James Marshall "Jimi" Hendrix (born Johnny
Allen Hendrix; November 27, 1942 – September 18, 1970) was an American
musician, singer and songwriter. Despite a limited mainstream exposure of four
years, he is widely considered one of the most influential electric guitarists
in the history of popular music, and one of the most important musicians of the
20th century.
Inspired
musically by American rock and roll and electric blues, following his initial
success in Europe with the Jimi Hendrix Experience, he achieved fame in the US
after his 1967 performance at the Monterey Pop Festival. Later, he headlined
the Woodstock Festival in 1969 and the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970, before
dying from drug-related asphyxia at the age of 27.
Instrumental
in developing the previously undesirable technique of guitar amplifier
feedback, Hendrix favored overdriven amplifiers with high volume and gain. He
helped to popularize the use of the wah-wah pedal in mainstream rock and he
pioneered experimentation with stereophonic phasing effects in rock music
recordings.
The
recipient of several music awards during his lifetime and posthumously, the
Jimi Hendrix Experience was inducted into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
1992, and the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2005. Rolling Stone ranked his
three non-posthumous studio albums, Are You Experienced, Axis: Bold
as Love, and Electric Ladyland among the 100 greatest albums of all
time. Rolling Stone also ranked him as the greatest guitarist of all
time, and the sixth greatest artist of all time.
Genealogy, childhood, and
militaray service
Hendrix's paternal grandparents, Ross and Nora Hendrix,
pre-1912
Jimi
Hendrix was of a mixed genealogy that included African American, Irish, and
Cherokee ancestors. His paternal great-great-grandmother Zenora was a
full-blooded Cherokee from Georgia who married an Irishman named Moore. They
had a son Robert, who married a black girl named Fanny. In 1883, Robert and
Fanny had a daughter whom they named Zenora "Nora" Rose Moore, Hendrix's
paternal grandmother. The illegitimate son of a black slave woman, also called
Fanny, and her white overseer, Jimi's paternal grandfather, Bertran Philander
Ross Hendrix (born 1866) was named after his biological father, a grain
merchant from Urbana, Ohio, and one of the wealthiest white men in the area at
the time. On June 10, 1919, Hendrix and Moore had a son they named James Allen
Ross Hendrix (died 2002); people called him Al.
In
1941, Al met Lucille Jeter (1925–1958) at a dance in Seattle; they married on
March 31, 1942. Drafted into the United States Army to serve in World War II,
Al went to war three days after their wedding. Born Johnny Allen Hendrix on
November 27, 1942 in Seattle, Washington, the first of five children born to
Lucille, in 1946, having been unable to consult his father at the time of his
birth, they changed Johnny's name to James Marshall Hendrix, in honor of Al,
and Al's late brother Leon Marshall.
Stationed
in Alabama at the time of Johnny's birth, and having been denied the standard
military furlough afforded servicemen for childbirth, the commanding officer
placed Al in the stockade as a preventative measure against his going AWOL to
see his infant son in Seattle. He spent two months locked-up without trial, and
while in the stockade, he received a telegram announcing his son's birth.
During Al's three-year absence, Lucille struggled to raise their son, often
neglecting him in favor of nightlife. Family members and friends mostly cared
for him during this period, especially Lucille's sister, Delores Hall, and her
friend Dorothy Harding. Al received an honorable discharge from the U.S. Army
on September 1, 1945. Two months later, unable to find Lucille, he went to the
Berkeley home of a family friend named Mrs. Champ, who had taken care of and
attempted to adopt Jimi, where Al met his son for the first time.
After
his return from service, Al reunited with Lucille, but his difficulty finding
steady work left the family impoverished. Both he and Lucille struggled with
alcohol abuse, and they often fought while intoxicated. His parents' violence
sometimes made Hendrix withdraw and hide in a closet in their home. Jimi's
relationship with his brother Leon (born 1948) was close but precarious; with
Leon in and out of foster care, they lived with an almost constant threat of
fraternal separation. In addition to Leon, Jimi had three other younger
siblings: Joseph, born in 1949, Kathy in 1950, and Pamela, 1951, all of whom Al
and Lucille surrendered into foster care and adoption. The family frequently
moved, staying in cheap hotels and apartments around Seattle. On occasion,
family would take Hendrix to Vancouver to stay at his grandmother's. A shy and
sensitive boy, Hendrix was deeply affected by these experiences. In later
years, he confided to a girlfriend that he had been the victim of sexual abuse
by a man in uniform.
On
December 17, 1951, when Hendrix was nine years old, his parents divorced; the
court granted Al custody of Jimi and Leon. At thirty-three, Lucille had
developed cirrhosis of the liver; she died on February 2, 1958 when her spleen
ruptured. Instead of taking Jimi and Leon to attend their mother's funeral, Al
gave them shots of whiskey and told them that was how men are supposed to deal
with loss.
First instruments
At
Horace Mann Elementary School in Seattle during the mid-1950s, Hendrix's habit
of carrying a broom with him to emulate a guitar gained the attention of the
school's social worker. After more than a year of his clinging to a broom like
a security
blanket,
she wrote a letter requesting school funding intended for underprivileged
children insisting that leaving him without a guitar might result in
psychological damage. Her efforts failed, and Al refused to buy him a guitar.
In
1957, while helping Al with a side-job,
Jimi found a ukulele amongst the garbage
that they were removing from a wealthy older woman's home. The woman told him
that he could keep the instrument, which had only one string. Learning by ear,
he played single notes, following along to Elvis Presley songs, particularly
Presley's cover of Leiber and Stoller's "Hound Dog". In mid-1958,
at age 15, Hendrix acquired his first acoustic guitar, for $5. Hendrix
earnestly applied himself, playing the instrument for several hours daily,
watching others and getting tips from more experienced guitarists, and
listening to blues artists such as Muddy Waters, B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf, and Robert Johnson. The first tune Hendrix learned how to play was
the theme from Peter
Gunn.
Soon
after he acquired the acoustic guitar, Hendrix formed his first band, the
Velvetones. Without an electric guitar, he could barely be heard over the sound
of the band. After about three months of being drowned out, he realized that he
needed an electric guitar in order to continue. In mid-1959, his father bought
him a white Supro
Ozark,
his first electric guitar. His first gig was with an unnamed band in the
basement of a synagogue, Seattle's Temple De Hirsch. After too much
showing off, the band fired him between sets. Hendrix later joined the Rocking
Kings, which played professionally at venues such as the Birdland club. When
someone stole his guitar after he left it backstage overnight, Al bought him a
red Silvertone Danelectro.
Hendrix
completed his studies at Washington
Junior High School,
but he did not graduate from Garfield High School. The school later awarded him an honorary
diploma and in the 1990s they placed a bust of him in the school library.
Army
Law
enforcement authorities twice caught Hendrix riding in stolen cars and when
given a choice between spending time in prison or joining the Army, he chose the latter
and enlisted on May 31, 1961. After completing his
basic training at Fort
Ord, California, the Army assigned
him to the 101st
Airborne Division
and stationed him in Fort
Campbell,
Kentucky.
In
November 1961, fellow servicemen Billy Cox walked past the service club and
heard Hendrix playing guitar inside. Cox, intrigued by the proficient playing,
immediately checked-out a bass guitar and the two began to jam. Soon after, they
began performing at the base clubs on the weekends with other musicians in a
loosely organized band called the Casuals. On June 29, 1962, Captain Gilbert
Batchman granted Hendrix an honorable discharge on the basis of unsuitability.
Musical career
Early years
In
September 1963, after Cox was discharged from the Army, he and Hendrix moved to
Clarksville,
Tennessee
and formed a new band called the King Kasuals. Hendrix had watched Butch Snipes
play with his teeth in Seattle and by now Alphonso 'Baby Boo' Young, the other
guitarist in the band, also performed this guitar gimmick. Not to be upstaged,
it was then that Hendrix learned to play with his teeth, according to Hendrix:
"the idea of doing that came to me in a town in Tennessee. Down there you
have to play with your teeth or else you get shot. There's a trail of broken
teeth all over the stage." They
played mainly in low-paying gigs at obscure venues. The band eventually moved
to Nashville's Jefferson Street,
the traditional heart of Nashville's black community and home to a thriving rhythm and blues music scene. While
in Nashville, they earned a brief residency playing at a popular venue in town,
the Club del Morocco. For the next two years, Hendrix made a living performing
at a circuit of venues throughout the South. Affiliated with the Theater Owners' Booking
Association
(TOBA), it was also widely known as the Chitlin' Circuit. In addition to
performing in his own band, Hendrix performed in backing bands for various
soul, R&B, and blues musicians, including Wilson Pickett, Chuck Jackson, Slim Harpo, Tommy Tucker, Sam Cooke, and Jackie Wilson.
In
January 1964, feeling he had outgrown the circuit artistically and frustrated
by having to follow the rules of bandleaders, Hendrix decided to venture out on
his own. He moved into the Hotel Theresa in Harlem,
where he soon befriended Lithofayne Pridgeon, known as "Faye", she
became his girlfriend. Pridgeon, a Harlem native with connections throughout
the area's music scene, provided Hendrix with shelter, support, and
encouragement. He also met the Allen twins, Arthur and Albert. In February
1964, Hendrix won first prize in the Apollo Theater amateur contest.
Hoping to land a gig, he played the club circuit and sat in with various bands.
At the recommendation of a former associate of Joe Tex, Ronnie Isley granted Hendrix an audition
that led to an offer to become the guitarist with the Isley Brothers' back-up band, the
I.B. Specials; Hendrix readily accepted.
First recordings
In
March 1964, Hendrix recorded the two-part single "Testify" with the Isley
Brothers. Released in June 1964, it failed to chart. After touring with the
band through the summer of 1964, he quit after a gig in Nashville. In September
1964, Hendrix joined Little
Richard's
touring band, the Upsetters. During a stop in Los Angeles, Hendrix recorded his
first and only single with Richard, "I Don't Know What You Got (But It's
Got Me)", written by Don Covay
and released by Vee-Jay Records. In July 1965, on Nashville's Channel 5 Night
Train, he made his first television appearance. Performing in Little
Richard's ensemble band, Hendrix backed up vocalists "Buddy and
Stacy" on "Shotgun". The video recording of the show marks the
earliest known footage of Hendrix performing. He often clashed with Richard
over tardiness, wardrobe, and his stage antics, so in late July 1965, Richard's
brother Robert fired him. He then briefly rejoined the Isley Brothers, and
recorded a second single with them, "Move Over and Let Me Dance"
backed with "Have You Ever Been Disappointed".
Later
that year, Hendrix joined a New York–based R&B band, Curtis Knight and the
Squires,
after meeting Knight in the lobby of a hotel where both men were staying.
Hendrix performed on and off with them for eight months. In October 1965, he
and Knight recorded the single, "How Would You Feel" backed with
"Welcome Home" and on October 15 Hendrix signed a three-year
recording contract with entrepreneur Ed Chalpin. While the relationship with
Chalpin was short-lived, his contract remained in force, which caused
considerable problems for Hendrix later on in his career. During his time with
Curtis Knight and the Squires, Hendrix briefly toured with Joey Dee and the
Starliters
and worked with King Curtis on several recordings including Ray Sharpe's two-part single,
"Help Me".
In
mid-1966, Hendrix recorded with Lonnie Youngblood, a saxophone player
who occasionally performed with Curtis Knight. The sessions produced two
singles for Youngblood: "Go Go Shoes"/"Go Go Place" and
"Soul Food (That's What I Like)"/"Goodbye Bessie Mae".
Singles for other artists also came out of the sessions, including the Icemen's
"(My Girl) She's a Fox"/ "(I Wonder) What It Takes" and Jimmy Norman's "That Little
Old Groove Maker"/"You're Only Hurting Yourself". Hendrix earned
his first composer credits for two instrumentals, "Hornets Nest" and
"Knock Yourself Out", released as a Curtis Knight and the Squires
single in 1966.
In
early 1966, Hendrix formed his own band, the Blue Flame, which included
Randy Palmer (bass), Danny Casey (drums), and a 15-year-old guitarist named
Randy Wolfe. By June 1966, the Blue Flame began playing at several clubs in New
York, but their primary venue was a residency at the Cafe Wha? on MacDougal Street in
Greenwich Village. They gave their last concerts at the Cafe au Go Go, as John Hammond Jr.'s backing group.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience
The Experience in 1968
In
May 1966, Hendrix, struggling to earn a living wage playing the R&B
circuit, briefly rejoined Curtis Knight and the Squires for an engagement at
one of New York City's most popular nightspots, the Cheetah Club. During a
performance, Linda Keith, the girlfriend of Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards noticed Hendrix. She
commented: "[His] playing mesmerised me". She arranged for him to
join her for a drink, and the two soon became friends.
Keith
recommended Hendrix to Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham, and producer Seymour Stein. Both men failed to
see Hendrix's musical potential, and they rejected him. She then referred
Hendrix to Chas
Chandler,
who was leaving the
Animals
and interested in managing and producing artists. Chandler liked the song
"Hey
Joe"
and was convinced he could create a hit single with the right artist. Impressed
with Hendrix's version of the song, Chandler brought him to London on September
23 1966, and signed him to a management and production contract with himself
and ex-Animals manager Michael Jeffery. Chandler then
helped Hendrix form a new band, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, with
guitarist-turned-bassist Noel
Redding
and drummer Mitch
Mitchell.
Chandler also convinced Hendrix to change the spelling of his first name from
"Jimmy" to "Jimi".
Chandler
introduced Hendrix to EricClapton,
who had recently co-founded Cream.
On September 30, Chandler brought Hendrix to the London Polytechnic at Regent Street,
where Cream was scheduled to perform, and it was then that Hendrix and Clapton
first met. Clapton commented: "He asked if he could play a couple of
numbers. I said, 'Of course', but I had a funny feeling about him."
Halfway through Cream's set, Hendrix took the stage and performed a frantic
version of the Howlin' Wolf song "Killing Floor". Clapton
described the performance: "He played just about every style you could
think of, and not in a flashy way. I mean he did a few of his tricks, like
playing with his teeth and behind his back, but it wasn't in an upstaging sense
at all, and that was it ... He walked off, and my life was never the same
again".
UK success
In
mid-October 1966, Chandler arranged for the Experience to accompany Johnny Hallyday as his support act
for a brief tour of France. Their enthusiastically received 15-minute
performance at the Olympia theatre in Paris on
October 18 marks the earliest known recording of the band. In late October, Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, managers of the Who, signed the
Experience to their newly-formed record label, Track Records, who released the
Experience's first single on October 23. "Hey Joe", a cover of the Billy Roberts song, which included
a female backing chorus provided by the Breakaways, was backed by
Hendrix's first songwriting effort, "Stone Free".
In
mid-November, they gave a showcase performance at London's newly opened
nightclub the
Bag O'Nails,
with Clapton, JohnLennon, Paul McCartney, Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend, Brian Jones, Mick Jagger, and Kevin Ayers in attendance. Ayers
described the crowd's reaction as stunned disbelief: "All the stars were
there, and I heard serious comments, you know 'shit', 'Jesus', 'damn' and other
words worse than that." The performance's success earned Hendrix his first
interview, published in Record Mirror on December 10, two weeks before the release
of "Hey Joe". Record Mirror printed the interview with the
headline: "Mr. Phenomenon". "Now hear this ... we predict
that [Hendrix] is going to whirl around the business like a tornado". Bill Harry asked the rhetorical
question: "Is that full, big, swinging sound really being created by only
three people?" Hendrix commented: "We don't want to be classed in any
category ... If it must have a tag, I'd like it to be called, 'Free
Feeling'. It's a mixture of rock, freak-out, rave, and blues". After
appearances on the UK television shows, Ready Steady Go! and the Top of the Pops, "Hey Joe"
entered the UK charts on December 29 1966, peaking at number 6. Further success
came in March 1967 with the UK number 3 hit, "Purple Haze", and in May
with "The
Wind Cries Mary",
which remained on the UK charts for eleven weeks, peaking at number 6.
On
March 31, 1967, while booked to appear at the London Astoria, Hendrix and
Chandler discussed ways in which they could increase the band's media exposure.
Chandler asked journalist Keith Altham for advice, who suggested that they
needed to do something more dramatic than the stage show of the Who, which involved the
smashing of instruments. Hendrix replied: "Maybe I can smash up an
elephant", to which Altham replied: "Well, it's a pity you can't set
fire to your guitar". Chandler immediately asked road manager Gerry
Stickells to get them some lighter fluid. Hendrix gave an especially dynamic performance before
setting his guitar on fire at the end of his 45-minute set. In the wake of the
notable stunt, London's press labeled Hendrix the "Black Elvis" and the
"Wild Man of Borneo".
Are You Experienced
Rolling Stone described the double-platinum Are You
Experienced as Hendrix's "epochal debut", and they ranked it the
15th greatest album of all-time, noting his "exploitation of amp
howl", describing his guitar playing as "incendiary ... historic
in itself" and the songs as "soul music for inner space." The
founding editor of Guitar World called it, "the album that shook
the world ... leaving it forever changed". Released in the UK on May
12 1967, Are You Experienced spent 33 weeks on the charts, peaking at
number 2.
On
June 4, 1967, Hendrix opened a show at the Saville Theatre in London with his
own rendition of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", released
three days earlier. Beatles manager Brian Epstein owned the Saville at the
time, and both George Harrison and Paul McCartney attended the performance.
McCartney described the moment: "It's still a shining memory for
me ... The curtains flew back and he came walking forward playing 'Sgt.
Pepper'. It's a pretty major compliment in anyone's book. I put that down as
one of the great honors of my career." Released in the US in August by
Reprise Records, Are You Experienced, reached number 5 on the Billboard
Hot 100.
US success
Although
popular in Europe at the time, the Experience's first US single, "Hey
Joe"/"51st Anniversary", released May 1, 1967, failed to reach
the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Their
fortunes soon improved when Paul McCartney recommended them to the organizers of
the Monterey
International Pop Festival. McCartney insisted that the festival would be
incomplete without Hendrix, who he called "an absolute ace on the
guitar", and he agreed to join the board of organizers on the condition
that the Experience perform at the festival in mid-June.
Introduced
by Brian Jones as "the most exciting performer [he had] ever heard",
Hendrix opened with a fast arrangement of Howlin' Wolf's song "Killing
Floor", wearing what author Keith Shadwick described as "clothes as
exotic as any on display elsewhere ... He was not only something utterly
new musically, but an entirely original vision of what a black American
entertainer should and could look like." The Monterey performance also
included "Hey Joe", a rendition of B.B. King's "Rock Me
Baby", and Bob
Dylan's
"Like
a Rolling Stone",
as well as four original compositions: "Foxy Lady", "Can You See Me",
"The
Wind Cries Mary",
and "Purple
Haze".
The set ended with Hendrix burning his guitar on stage, then smashing it before tossing pieces
out to the audience. Filmed by D. A. Pennebaker, and later included in the concert documentary Monterey Pop, the performance
helped earn Hendrix the attention of the US public. After the festival, the
Experience played a series of concerts at Bill Graham's Fillmore, with Big Brother and the
Holding Company,
and Jefferson
Airplane,
before replacing the latter at the top of the bill after embarrassing the band
by out-performing them musically.
Following
their successful West Coast introduction, which included a free open air
concert at Golden
Gate Park
and a concert at the Whisky
a Go Go,
they were booked as an opening act for the pop group the Monkees, on their first
American tour. The Monkees asked for Hendrix because they were fans, but their
young audience disliked the Experience, who left the tour after six shows.
Chandler later admitted that he engineered the Monkees tour to gain publicity
for Hendrix.
Axis: Bold as Love
The
title track of the second Experience album, Axis: Bold as Love (1967),
features the first recording of stereo phasing. The album's opening track,
"EXP", featured innovative use of microphonic and harmonic feedback.
It also featured a stereo panning effect in which sounds emanating from
Hendrix's guitar move through the stereo image, seeming to revolve around the
listener. This album marked the first time Hendrix recorded the whole album
with his guitar tuned down one half-step, to E♭, which he used
exclusively thereafter and was his first to feature the wah-wah pedal.
A
mishap almost delayed the album's pre-Christmas release: Hendrix lost the
master tape of side one of the LP, leaving it in the back seat of a London
taxi. With the release deadline looming, Hendrix, Chas Chandler and engineer
Eddie Kramer had to remix most of side one in an overnight session, but they
could not match the lost mix of "If 6 Was 9". They soon learned that
bassist Noel Redding had a tape recording of this mix, which had to be smoothed
out with an iron as it had gotten wrinkled. Hendrix used a familiar guitar
technique during the verses of the song, doubling his voice with his guitar,
which he played one octave lower. The
founding editor of Guitar World described the LP as "a voyage to
the cosmos".
Disappointed
that the album had to be finished so quickly, Hendrix felt it could have been
better had they been given more time. He also expressed disappointment in the
album cover art work, which depicts Hendrix and the Experience as various forms
of Vishnu, incorporating a painting of them by Roger Law (from a photo-portrait
by Karl Ferris). Hendrix remarked that it would have been more appropriate if
the cover had highlighted his American Indian heritage.
They
released the album in the UK near the end of their first headlining tour there,
after which their performance frequency slowed briefly during the Christmas
holidays. In January 1968, the band travelled to Sweden for a one-week tour of
Europe. During the early morning hours of the first day, Hendrix became engaged
in a drunken brawl in the Hotel Opalen, smashing a plate-glass window and
injuring his right hand, for which he received medical treatment. The incident
culminated in his arrest, though the authorities released him pending a court
appearance on the 16th. The remainder of the tour was uneventful, though
Hendrix had to spend some time in Sweden awaiting his trial, which resulted in
a large fine.
Electric Ladyland
Electric Ladyland (1968) was the third and final studio album
released during Hendrix's lifetime. The double album was also the first
Experience album to be mixed entirely in stereo. Recording began at the newly
opened Record Plant Studios with engineers Eddie Kramer and Gary Kellgren and
Chas Chandler as producer.
During
recording sessions for the album, Chandler became increasingly frustrated with
Hendrix's perfectionism, who demanded numerous re-recordings that Chandler
deemed unnecessary. Hendrix also allowed various friends and guests in join
them in the studio, which contributed to a chaotic and crowded environment in the
control room, leading Chandler to sever his professional relationship with
Hendrix.
For
this album Hendrix began experimenting with different combinations of musicians
and instruments. During production, Hendrix appeared at an impromptu jam with
B.B. King, Al Kooper, and Elvin Bishop. In March 1968, Jim Morrison of the
Doors joined Hendrix onstage at the Scene Club in New York.
In
November 1968, the album reached number 1 in the US, spending two weeks at the
top spot. The LP peaked at number 6 on the UK charts, spending 12 weeks on the
chart. The founding editor of Guitar World described the album as
"Hendrix's masterpiece".
Breakup of the Experience
After
a year based in the US, Hendrix temporarily moved back to London and into his
girlfriend Kathy
Etchingham's
rented Brook Street flat, next door to the Handel House Museum, in the West End of
London. During this time, the Jimi Hendrix Experience toured Scandinavia,
Germany, and included a final French concert. They later performed two sold-out
concerts at London's Royal
Albert Hall
on February 18 and 24, 1969, which were the last European appearances of this
line-up of the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Gold and Goldstein filmed these shows;
however, as of 2012, they have not seen an official release.
Noel
Redding formed his own band Fat Mattress, which allowed him to play his preferred instrument, the
guitar. Redding spent less time with Hendrix, which resulted in Hendrix playing
many of the bass parts on Electric Ladyland. Fruitless recording sessions at
Olympic in London; Olmstead and the Record Plant in New York that ended on
April 9, which only produced a remake of "Stone Free" for a possible
single release, were the last to feature Redding. Hendrix then flew Billy Cox
to New York and started recording and rehearsing with him on April 21 as a
replacement for Noel.
The
last Experience concert took place on June 29, 1969 at Barry Fey's Denver Pop Festival, a three-day event
held at Denver's Mile High Stadium that was marked by
Denver police using tear gas to control the audience as the band played "Voodoo Chile (Slight
Return)".
They narrowly escaped from the venue in the back of a rental truck which was
partly crushed by fans trying to escape the tear gas. The next day, Redding
quit the Experience, returning to London. He blamed Hendrix's plans to expand
the group without allowing for his input as a primary reason for leaving.
After
the departure of Noel Redding from the group, Hendrix rented the eight-bedroom
'Ashokan House' in the hamlet of Boiceville near Woodstock in upstate New York, where he spent
some time in mid-1969. Manager Michael Jeffery, who owned a house in Woodstock,
arranged the stay, with hopes that the respite would produce a new album. To
replace Redding as bassist, Hendrix had been rehearsing and recording with Billy Cox, his old and trusted
Army buddy, since April 21. Mitchell was unavailable to help fulfill Hendrix's
commitments at this time, which included his first appearance on US TV – on the
Dick Cavett show – where he was backed by the studio orchestra, and an
appearance on The
Tonight Show
where he appeared with his new bass player Billy Cox, and session drummer Ed
Shaughnessy sitting in for Mitchell.
Woodstock
Hendrix performed at the Woodstock
Music Festival, along with many of the most popular rock bands of the time. It
took place on farmland rented from Max Yasgur, in Bethel, New York, from August
15 to 18, 1969. Although much of Hendrix's music had been written for a power
trio of guitar, bass, and drums, he wanted to expand his sound so he added
rhythm guitarist Larry Lee and conga players Juma Sultan and Jerry Velez. With
Mitch Mitchell, Hendrix called this new lineup, "Gypsy Sun and
Rainbows". They rehearsed for less than two weeks before the festival, and
according to Mitchell never really meshed. In addition, although Woodstock
would become famous and mythologized through the documentary film of the same
name, by the time of his performance, Hendrix had been up for three days, and
his band was short on sleep as well, contributing a rawness to their filmed
performance.
Before Hendrix arrived at the
festival, he started to hear media reports that the crowds of kids showing up
for the festival were swelling to biblical proportions, in addition to the
emerging logistical problems being reported at the site. This gave Hendrix
cause for concern since he did not like performing in front of very large
crowds. Since he was considered an important draw for the festival, and because
of his manager's negotiations, Hendrix was getting paid more than the other
performers, (US$18,000, plus US$12,000 for rights to film him). As the
scheduled time slot of Sunday night at midnight drew closer, Hendrix indicated
that he would rather wait and close the show. A substantial rainstorm that day
had delayed the schedule of performers, so when Hendrix insisted on being the
closing headliner, it pushed back the time when they finally hit the stage –
which ended up being 8:30 am Monday morning. The audience which had peaked
at an estimated 400,000 people during the festival, was now reduced to about
30–40,000 by that point; many of whom merely waited to catch a glimpse of
Hendrix before leaving during his show. This reflected the reality that by the
third day attendees had been sleeping in muddy conditions with limited food.
Hendrix and his band were introduced
by the festival MC, Chip Monck, as "the Jimi Hendrix Experience", but
once on stage Hendrix clarified, saying, "We decided to change the whole
thing around and call it Gypsy Sun and Rainbows. For short, it's nothin' but a
'Band of Gypsys'". He then launched into a two-hour set, the longest of
his career. Hendrix started off with a new song, "Message to Love",
his Woodstock set consisting of new material alongside his well-known hits.
Hendrix's rendition of the U.S.
national anthem, "The Star-Spangled Banner" occurred about 3/4 into
their set (after which he morphed into "Purple Haze"). The song had
actually been part of his set for over a year and he had already performed it
at at least 28 different concerts and recorded a studio version. During the
number, Hendrix used feedback and sustain on his guitar to recreate the sound
of wails and falling rockets. Although pundits quickly branded the song as a
political manifesto against the Vietnam War, Hendrix himself never explained
its meaning other than to say at a press conference three weeks later,
"We're all Americans ... it was like 'Go America!'... We play it
the way the air is in America today. The air is slightly static, see". The song
would become "part of the sixties Zeitgeist" as it was captured
forever in the Woodstock film; Hendrix's image performing this number during
the day wearing a blue-beaded white leather jacket with fringe and a red head
scarf, has since been regarded as a defining moment of the 1960s.
Hendrix performed "Hey
Joe" as the encore to finish off their set which concluded the 3½ day
Woodstock Music Festival. Upon leaving the stage, Hendrix collapsed from
exhaustion. After Woodstock, this particular lineup of the band appeared on only
two more occasions. The first was a street benefit in Harlem where, in a
scenario similar to the festival, most of the audience had left and only a
fraction remained by the time Hendrix took the stage. Within seconds of Hendrix
arriving at the site two youths had stolen his guitar from the back seat of his
car, although it was later recovered. The band's only other appearance was at
the Salvation club in Greenwich Village, New York. After some studio
recordings, Hendrix disbanded the group. Some of this band's recordings can be
heard on the MCA Records box set The Jimi Hendrix Experience and
on South Saturn Delta. Their final session together before Lee and Velez
left the band took place on September 16.
Band of Gypsys
In
1968, a contractual dispute arose in relation to a previous agreement Hendrix
had entered into with producer Ed Chalpin. The resolution for the dispute
included Hendrix having to record an LP of new material for Chalpin's company.
For the agreed upon album, Hendrix chose to record the live LP, Band of
Gypsys.
Against
the backdrop of widespread social upheaval in the United States that included
the African-American Civil Rights Movement, the escalation of the Vietnam War,
the growing Black Power movement, and several notable assassinations, Hendrix
created a new all-black band with Billy Cox and drummer Buddy Miles (formerly
with Wilson Pickett, the Electric Flag and the Buddy Miles Express). Critic
John Rockwell described Hendrix and Miles as jazz-rock fusionists and their
collaboration as pioneering.
Hendrix
had been recording with Cox since April and jamming with Miles since September.
He wrote and rehearsed material which they then performed at a series of four
concerts over two nights, New Year's Eve and New Year's Day at Fillmore East.
Recordings of these concerts became the material for the Band Of Gypsys
LP, produced by Hendrix. The album contains the track, "Machine Gun",
described by musicologist Andy Aledort as the pinnacle of Hendrix's career, and
"the premiere example of Hendrix's unparalleled genius as a rock
guitarist ... In this performance, Jimi transcended the medium of rock
music, and set an entirely new standard for the potential of electric
guitar."
Some
have thought that the creation of the band was Hendrix's efforts to appease overtures
from the Black Power movement and others in the black communities asking him to
become more militant in using his fame to speak up for civil rights. In 1967, Hendrix told Open City, a Los
Angeles-based underground newspaper: "Quite naturally I don't like to see
houses being burnt", referring to the Watts Riots that had occurred in
1965. He clarified: "I don't have much feeling for either side right
now ... Maybe I'll have more to say later, when I get more
political."
The
Band of Gypsys album was the only official live, complete LP of
Hendrix's music released during his lifetime. A couple of tracks from Woodstock
and one side of an LP of tracks from his Monterey show were also released,
later, in his lifetime. The album reached the top ten in both the US and the UK
in April 1970. The band also released a single "Stepping Stone",
which was given no publicity and failed to sell, and recorded three other
studio songs slated for Hendrix's future LP. In 1999, the tapes from the four
Fillmore concerts were remastered and additional tracks and edits were released
as Live at the Fillmore East. Litigation with Chalpin ended in 2007
after the "singularly uncredible witness" was fined nearly US$900,000
for failure to abide by contractual limitations and failure to pay Experience
Hendrix L.L.C. its court ordered royalties.
On
January 26 and 27, 1970, Mitch Mitchell and Noel Redding flew into New York and
signed contracts with Jeffery for the upcoming Jimi Hendrix Experience tour.
The next day, a second and final Band of Gypsys appearance occurred at a
twelve-act show in Madison Square Garden which was a benefit for the
anti-Vietnam War Moratorium Committee, titled the "Winter Festival for
Peace". Similar to Woodstock, set delays forced Hendrix to take the stage
at an inopportune 3 am, only this time he was obviously in no shape to
play. He played "Who Knows" before snapping a vulgar response at a
woman who shouted a request for "Foxy Lady". He played a second song,
"Earth Blues", he then told the audience: "That's what happens
when earth fucks with space—never forget that". He then sat down on the
drum riser for a minute and then walked off stage. Various unverifiable
assertions have been proffered to explain this bizarre scene. Buddy Miles
claimed that manager Michael Jeffery dosed Hendrix with LSD in an effort to
sabotage the current band and bring about the return of the Experience lineup,
but none of Hendrix's other close associates verifies his statement.
Cry of Love tour
A
week after the botched Band of Gypsys show, Hendrix, Mitch Mitchell and Noel
Redding gave an interview to Rolling Stone for the upcoming tour dates
as a reunited Experience. However, Redding never made the time to rehearse, as
Hendrix continued to work with Billy Cox. Noel was not told he was not going to
be playing until the pretour rehearsals. Fans refer to this final "Jimi
Hendrix Experience" lineup as the "Cry of Love" band, named
after the Cry of Love Tour to distinguish it from the original. Billy Cox has
countered on several occasions that this lineup considered themselves "the
Jimi Hendrix Experience" before they even went on tour and that any other
title is bogus. Billing, adverts, tickets etc. on the tour used "Jimi
Hendrix Experience" or occasionally, as previously, just "Jimi
Hendrix".
Two
of Hendrix's later recordings were the lead guitar parts on "Old Times
Good Times" from Stephen Stills hit eponymous album (1970), and on
"The Everlasting First" from Arthur Lee's new incarnation of Love,
not so successful and aptly named LP False Start both tracks were
recorded with these old friends on a fleeting and unexplained visit to London
in March 1970, following Kathy Etchingham's marriage.
He
spent the next four months of 1970 working on his next LP tentatively titled First
Rays of the New Rising Sun, recording during the week and playing live on
the weekends. The Cry of Love tour, launched that April at the L.A. Forum, was
partly undertaken to earn money to repay the Warner Bros. loan for completing
his Electric Lady Studios. Performances on this tour featured Hendrix, Cox, and
Mitchell playing new material alongside older audience favorites. The American
leg of the tour included 30 performances and ended at Honolulu, Hawaii, on
August 1, 1970. A number of these shows were recorded and produced some of
Hendrix's most memorable live performances. At one of them, the second Atlanta
International Pop Festival (1970), on July 4, Hendrix played to the largest
American audience of his career.
Electric Lady Studios
In
1968, Hendrix and Jeffery had invested jointly in the purchase of the
Generation Club in Greenwich Village. Their initial plans to reopen the club
were changed when the pair decided that the investment would serve them much
better as a recording studio. After the exorbitant studio fees incurred during
the lengthy Electric Ladyland sessions, Hendrix was seeking a recording
environment that suited him. In August 1970, Electric Lady Studios was opened
in New York.
Designed
by architect and acoustician John Storyk, the studio was made specifically for
Hendrix, with round windows and a machine capable of generating ambient
lighting in a myriad of colors. It was designed to have a relaxing feel to
encourage Hendrix's creativity, but at the same time provide a professional
recording atmosphere. Engineer Eddie Kramer upheld this by refusing to allow
any drug use during session work.
Hendrix
spent only two and a half months recording in Electric Lady, most of which took
place while the final phases of construction were still ongoing. Following a mastering
session at Sterling Sound on August 26, they held an opening party later that
day for Electric Lady Studios. Hendrix left for London after the party and
never returned to the newly finished studio. He boarded an Air India flight for
London with Billy Cox, joining Mitch Mitchell to perform at the Isle of Wight
Festival.
European tour
When
the Experience commenced the European leg of their tour, Hendrix, longing for
his new studio and creative outlets, found that he was not eager to fulfill the
commitment. In Aarhus, Hendrix abandoned the performance after only three
songs, remarking: "I've been dead a long time". On September 6, 1970,
his final concert performance, Hendrix was greeted with some booing and jeering
by fans at the Isle of Fehmarn Festival in Germany, due to his non-appearance
at the end of the previous night's bill (due to the torrential rain and risk of
electrocution). Several acts played after he left the stage; later, part of the
stage was burnt during the first stage appearance of Ton Steine Scherben. Billy
Cox quit the tour and headed home to Memphis, Tennessee, reportedly suffering
paranoia after taking LSD or being given it unknowingly, earlier in the tour. A
live recording of the concert was later released as Live at the Isle of Fehmarn.
Hendrix
returned to London, where he reportedly spoke to Chas Chandler, Eric Burdon,
and others about leaving his manager, Michael Jeffery. Hendrix's last public
performance was an informal jam at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in Soho with Burdon
and his latest band, War. Much of this was recorded on a Sony cassette recorder
by Bill Baker, of Shepherds Bush, London, then aged 20, who was present
throughout the entire performance. Two Hendrix tracks from this recording,
"Mother Earth" and "Tobacco Road", were later included,
without permission from Baker, on a bootleg LP, Can You Please Crawl Out
Your Window?, produced in the 1970s, and on an audio tape of poor quality.
In 2009, the entire recording entered general circulation within the collecting
community. Remastered in California in December 2010, it includes tracks from
the same night's performance by Eric Burdon's War. It is Hendrix's last known
recording; he died less than 48 hours later.
Death, post-mortem, and burial
Though
the details of his last day and death are unclear and widely disputed, Hendrix
spent much of September 17 in London with Monika Dannemann, the only witness to
his final hours. Dannemann said she prepared a meal for them at her apartment
in the Samarkand Hotel, 22 Lansdowne Crescent, Notting Hill, sometime around 11
p.m., when they shared a bottle of wine. She drove Hendrix to the residence of
an acquaintance at approximately 1:45 a.m., where he remained for about an hour
before she picked him up and drove them back to her flat at 3 a.m. Dannemann
said they talked until around 7 a.m., when they went to sleep. She awoke around
11 a.m., and found Hendrix breathing, but unconscious and unresponsive. She
called for an ambulance at 11:18 a.m.; they arrived on the scene at 11:27 a.m.
Paramedics then transported Hendrix to St Mary Abbot's Hospital where Dr. John
Bannister pronounced him dead at 12:45 p.m., on September 18, 1970.
To
determine the cause of death, Coroner Gavin Thurston ordered a post-mortem
examination on Hendrix's body, which was performed on September 21 by Professor
Robert Donald Teare, a forensic pathologist. Thurston held the inquest on
September 28, and concluded that Hendrix aspirated his own vomit and died of
asphyxia while intoxicated with barbiturates. Citing "insufficient
evidence of the circumstances", he declared an open verdict. Dannemann
later stated that Hendrix took nine of her prescribed Vesparax sleeping
tablets, 18 times the recommended dosage.
On
September 29, Hendrix's body was flown to Seattle, Washington. After a service
at Dunlop Baptist Church on October 1, he was interred at Greenwood Cemetery in
Renton, Washington, the location of his mother's gravesite. Hendrix's family
and friends traveled in twenty-four limousines. More than two hundred people
attended the funeral, including several notable musicians such as original
Experience members Mitch Mitchell and Noel Redding, as well as Miles Davis,
John Hammond and Johnny Winter
Drug use and violence
Arrest photo in Canada, 1969
Widely
associated with the use of psychedelic drugs, particularly lysergic acid
diethylamide (LSD), Hendrix had never taken psychedelic drugs until the night
he met Linda Keith, but had smoked cannabis. Hendrix also used amphetamines,
especially during tours. Friends and bandmates reported that Hendrix would
sometimes become angry and violent when he drank too much alcohol. Though
illicit drugs alone did not seem to produce a significant negative effect on
him, when he mixed them with alcohol, he would often become incendiary. Hendrix
friend, Herbie Worthington, explains: "You wouldn't expect somebody with
that kind of love to be that violent ... He just couldn't drink ...
he simply turned into a bastard."
A
girlfriend of Hendrix's, Carmen Borrero, required stitches after he hit her
above her eye with a vodka bottle during a drunken, jealous rage. Drugs and
alcohol played a role in Hendrix's 1968 rampage that badly damaged a Stockholm
hotel room, which led to him injuring his right hand and to his arrest and
eventual fine. After the burglary
of his house in Benedict Canyon, California, while under the influence of drugs
and alcohol, he punched his friend Paul Caruso and accused him of the theft.
Hendrix then chased Caruso away from the residence while throwing stones at
him.
On
May 3, 1969, while checking through Canadian customs at Toronto Pearson
International Airport, authorities arrested Hendrix for drug possession after
finding a small amount of heroin and hashish in his luggage. After being
released on a CAN$10,000 cash bail the same day, only four hours before his
show was scheduled to begin, the Experience performed at Maple Leaf Gardens
that night. The courts required Hendrix to appear before a judge at a later
date. In his trial defense Hendrix claimed that a fan had slipped the drugs
into his bag without his knowledge; he was acquitted of the charges.
Recordings and posthumous
releases
Hendrix's
recordings were originally released in North America on Reprise Records, a
division of Warner Communications, from 1967 until 1993 and were released
internationally on Polydor Records. Capitol Records released the Band of
Gypsys album in the US and Canada. British releases of his albums up to and
including The Cry of Love were first issued on the independent label
Track Records, which was originally created by the managers of the Who. Polydor
later absorbed the label.
In
1994, the Hendrix family prevailed in its long standing legal attempt to gain
control of Jimi's music, and subsequently licensed the recordings to MCA
Records (later Universal Music) through the family-run company Experience
Hendrix. In August 2009, Experience Hendrix announced that it had entered a new
licensing agreement with Sony Music Entertainment's Legacy Recordings division
which would take effect in 2010.
Reports
that Hendrix's tapes for a concept album Black Gold had been stolen and
lost from the London flat, are incorrect. Hendrix gave those tapes to Mitch
Mitchell at the Isle of Wight Festival three weeks prior to his death. They are
now in the possession of Experience Hendrix LLC. Hendrix's
unfinished album was partly released as the 1971 title The Cry of Love.
The album was well received and charted in several countries. However, the
album's producers, Mitchell and Kramer, would later complain that they were
unable to make use of all the tracks they wanted. This was due to some tracks
being used for 1971's Rainbow Bridge and 1972's War Heroes for
contractual reasons. Material from The Cry of Love was rereleased in
1997 as First Rays of the New Rising Sun, along with the rest of the
tracks that Mitchell and Kramer wanted to include.
Many
of Hendrix's personal items, tapes, and many pages of lyrics and poems are now
in the hands of private collectors and have attracted considerable sums at the
occasional auctions. These materials surfaced after two employees, under the
instructions of Mike Jeffery, removed items from Hendrix's Greenwich Village
apartment following his death.
In
2010, Legacy Recordings and Experience Hendrix LLC launched the 2010 Jimi
Hendrix Catalog Project, starting with the release of Valleys of Neptune
in March. Legacy has also released deluxe CD/DVD editions of the Hendrix albums
Are You Experienced, Axis: Bold As Love, Electric Ladyland
and First Rays of the New Rising Sun, as well as the 1968 compilation
album Smash Hits.
Musical influences
As
an adolescent during the 1950s, rock and roll artists such as Elvis Presley, Little
Richard and Chuck Berry earned Hendrix's interest. In 1968, he told Guitar
Player magazine that electric blues artists including Muddy Waters, Elmore James
and B.B. King influenced him during the beginning of his career, he also cited
Eddie Cochran as an early influence. In 1970, he told Rolling Stone that
he was a fan of western swing artist Bob Wills, and while he lived in
Nashville, the telvision show, the Grand Ole Opry. Of Muddy Waters, the first
electric guitarist of which Hendrix became aware, he said: "I heard one of
his records when I was a little boy and it scared me to death because I
heard all of these sounds."
Band
of Gypsys bassist, Billy Cox, stated that during their time serving in the US
military, he and Hendrix listened to mostly southern blues artists such as
Jimmy Reed, B.B. King and Albert King. According to Cox, "Albert King was
a very, very powerful influence" on Hendrix. Howlin' Wolf also influenced
Hendrix, who performed Wolf's "Killing Floor" as the opening number
to the set of his US debut at the Monterey Pop Festival. Soul guitarist Curtis
Mayfield also significantly influenced Hendrix.
In
early 1967, when asked what he thought about the music of the Beatles, Hendrix
replied: "Oh, yes. I think its good. They're one group you can't really
put down because they're just too much." During the same interview, when
asked if he had ever seen Pink Floyd perform, Hendrix replied: "I've heard
they have beautiful lights but they don't sound like nothing." In 1970,
during his final interview he commented: "They're doing a different type
of music. They're doing more of a space type of thing, I mean inner
space".
Equipment Guitars
Hendrix's Gibson Flying V guitar
Hendrix
owned and used a variety of guitars during his career. However, his guitar of
choice (and the instrument that became most associated with him), was the
Fender Stratocaster. He started playing the model in 1966 and thereafter used
it prevalently in his stage performances and recordings.
Hendrix
bought many Stratocasters and gave some away as gifts. The original Fender
Stratocaster Sunburst that Hendrix burnt at the Astoria in 1967, and that he
kept as a souvenir, was given to Frank Zappa by a Hendrix roadie at the 1968
Miami Pop Festival. After Astoria, the guitar was restored, and Hendrix had
burned it again onstage in Miami. Once in Frank Zappa's hands, Zappa had it
restored again and used it himself. As well as playing it, it was this guitar
that Zappa chose to be photographed with for the cover of the January 1977
edition of Guitar Player.
"I
had it hanging on the wall in my basement for years until last year when I gave
it to Rex [Brogue] and said, 'Put this sucker back together,' because it was
all tore up," Zappa told journalist Steve Rosen in a feature interview
inside the magazine. "The neck was cracked off, the body was all fired,
and the pickups were blistered and bubbled. That's the one that's got the Barcus-Berry
in the neck. A lot of people thought I had Hendrix's guitar from Monterey, but
it was from Miami; the one at Monterey was white and this one is
sunburst." As the years passed, Zappa only remembered having it after his
son, Dweezil Zappa, found it dismantled near his father's studio in the early
1990s.
"It's
a very inspiring guitar," Dweezil Zappa told BBC News, "because it
has such a unique history, one that can never be recreated." Subsequent to
having it carefully restored by the late master guitar maker, Rex Brogue,
Dweezil Zappa put the guitar up for auction in 2002. The highest bid for the
restored guitar was £300,000, but Zappa changed his mind and kept it.
Hendrix
used right-handed guitars, turned upside down and restrung for left-hand playing.
This had an important effect on his guitar sound: because of the slant of the
Strat's bridge pickup, his lowest string had a bright sound while his highest
string had a mellow sound, the opposite of the Stratocaster's intended design.
Heavy use of the tremolo bar necessitated frequent tuning; Hendrix often asked
the audience for a "minute to tune up", as heard on many live
bootlegs of his performances.
In
addition to Stratocasters, Hendrix was also photographed playing Fender
Jazzmasters, Duosonics, two different Gibson Flying Vs, a Gibson Les Paul,
three Gibson SGs, a Gretsch Corvette he used at the 1967 Curtis Knight sessions
and miming with a right-strung Fender Jaguar on the Top of the Pops TV
show, as well as several other brands. Hendrix borrowed a Fender Telecaster
from Noel Redding to record "Hey Joe" and "Purple Haze",
used a white Gibson SG Custom for his performances on The Dick Cavett Show
in the summer of 1969, and the Isle of Wight film shows him playing his second
Gibson Flying V. While Jimi had previously owned a Flying V that he had painted
with a psychedelic design, the Flying V used at the Isle of Wight was a unique
custom left-handed guitar with gold plated hardware, a bound fingerboard and
"split-diamond" fret markers that were not found on other 1960s-era
Flying Vs.
On
December 4, 2006, one of Hendrix's 1968 Fender Stratocaster guitars with a
sunburst design was sold at a Christie's auction for US$168,000.
Described
as the first guitar Hendrix set fire to, another of his Stratocasters was sold
at an auction for a record price in London two years later in 2008. Daniel
Boucher, an American collector from Boston, paid £280,000 ($497,500) for the
guitar. This guitar was set aflame at the end of the Astoria concert in March
1967. Hendrix's action "sent roadies rushing to put out the flames and
left Hendrix needing treatment for minor burns." Rescued by Hendrix's
press officer, Tony Garland, it was his nephew who came forward in 2007 and put
the guitar up for auction. The guitar had been forgotten in Tony Garland's
parents' garage for some forty years. In 2009, some experts in Hendrix's
guitars questioned whether the guitar Boucher bought was in fact an elaborate
forgery.
Amplifiers and effects
Hendrix
was a catalyst in the development of modern guitar effects pedals. His high
volume and use of feedback required robust and powerful amplifiers. For the
first few rehearsals he used Vox and Fender amplifiers. Sitting in with Cream,
Hendrix played through a new range of high-powered guitar amps being made by
London drummer turned audio engineer Jim Marshall, and they proved perfect for
his needs. Along with the Stratocaster, the Marshall stack and amplifiers were
crucial in shaping his heavily overdriven sound, enabling him to master the use
of feedback as a musical effect, and he created a "definitive vocabulary
for rock guitar".
Hendrix
most likely first heard a wah-wah pedal used with an electric guitar in Cream's
"Tales of Brave Ulysses", released in May 1967. In July, while
playing sets at the Scene club in New York City, Hendrix met Frank Zappa, whose
Mothers of Invention were playing the adjacent Garrick Theater. Hendrix
immediately became fascinated by Zappa's use of a wah-wah pedal and Hendrix
used one later that evening while recording overdubs in a studio.
Although
Hendrix typically used the Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face and a Vox wah-wah pedal, he
also experimented with other guitar effects. He had a fruitful association with
engineer Roger Mayer who later went on to make the Axis fuzz unit, the Octavia
octave doubler and several other devices based on units Mayer had created or
tweaked for Hendrix. The Japanese-made Uni-Vibe, designed to simulate the
modulation effects of the rotating Leslie speaker, provided a rich phasing
sound with a speed control pedal, and is heard on the Band of Gypsys track
"Machine Gun", which highlights use of the Uni-Vibe, Octavia and Fuzz
Face.
The
Hendrix sound combined high volume and high power, feedback manipulation, and a
range of cutting-edge guitar effects. He was also known for his trick playing,
which included playing with only his right (fretting) hand and using his teeth
or playing behind his back and between his legs. Hendrix had large hands and
characteristically used his thumb to fret bass notes, leaving his fingers free
to play melodic lines on top. A clear demonstration of this thumb technique can
be witnessed in the Woodstock video; during the song "Red House"
there are closeups of Hendrix's fretting hand.
Guitar rig and signal flow
Hendrix's
usual signal flow for live performance involved first plugging his guitar into
a Vox Wah-Wah pedal, then into an Arbiter Fuzz Face, and then into a Uni-Vibe,
before connecting to a Marshall amplifier
Legacy
Musical
His
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame biography states: "Jimi Hendrix was arguably
the greatest instrumentalist in the history of rock music. Hendrix expanded the
range and vocabulary of the electric guitar into areas no musician had ever
ventured before. His boundless drive, technical ability and creative application
of such effects as wah-wah and distortion forever transformed the sound of rock
and roll." Musicologist Andy Aledort described Hendrix as "one of the
most creative musicians of all time."
Instrumental
in developing the previously undesirable technique of guitar amplifier
feedback, Hendrix favored overdriven amplifiers with high volume, gain and
treble. He helped to popularize use of the wah-wah pedal in mainstream rock,
which he often used to deliver tonal exaggerations in his solos, particularly
with high bends, complex guitar playing, and use of legato. On most of his
recordings, Hendrix rejected the standard barre chord fretting technique in
favor of fretting the low 6th string root notes with his thumb. He also
pioneered experimentation with stereophonic phasing effects in rock music
recordings. Rolling Stone comments: "Hendrix pioneered the use of
the instrument as an electronic sound source. Players before him had
experimented with feedback and distortion, but Hendrix turned those effects and
others into a controlled, fluid vocabulary every bit as personal as the blues
with which he began." Hendrix also played keyboard instruments on several
recordings, including piano on "Are You Experienced?", "Spanish
Castle Magic" and "Crosstown Traffic", and harpsichord on
"Bold as Love", and "Burning of the Midnight Lamp".
Hendrix
synthesized many styles in creating his musical voice and his guitar style was
unique, later to be abundantly imitated by others. Despite his hectic touring
schedule and notorious perfectionism, he was a prolific recording artist and
left behind more than 300 unreleased recordings. Musically, Hendrix did much to
further the development of the electric guitar's repertoire, establishing it as
a unique sonic source, rather than merely an amplified version of the acoustic
guitar. Likewise, his feedback, wah-wah and fuzz-laden soloing moved guitar
distortion well beyond mere novelty, incorporating other effects pedals and
units specifically designed for him by his sound technician Roger Mayer (such
as the Octavia and Uni-Vibe) with dramatic results.
He
affected popular music with similar profundity; along with earlier bands such
as the Who and Cream, he established a sonically heavy yet technically
proficient bent to rock music as a whole, significantly furthering the
development of hard rock and paving the way for heavy metal. He took blues to
another level. His music has also had a great influence on funk and the
development of funk rock especially through the guitarists Ernie Isley of the
Isley Brothers and Eddie Hazel of Funkadelic; Prince; John Frusciante, former
member of the Red Hot Chili Peppers; and Jesse Johnson of the Time. His
influence even extends to many hip hop artists, including Questlove, Chuck D of
Public Enemy, Ice-T (who covered "Hey Joe" with his heavy metal band
Body Count), El-P and Wyclef Jean. Miles Davis was also deeply impressed by
Hendrix and compared his improvisational skills with those of saxophonist John
Coltrane, and Davis would later want guitarists in his bands to emulate
Hendrix. Hendrix's guitar style also had significant influence upon Texas
guitar legend Stevie Ray Vaughan, and later on Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett
and Pearl Jam's Mike McCready, among others. Hendrix's influence is also
evident in the musical styles of many prominent bassists such as Stanley
Clarke, Jaco Pastorius, Billy Sheehan, and Les Claypool.
His
career and death grouped him with Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison and Brian Jones as
one of the 27 Club, a group including 1960s rock performers who suffered
drug-related deaths at the age of 27 within a two-year period, leaving legacies
in death that have eclipsed the popularity and influence they experienced
during their lifetimes.
Electric church
Popularized
by Hendrix, "Electric Church" was a quasi-spiritual belief that
electric music brings out emotions and creative ideas in people, and encourages
spirituality. On the Dick Cavett Show in 1969, Hendrix said that he designed
his music so that it would be able to go "inside the soul of the person,
and awaken some kind of thing inside, because there are so many sleeping
people". Promoting his third album Electric Ladyland, Jimi Hendrix
said "the influence the psychedelics have on one is truly amazing, and I
only wish more people appreciated this belief and genre". When asked why
he didn't name the album "Electric Church" instead of "Electric
Ladyland", Hendrix said some women were "electric too". Hendrix
made numerous allusions to the concept in his music, most famously in the song
"Red House", in which he introduces his band by saying that he is
about to present them all to the "Electric Church".
Fashion
Well
known for his sense of fashion and wardrobe and his Dylan-esque hairstyle, a
set of hair curlers was one of the few possessions that Hendrix took with him
to England in 1966. When his first advance check arrived, Hendrix immediately
took to the streets of London in search of clothing at famous boutiques like I
Was Lord Kitchener's Valet and Granny Takes a Trip; both specialized in vintage
fashion. He bought at least two army dress uniform jackets including "his
famous Crimean War-era Royal Hussars regimental coat" or pelisse, adorned
with tasseled ropes. A group of policemen once ordered him to remove the other,
a Royal Veterinary Corps dress jacket, saying it was an offense to the men who
had worn it.
With their mutton-chop sideburns, droopy moustaches and
flowing hair, English rock stars were effectively spoofing the Victorian
officer class whose finery they donned. But a grinning, crazy-haired Hendrix in
hussar's jacket suggested something else entirely—a redskin brave showing off
the spoils of a paleface scalp, perhaps, or a negro "buffalo soldier"
fighting on the side of the anti-slavery Yankee forces in the US Civil War. ~
Neil Spencer, Editor, NME (1978–1985)
Many
photographs of Hendrix show him wearing various scarves, rings, medallions, and
brooches, and in the early days occasionally badges (pins or buttons) that
professed his support for the hippie movement or his fascination with BobDylan. He initially wore a dark suit and plain silk shirts that progressively
became "louder" and more psychedelically patterned. He later favored
a bright blue velvet suit, then a bright red one, antique military dress
jackets, a very broadly striped suit, psychedelically patterned silk jackets,
various exotic waistcoats and brightly colored flared trousers. At Monterey, he
wore a hand-painted silk jacket by Chris Jagger (Mick Jagger's brother) and a
bright pink feather boa. In late 1967 he started to wear a wide-brimmed Western
style hat (brand name "The Westerner"). It was adorned with a narrow
purple band and various brooches, as shown in the original Jimi Plays
Monterey film. This hat was stolen in 1968, and replaced later with
another, crowned variously with a longer purple scarf, a star-like brooch in
front and a set of silver bangles, sometimes with an angled feather, though he
went hatless for protracted periods after this.
From
late 1968 he began tying scarves to one leg and one arm, and in mid-1969 he
gave up the hat for bandanas. He started wearing increasingly fantastic
custom-made stage costume with long trailing sleeves, culminating in his
African-styled "Fire Angel" outfit that he wore throughout most of
his final "Cry Of Love" tour, until it began to come apart during the
Isle of Wight concert. He appeared in this outfit only once more (in just the
jacket) at the disastrous concert in Aarhus, Denmark. His only non-work-related
vacation was a two-week trip to Morocco in July 1969 with friends Colette
Mimram, Stella Benabou (the then-wife of producer Alan Douglas), and Deering
Howe. Upon his return Hendrix decorated his Greenwich Village apartment with
Moroccan objets d'art and fabrics. Mimram and Benabou created some of
Hendrix's most memorable later attire, the shortened blue kimono-style jacket
that he wore in three TV appearances and the white fringed jacket, ornamented
with blue glass beads, he wore at the Woodstock Festival.
Financial and legal
Al
Hendrix died of congestive heart failure in 2002. In his will, he stipulated
that Experience Hendrix LLC was to exist as a trust designed to distribute
profits to a list of Hendrix family beneficiaries. Upon his death, it was
revealed that Al had signed a revision to his will which removed Hendrix's
brother Leon Hendrix as a beneficiary. A 2004 probate lawsuit merged Leon's
challenge to the will with charges from other Hendrix family beneficiaries that
Janie Hendrix, Al's adopted daughter, was improperly handling the company
finances. The suit argued that Janie and a cousin of Jimi Hendrix (Robert
Hendrix) paid themselves exorbitant salaries and covered their own mortgages
and personal expenses from the company's coffers while the beneficiaries went
without payment and the Hendrix gravesite in Renton went uncompleted.
Janie
and Robert's defense was that the company was not yet profitable, and that
their salary and benefits were justified given the work that they put into
running the company. Leon charged that Janie bilked Al Hendrix, then old and
frail, into signing the revised will, and sought to have the previous will
reinstated. The defense argued that Al willingly removed Leon from his will
because of Leon's problems with alcohol and gambling. In early 2005, presiding
judge Jeffrey Ramsdell handed down a ruling that left the final will intact,
but replaced Janie and Robert's role at the financial helm of Experience
Hendrix with an independent trustee.
On
October 5, 2011 the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in a case Golan v.
Holder concerning the 1994 U.S. federal law that protected foreign
copyrights. At stake in the outcome of this case is whether previously
unprotected foreign works could be suddenly copyrighted and withdrawn from
public domain. In a hypothetical argument Justice John Roberts asked "what
about Jimi Hendrix?" and if Hendrix's rendition of the "Star Spangled
Banner" at Woodstock violated copyright protection or was protected under
public domain. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, who defended the 1994 law,
stated "maybe Jimi Hendrix could claim fair use".
Alleged progency
Hendrix
performed in Sweden frequently throughout his career, and his only son James
Daniel Sundquist was born there in 1969 to a Swede, Eva Sundquist, recognized
as such by the Swedish courts and paid a settlement by Experience Hendrix LLC.
The Jimi Hendrix Foudation
In
1987, Leon Hendrix commissioned the James (Jimi) Marshall Hendrix Foundation.
This foundation is based in Renton, Washington. Though run for some time by
Jimi's brother Leon Hendrix, in August 2006 Leon asked a childhood friend of
Jimi Hendrix – James (Jimmy) Williams, to take control of the Foundation.
Recognition and awards
Hendrix
said of the 1967 Melody Maker Pop Musician of the Year Award he had won:
"We were off somewhere on the road, and I was brushing my teeth, thinking
about it". "I started to cry because it meant so much, and I ended up
washing my face three times to get off this mess of tears and toothpaste."
The award was the first of many Hendrix won during his lifetime, but many more
were given posthumously. Despite his influence on other major musicians, he did
not receive a single Grammy Award in his lifetime—not even a nomination.
Posthumously, he and the Jimi Hendrix Experience received a collective total of
seven Grammy awards (see table below) including one Hendrix received for
Lifetime Achievement.
Rolling Stone ranked his three non-posthumous studio
albums, Are You Experienced (1967), Axis: Bold as Love (1967) and
Electric Ladyland (1968) among the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
They ranked Hendrix number one on their list of the 100 greatest guitarists of
all time, and number six on their list of the 100 greatest artists of all time.
Guitar World's readers voted six of Hendrix's solos among the top 100
Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time: "Purple Haze" (70), "The
Star-Spangled Banner" (52; live version from Live at Woodstock),
"Machine Gun" (32; live version from Band of Gypsys),
"Little Wing" (18), "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" (11) and
"All Along the Watchtower" (5). Rolling Stone placed seven of
his recordings in their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time:
"Purple Haze" (17), "All Along the Watchtower" (47)
"Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" (102), "Foxy Lady" (153),
"Hey Joe" (201), "Little Wing" (366), and "The Wind
Cries Mary" (379). Additionally, they included three of Hendrix's songs in
their list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time: "Purple
Haze" (2), "Voodoo Child" (12), and "Machine Gun"
(49).
The
recipient of several prestigious rock music awards during his lifetime and
posthumously, the Jimi Hendrix Experience was inducted into the US Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame in 1992, and the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2005. A star for
Hendrix on the Hollywood Walk of Fame was dedicated on November 14, 1991, at
6627 Hollywood Boulevard. In 1999, readers of Rolling Stone and Guitar
World ranked Hendrix among the most important musicians of the 20th
century. In 2005, his debut album, Are You Experienced, was one of 50
recordings added that year to the United States National Recording Registry in
the Library of Congress, "[to] be preserved for all time ... [as]
part of the nation's audio legacy." The English Heritage blue plaque that
identifies his former residence at 23 Brook Street, London, was the first the
organization ever granted to a pop star.
It
was a direct result of Kathy Etchingham's efforts, Hendrix's former girlfriend
who lived with him at the flat. She wrote to English Heritage first in 1992 and
her request, along with all those received from other writers, was declined.
She persisted and asked others to write. Finally the Committee gave its
approval. There "had been talk of carrying it out in purple," Sue
Ashworth, one of the plaque makers remembers, but it was eventually done in the
traditional blue. "We needed a guitar player to do this," Pete
Townshend said, at the plaque's unveiling in September 1997. Noel Redding, and
Kathy Etchingham, looked on with several other rock luminaries and hundreds of
other people in the street. "And I'm so proud to be able to pull this bit
of string [to unveil the plaque]. I have to tell you, I am so
proud," Townshend added.
A
memorial statue of Hendrix playing a Stratocaster stands near the corner of Broadway
and Pine Streets in Seattle. In May 2006, the city renamed a park near its
Central District in his honor.
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