to help support our content. We may earn a commission on any affiliated purchases.

Dave Navarro on Trainwrecks, Rabbit Holes, and the “Navarro Smear”

dave navarro cory wong

The guitarist goes long on influences, nontraditional structure, his signature style, and what happens when the band “trainwrecks” during a live show.


We know what you’re thinking: Dave Navarro is gonna talk about the onstage brawl. But Cory Wong starts this episode of Wong Notes with an important caveat. This show was recorded long before the awful breakdown and confrontation between Navarro and Jane’s Addiction vocalist Perry Farrell, so don’t expect any salacious gossip. But that just makes this episode all the more interesting.

Navarro talks Wong through his formative influences, from Hendrix, Zeppelin, and the Doors to Maiden, heavy metal, and goth. That melting pot, he says, became one of Jane’s Addiction’s calling cards: “Perry and Eric [Avery] ended up in a band that is influenced by bands they hate,” laughs Navarro, who geeks out on Rush and prog-rock.

Navarro discusses how Jane’s Addiction has a propensity for jamming live, a practice developed out of a mutual appreciation for nontraditional song structures. But the delineations can sometimes go wrong. “We do run into trainwrecks,” says Navarro. “Sometimes we’ll find ourselves in a part that we’re vibing on, and we’ll keep going, and Perry doesn’t know what we’re doing. He’ll come in and it’s in the wrong place, and we’re fucking him up.”

Tune in to hear Navarro talk his “rabbit hole de jour” practice style, how to exercise your fingers and your brain, and a lead technique he calls “the Navarro smear.” All this and more on this latest episode of Wong Notes.

Wong Notes is presented by DistroKid.
Use this link for 30% off your first year.

Get ready to rock with the guitar that’s turning heads! For the next 30 days, you have the chance to win the iconic Billy Corgan Signature Drop Z from Reverend Guitars.

Read MoreShow less

Neil’s brother-in-law Billy’s Ovation, before Neil’s repairs.


Reader: Neil Crump
Hometown: Austin, Texas
Guitar: King of the Road

When his brother-in-law passed away, this reader made it his mission to repair his old damaged Ovation guitar as a gift to his niece.

Read MoreShow less

Two horns? It must be a Bison!

Our columnist links a few memories together to lead us to another obscure guitar model—one he remembers from his childhood and came to acquire as an adult.

Do you have any “click and stick” movies that you love? Like when you are channel surfing and see a movie that you’ve watched a lot, and then just watch it again? Lately, for me, it’s been the 2015 movie The Revenant. It’s a truly brutal tale of survival set in 1820s frontier America. My gosh, that movie just draws me in every time. There’s one scene where the main character goes flying off a cliff while riding a horse! He just sort of falls/rolls through a pine tree and lands in the snow … and he still survives! It’s crazy!

Read MoreShow less

A 1000-watt speaker cabinet crafted for musicians who demand power and precision. Sunn Amps intends to reinvent the standard 4x12 configuration with the introduction of this new cabinet.

Read MoreShow less