by Cherokee Billie: http://cherokeebillie.wordpress.com/2013/11/27/remembering-jimi-hendrixs-71th-birthday/
November 27, 2013 marks Jimi Hendrix’s 71th birthday.
This man
single-handedly changed music Forever.
It’s beyond me to even comprehend
Jimi Hendrix at 71 years of age.
Out of all the famous performers that I
have seen live only one stands out above them all and it is Jimi
Hendrix.
I feel grateful that I lived In Los Angeles in the 60’s and
was able to see this amazing man so many times in person. Perhaps no
other rock-and-roll trailblazer has been as original or as influential
in such a short span of time as Jimi Hendrix.
Widely acknowledged as one of the most daring and inventive virtuosos
in rock history, Hendrix pioneered the electric guitar (he played a
right-handed Fender Stratocaster upside-down and left-handed) as an
electronic sound source capable of feedback, distortion, and a host of
other effects that could be crafted into an articulate and fluid
emotional vocabulary. Jimi literally made his guitar talk.
For a man
who could not read music and played the guitar with his left hand he
showed what talent and determination can do. They did not make guitars
for left handed guitar players at that time and he just strung the
guitar strings backwards so he could perform.
Although he was on the scene as a solo artist for less than five
years, Jimi Hendrix is credited for having a profound effect on everyone
from Miles Davis to Stevie Ray Vaughan.
Eric Clapton has stated that
after seeing Jimi Hendrix the first time he knew that he, Eric, didn’t
hold a candle to the talent of Jimi. In the few short years that he
obtained superstardom he has never been forgotten.
Jimi came from a background of a black American of African, European,
Cherokee Indian and Mexican descent. An unsettled home environment made
Jimi spend much of his early years staying with his grandmother, a
full-blooded Cherokee, in Canada.
Jimi took care of his little brother
with very little help from his father as his mother had passed away when
he was only ten years old. At the age of seventeen he left and joined
the army, where he served as a parachute jumper until he broke his ankle
and was honorably discharged.
Aside from playing the guitar behind his head or with his teeth,
Hendrix was renowned for setting his instrument on fire during his
performances. The first time he set his guitar ablaze was on March 31,
1967, during a show at Finsbury Park in London.
That year also marked
the release of his first single, “Hey Joe,” which went to #6 and lasted
ten weeks on the U.K. charts.
It was followed in quick succession by
“Purple Haze” (#3), “The Wind Cries Mary” and the trio’s ferocious debut
album, “Are You Experienced?” which featured those tracks and the
Hendrix staples “Foxy Lady” and “Manic Depression.”
Hendrix’s popularity in the United States was a bit slower in
igniting, but “Are You Experienced?” finally broke through in a major
way after a defining moment at the famed Monterey Pop Festival, in June
of 1967, when the notoriously outlandish frontman created a sensation by
coaxing flames from his Stratocaster during the band’s performance as a
sacrifice for the audience.
Throughout the next year, Hendrix’s
eclectic psychedelia reached a zenith with two albums, “Axis: Bold as
Love” and “Electric Ladyland” - the latter ranks as one of the greatest
albums of the rock era.
He was recognized as the greatest guitarist when he was alive and one
can only glimpse what might have been his future had he lived.
There’s
no question that he would have advanced musically beyond what he had
done previously. So much of the music performed today would not exist
were it not for the groundwork that Jimi Hendrix laid for those that
followed after him.
He perfected the use of the wha-wha pedal that
alters the tone of guitars and to boost certain frequencies. Jimi’s
wah-wah style utilized a percussive “wacka-wacka” effect by muting
strings and moving the pedal at the same time. The first time this was
ever done was on the song “Little Miss Lover.”
His connection to the audience was so powerful and you felt like
every note he played was just for you. I always think of how he came out
smiling and how he always exited the same way, smiling.
There were no
fancy sound systems; yet, his music was so powerful he didn’t need what
is used today to convey his music.
Orchestras have performed some of his songs and I often think how
blown away Jimi would have been to have heard his songs done by famous
orchestras. Perhaps he would have formed an orchestra himself. He
certainly had the talent and the gift to do anything that he put his
mind to.
Jimi never owned much of anything during his life as he traveled
almost 50 weeks out of the year and what little free time he had he
spent in the studio recording. He never was able to settle down into
one place.
He called himself a “Highway Child” and that was certainly a
good description of what his life was. He did not leave a will and it
took many years for his father to gain rights to his estate and it
eventually passed to his brother Leon.
Located in Seattle Washington there is a beautiful exhibit called the
Experience Music Project with more than 8,000 Jimi Hendrix artifacts in
its collection.
Some may say that Jimi Hendrix burnt out, but to burn out you have to first be on fire, and my friends this man was on Fire!
For a gentle man who only lived 27 years he changed the face of music
and performing for ever. I know that where ever you are Jimi you are
still making beautiful music and smiling. And you certainly did live
your life the way you wanted to!
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