The part in technique that says "The off-beat (which would be syncopated) 16th note rhythm scheme is reminiscent of." directly contradicts the pictures that show the rhythmic notation of the piece, which clearly show the riff as being in straight 16ths.
Duffbeerforme ( talk) 16:45, 6 March 2009 (UTC) Did you ever look at the Ghits? I reworded it a bit.- Avant-garde a clue- hexa Chord 2 17:02, 6 March 2009 (UTC) Technique Sources do not come close to supporting that claim. Unreliable ghit numbers and a joke article do not support the claim that the song "is an integral part of cyberculture." That claim is not a neutral point of view and is original research unless you have a relisble source that directly supports the information as it is presented. Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.50.94.184 ( talk) 00:41, 21 October 2008 (UTC) integral part of cyberculture People can learn this song on guitar hero for a couple of months but few will ever be able to play the actual song, let alone coming up with it. This article should concentrate on the technical difficulties and musical values of the actual song, not how it is known because it is featured on guitar hero or whatever. The tempo is 116 BPM (constant for the whole song), and the notes are 32nd notes, which means 32 notes per measure or 8 per beat. Please see for the official Guitar Hero chart for which the song was recorded. Ouzo ( talk) 19:15, 22 January 2008 (UTC) Guys, the solo is 15.47 notes per second This article is about the song, not about what happens in Guitar Hero. While I agree it is a great accomplishment, it really doesn't belong in this or any article per WP:FAN. I've noticed a lot of reverts concerning Scorehero's HellAshes FCing Jordan. Ledgo ( talk) 12:05, 25 April 2008 (UTC) Inclusion of HellAshes's Jordan FC But he proved them wrong at the James Brown Tribute. There were alot of rumors that rised from the Guitar Hero II community about how he recorded the song. Though a late response, people thought he couldn't play it live, but he had recorded each of the solos seperatley, or that he laid down three guitar tracks. Why wouldn't Buckethead not be able to play his own song? - Ouzo ( talk) 13:57, 10 January 2008 (UTC) This however has been disproven due to a video of him playing the Guitar Hero II solo of the song at the James Brown tribute concert. Most had believed that the solo played during the Guitar Hero II version of Jordan could not be played, even by Buckethead himself. The key signature would be a nice addition Chicken picking is a type of hybrid picking, not the technique Buckethead used.
There's no chicken picking in this song, whoever added that was probably thinking of the bridge, where the guitar makes a chicken-like sound. Vixus 13:42, 20 April 2007 (UTC) this song isnt even on the myspace that is there. ~Jakeīuckethead does not have an official MySpace page and should not be mentioned without a link. Its not the "hardest" because hard means differently for some people like close frets, switching chords, strumming fast, cant change from chords to frets, it should be the most difficult because you pretty much have to use hammer-ons to pass. The preceding unsigned comment was added by Soulpopped ( talk i'd remove it but i'm not sure how, exactly, without making it look bad. The second external link when describing jordan as the hardest song is broken.