James Marshall "Jimi" Hendrix
(November
27, 1942
- September
18, 1970)
was a Blues/rock
guitarist,
Top
40 act and an undisputed guitar innovator whose recordings
during the psychedelic
era helped to redefine the sound of the electric
guitar.
Following a medical discharge from the 101st
Airborne Division (from a broken ankle after a parachute
jump), Hendrix, who had been playing guitar (lefthanded)
since childhood, initially made his living supporting touring
soul and blues musicians, including Curtis
Knight[?], B.
B. King and Little
Richard during 1965.
His first notice came from appearances with The
Isley Brothers, notably on the two-parter "Testify"
in 1964.
By 1966
he had his own band, Jimmy James and the Blue Flames, and
a residency at the Cafe Wha? in New
York City. While with the Blue Flames, he was discovered
by Chas
Chandler[?], of British rock group The
Animals, who brought him to England,
where Chandler as the record
producer helped Hendrix form a new band, The Jimi Hendrix
Experience with bassist
Noel
Redding and drummer Mitch
Mitchell.
After a few concerts, the band started to
gain a reputation amongst their contemporaries, impressing
Eric
Clapton, Jeff
Beck, as well as members of The
Beatles and The
Who, who signed him to their record label. This promise
was borne out in their first single, a cover of "Hey Joe",
a stylized blues
song that was virtually a standard for rock bands at the
time.
Further success came with the follow-up,
the incendiary original "Purple Haze", whose heavily distorted
guitar sound would be highly influential for the next 20
years and ballad "The Wind Cries Mary". These three songs
were all Top 10 hits. 1967
also saw the release of the group's first album, Are
You Experienced[?], whose mix of melodic ballads
("Remember"), pop-rock ("Fire"), psychedelia ("Third Stone
From The Sun") and traditional blues ("Red House") would
prove the template for much of their later work.
At the instigation of Paul
McCartney the band were booked for the Monterey
Pop Festival[?], and the concert, with burning guitar,
was immortalised by filmmaker D.
A. Pennebaker[?] in his film Monterey
Pop[?]. The Montery festival was seen as a triumphant
homecoming. This was followed by a short tour opening for
the pop group The
Monkees who asked for him simply because they wanted
to see him play, but the Monkees audience didn't warm to
Hendrix and he quit the tour just as "Purple Haze" began
to chart.
Meanwhile back in England, Hendrix's wild-man
image and musical gimmickry (such as appearing to play guitar
with his teeth) continued to garner him publicity. 1967
also saw the release of his second album. Axis:
Bold as Love[?] was in the vein of the album Are
You Experienced, with tracks such as "Little Wing"
and "If 6 Was 9" showing his continuing mastery of his instrument.
The band's third recording, the double album
Electric
Ladyland 1968
, was more eclectic and experimental, featuring a lengthy
blues jam ("Voodoo Chile"), the jazz
inflected "Still Raining, Still Dreaming" and what is probably
the definitive version of Bob
Dylan's "All Along The Watchtower". (Hendrix credited
British band The
Alan Bown[?] for inspiration on the arrangement.) The
recording of the album was extremely problematic, with Hendrix's
work habits becoming erratic and a studio filled with his
hangers-on caused longtime producer Chandler to quit.
Despite this, many of the album tracks show
Hendrix's expansion beyond the scope of the original trio
(it is said that the sound of this record would help inspire
Miles
Davis' sound on Bitches Brew). Due to this
expansion of horizons, and a deterioration in his relationship
with his bandmates (and particularly Redding), the Experience
split.
By August of 1969,
however, Hendrix had formed a new band in order to play
the Woodstock
festival. The set, while notably under-rehearsed, ragged,
and played out to a slowly emptying field of revellers,
featured an improvised instrumental version of "The
Star Spangled Banner", distorted almost beyond recognition,
clearly symbolic of the unrest in US society over both civil
rights issues and the Vietnam
War. "The Star Spangled Banner" was an instant classic.
The inspiration was politically motivated and it was the
cry of the new generation.
The Woodstock band was short lived, and Hendrix
formed a new trio, Band Of Gypsys, comprising Billy Cox,
an old army buddy, on bass and Buddy
Miles on drums, for two concerts around New Year 1969/70.
The rest of that year was spent recording sporadically,
often with Mitchell, and attempting to carry out the Rainbow
Bridge project, an ambitious combination of film/album/concert
set in Hawaii.
In August he played at the Isle
of Wight festival[?] with Mitchell and Cox, expressing
disappointment onstage at his fans' clamour to hear his
old hits rather than his new ideas. He remained in England,
and on September
18th, he died in a barbiturate-induced
coma. His body was returned home and he was interred in
the Greenwood Memorial Park, Renton,
Washington, USA.
He left behind more than 300 unreleased recordings.
Jimi Hendrix one of the 1960's rock-n-roll musicians, like
Janis
Joplin and Jim
Morrison to 'go on to the next world' at so young an
age.
Hendrix' style of playing music along side
with the lyrics created a definite amazingly unique 'experience'.
Still today, not all Jimi Hendrix' musical configurations
are known.
Jimi Hendrix, a 20th century music artist,
still being listened to in the next century, around the
world,
by new generations of music lovers. Jimi Hendrix can be
found in many new media forms; vhs,cd,dvd, doing live performances
and personal interviews. Jimi Hendrix stepped into his own
mind and experiences. Shared it with the world, and so changed
millions of peoples formulated ideas about music. As with
other loved musicians, Jimi Hendrix' music is known to 'speak'
to one's soul