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Thread started 11/16/05 6:35am

beauhall

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YOU DONT LISTEN TO HENDRIX?

(this was an orgnote to somebody, but wanted to share with the class because I haven't had much sleep so my judgement is seriously impaired).

You don't listen to Hendrix? YOU DONT LISTEN TO HENDRIX? What are you - a communist?

If you like Prince's guitar playing, and YOU play guitar, how can you "not listen to Hendrix"?

Specifically, if you want to play guitar solos that display a confidence, a sense of rhythm, patterns that expand just basic scales, a sense of timing that works outside of the drummer, then you must at the very least study a few critical hendrix moments.

Okay - to be fair - I don't listen to most of his crap. I like the funky stuff, not so much a fan of the crappy experimental "my eye is on a rock near jupiter with waterfalls and feathery pillows" crud.

But as far as guitar solos - you need to go get just these two songs. Use iTunes or go to the wrecka sto and buy the whole damn album (Band of Gypsys):

Power Of Love - just the first 1:23 seconds is all you need. Honest. Be sure to wear a diaper. That opening solo displays several amazing things: one note can make your eyes bleed more than fifty. A wah pedal left on but not stepped on can be a good thing. And most importantly: vibrato.

Machine Gun - no - not that Prince crap from the Undertaker. The real deal. Again, most of the song requires a double hit from the bamboo bong, but the solo will educate you on the use of a single note to say more than a million notes. Specifically, 3:55. I used to sit at home with my amp on "kill", a distortion pedal and echo pedal trying to get the sound from that one note. I'm not lying. My neighbors came and asked me to at least play one more note so they don't kill me.

That song is probably by far the greatest thing Hendrix ever did live, spontaneously, on the fly. He did two shows that night, and the second show came out on record a few years ago and THAT solo is nothing like this one. He was channeling dead Viet Nam soldiers. I swear to God. I liked Hendrix before this song, but when I heard this one, and saw the video of the performance - it's like the first time you see the bootleg of Prince doing Purple Rain on 8/3/83 - the version that they used in the movie - you know you're watching something above and beyond just some dude playing a damn guitar.

That's all I'm saying. If you never listen to Hendrix, you still have to listen to those two songs.

All this is just my opinion. And you know what they say - opinions are like lobotomies - everybody needs one.
www.beaurocks.com Trees are made of WOOD!
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Reply #1 posted 11/16/05 6:42am

Anxiety

i grew up listening to hendrix. 'third stone from the sun' is one of my favorites of his, and 'are you experienced?' is one of my favorite albums.
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Reply #2 posted 11/16/05 7:04am

Slave2daGroove

Couldn't have said it all better myself.


What are you a commie? falloff
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Reply #3 posted 11/16/05 7:24am

artist08

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Who was this directed towards? We'll have to stone him!!

lol
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Reply #4 posted 11/16/05 7:29am

Anxiety

artist08 said:

Who was this directed towards? We'll have to stone him!!

lol


not necessarily stoned...
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Reply #5 posted 11/16/05 9:24am

yamomma

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Frank has the most frickin' awesome rendition of 3rd Stone I've ever heard. We need to upload that thang.
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Reply #6 posted 11/16/05 9:57am

Anxiety

yamomma said:

Frank has the most frickin' awesome rendition of 3rd Stone I've ever heard. We need to upload that thang.


zappa?! really? is it officially released? my mom has a truckload of zappa, most of it i've heard a kajillion times from when i was a kid...i don't remember that.

speaking of hendrix and zappa, can anyone confirm that zappa gave his charred hendrix guitar to adrien belew around the time he toured w/ bowie in '78? obscure question, i know, but i keep getting tour footage from around that time, and i swear belew's guitar is the same one zappa used to play that once belonged to hendrix. i showed my mom, and she was pretty sure it was the same one...but i know zappa disliked belew working with bowie, so it doesn't make sense...
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Reply #7 posted 11/16/05 10:19am

yamomma

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No, no ...

Sorry Anx. I was talking about my studio partner, Frank Axtell http://frankaxtell.com

I'll have to upload HIS version. It was recorded live with his trio from several years back. The drummer is amazing.
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Reply #8 posted 11/16/05 10:29am

yamomma

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© 2015 Yamomma®
All Rights Reserved.
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Reply #9 posted 11/16/05 11:04am

FrankAxtell

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beauhall said:

(this was an orgnote to somebody, but wanted to share with the class because I haven't had much sleep so my judgement is seriously impaired).

You don't listen to Hendrix? YOU DONT LISTEN TO HENDRIX? What are you - a communist?

If you like Prince's guitar playing, and YOU play guitar, how can you "not listen to Hendrix"?

Specifically, if you want to play guitar solos that display a confidence, a sense of rhythm, patterns that expand just basic scales, a sense of timing that works outside of the drummer, then you must at the very least study a few critical hendrix moments.

Okay - to be fair - I don't listen to most of his crap. I like the funky stuff, not so much a fan of the crappy experimental "my eye is on a rock near jupiter with waterfalls and feathery pillows" crud.

But as far as guitar solos - you need to go get just these two songs. Use iTunes or go to the wrecka sto and buy the whole damn album (Band of Gypsys):

Power Of Love - just the first 1:23 seconds is all you need. Honest. Be sure to wear a diaper. That opening solo displays several amazing things: one note can make your eyes bleed more than fifty. A wah pedal left on but not stepped on can be a good thing. And most importantly: vibrato.

Machine Gun - no - not that Prince crap from the Undertaker. The real deal. Again, most of the song requires a double hit from the bamboo bong, but the solo will educate you on the use of a single note to say more than a million notes. Specifically, 3:55. I used to sit at home with my amp on "kill", a distortion pedal and echo pedal trying to get the sound from that one note. I'm not lying. My neighbors came and asked me to at least play one more note so they don't kill me.

That song is probably by far the greatest thing Hendrix ever did live, spontaneously, on the fly. He did two shows that night, and the second show came out on record a few years ago and THAT solo is nothing like this one. He was channeling dead Viet Nam soldiers. I swear to God. I liked Hendrix before this song, but when I heard this one, and saw the video of the performance - it's like the first time you see the bootleg of Prince doing Purple Rain on 8/3/83 - the version that they used in the movie - you know you're watching something above and beyond just some dude playing a damn guitar.

That's all I'm saying. If you never listen to Hendrix, you still have to listen to those two songs.

All this is just my opinion. And you know what they say - opinions are like lobotomies - everybody needs one.
If you want to play rock,blues or funk you need to listen to Jimi Hendrix...he is rocks greatest innovator and instrumentalist!
[Edited 11/16/05 11:06am]
[Edited 11/16/05 11:07am]
"Study and show yourself approved"
© 2011 Frank Axtell ®
All Rights Reserved.
http://www.soundclick.com...tent=music

www.frankaxtell.com

www.myspace.com/frankaxtell
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Reply #10 posted 11/16/05 11:13am

beauhall

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Okay well I wouldn't go that far.

Have you forgotten C.C. DeVille?
www.beaurocks.com Trees are made of WOOD!
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Reply #11 posted 11/16/05 1:33pm

theAudience

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I'll even take it a step further. (He said with raw nerves exposed).

The "the funky stuff" is the easy part.

That "the crappy experimental "my eye is on a rock near jupiter with waterfalls and feathery pillows" crud." is where some of the true beauty and genius of Hendrix lies.

Third Stone from the Sun
May This Be Love
Up from the Skies
If 6 Was 9
One Rainy Wish
Have You Ever Been (To Electric Ladyland)


And the amazing Electric Ladyland sequence of...
Burning of the Midnight
Rainy Day, Dream Away
1983...(A Merman I Should Turn to Be)
Moon, Turn the Tides...Gently Gently Away

...are examples of an artist pushing the guitar envelope and succeeding much more often than failing in the process.

Voodoo Chile is an example of a great on the spot Space Blues jam.
The fact that his "arrows are made of desire from far away as Jupiter's sulphur mines", don't bother me one bit.
Not with all that hellfire guitar playing going on. Great interplay between Jimi and Steve Winwood on B3.

I'll take a musician, with appropriate skills, stretching themselves rather than playing it safe anyday.

Oh, and if you really want Hendrix in funk mode, The Voodoo Child (Slight Return) intro and Little Miss Lover should be part of the primer.



tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #12 posted 11/16/05 1:45pm

yamomma

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theAudience said:

I'll even take it a step further.


Take that ya commie bastid! lol
© 2015 Yamomma®
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Reply #13 posted 11/16/05 2:22pm

theAudience

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yamomma said:

Take that ya commie bastid! lol

Now, now. Don't be tryin' to start something. wink


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #14 posted 11/16/05 2:43pm

7salles

beauhall said:

Okay well I wouldn't go that far.

Have you forgotten C.C. DeVille?

lol
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Reply #15 posted 11/16/05 5:56pm

yamomma

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beauhall said:

Okay well I wouldn't go that far.

Have you forgotten C.C. DeVille?




I did. I had to google that name up. He had a good run in his time. lol

"And baby we'll be ...
At the Drive in
In the old man's ford
Behind the tool shed
Till I'm screamin' for mo' mo' mo'

Down in the basement
We'll lock the celler door
And baby ... Talk dirty to me ...

C.C. pick up that guitar and talk to me!"

Ok, I remember that song too well razz
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Reply #16 posted 11/16/05 6:01pm

7salles

But i didn't forget R. Kotzen.

cool
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Reply #17 posted 11/16/05 11:40pm

JesseDezz

7salles said:

But i didn't forget R. Kotzen.

cool

I dig Richie - seems like he releases an album a month.
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Reply #18 posted 11/17/05 1:49am

7salles

He loves Prince and alternative acts. I suppose cc deville only digs Kiss and scorpions. mad
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Reply #19 posted 11/19/05 5:46pm

carlcranshaw

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No matter how many times you hear them "Machine Gun" and Hendrix At Montery are awesome.

His version of "Like A Rolling Stone" is like a textbook of playing lead and rhythm and the same time, singing, chewing gum and chilling like he's from Venus.
‎"The first time I saw the cover of Dirty Mind in the early 80s I thought, 'Is this some drag queen ripping on Freddie Prinze?'" - Some guy on The Gear Page
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Reply #20 posted 11/19/05 6:43pm

cloud9mission

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Little Wing is pure genius!
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Reply #21 posted 11/20/05 12:39pm

VinaBlue

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yamomma said:

beauhall said:

Okay well I wouldn't go that far.

Have you forgotten C.C. DeVille?




I did. I had to google that name up. He had a good run in his time. lol

"And baby we'll be ...
At the Drive in
In the old man's ford
Behind the tool shed
Till I'm screamin' for mo' mo' mo'

Down in the basement
We'll lock the celler door
And baby ... Talk dirty to me ...

C.C. pick up that guitar and talk to me!"

Ok, I remember that song too well razz


falloff

Dude, I saw them live back in the day. I think they opened for David Lee Roth on the Skyscraper tour. Steve Vai was in the house. Ahhh my headbanging days... I saw Aerosmith with Skid Row as well.

headbang

CC is going to be on the next season of Surreal Life, btw.

lol
[Edited 11/20/05 12:42pm]
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Reply #22 posted 11/27/05 9:00pm

stim

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<rant>

I suppose this is prince.org so you're likely to get people here who think P exists in a vacuum and has no musical precedent or influences???

Someone studying the electric guitar and not listening to Hendrix is like a drama student refusing to do Shakespeare or a film student who won't watch Citizen Kane.

I remember having a heated conversation with someone who claimed to be a film buff but didn't watch black-and-white movies because they were 'too old and boring'. confused

Maybe it's something similar? Preconceptions about Hendrix and the era he happened to be alive in? Maybe their Dad listens to Hendrix? I dunno...

Putting these thoughts aside and just focussing on what he's doing technically might help. Studying a few Hendrix songs in depth definitely won't do your technique any harm.

My advice is try it, you might like it and it's good for you. I never used to eat fish when I was younger and now I love sushi.smile

</rant>
[Edited 11/27/05 21:01pm]
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Reply #23 posted 11/28/05 6:09am

beauhall

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Well, the obvious argument to your rant is that Prince constantly cites Santana as his inspiration, and rarely throws Hendrix out there. His solos tend to be more Santanian, less Hendrixian unless he's shooting for a Hendrix kind of feel.

Just my take.

So, then, if you grew up on Prince, (say, you were born in 1984 and Purple Rain is an oldie record [SHUDDER]) then, Prince, Hendrix and Santana are all old farts. Say, you pick Prince as your number one guitar inspiration, and you read all up on Prince and his guitar playing, it's very likely that you end up following Prince over to Santana, and you KNOW about Hendrix, but since Prince doesn't really mention Hendrix too much in interviews, etc, you tend to ignore Hendrix.

I know, it's crazy, but it could happen. When I got into Stevie Ray Vaughan, I totally ignored BB King, never listened to a thing he did because Stevie rarely mentioned him in interviews, never really played like him, etc. NOW, I love me some BB, but back then, if Stevie Ray didn't tell me to check them out, I didn't.

Ahh, the stupid days of youth.
www.beaurocks.com Trees are made of WOOD!
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Reply #24 posted 11/28/05 6:16am

Styles

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Late Pass, but.....

Hendrix was the reasaon I picked up a guitar and started playing
upside down (cause I'm a lefty).....His unreleased jams and such led
me to a lot of other guitarists and it went from there...

peace


Jshua
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Reply #25 posted 11/28/05 7:10am

stim

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beauhall said:

Well, the obvious argument to your rant is that Prince constantly cites Santana as his inspiration, and rarely throws Hendrix out there. His solos tend to be more Santanian, less Hendrixian unless he's shooting for a Hendrix kind of feel.


Agreed, following up on Prince's influences would lead you back to Santana. There's a lot of Santana in his lead playing.
I guess I meant that having a serious interest in playing the electric guitar should lead you to Hendrix at some point. But then I'm biased... veeeery biased.
biggrin
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Reply #26 posted 11/28/05 9:10pm

JesseDezz

Prince's greatest influence in my life has been as a gateway to other music/musicians. I first was drawn in by his funk guitar playing, which led me to rediscover Sly Stone, James Brown and all the funk records lying around the house. They were always there but I never LISTENED to them until I got seriously into Prince. Same with his rock guitar playing. Listening to Bambi and Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad led me to discover Jesse Johnson, then Hendrix, which led to Van Halen, Vito Bratta and other heavy guitar cats.

I remember in an early interview, guitarist Stevie Salas said that he never listened to Hendrix growing up, though later on other listeners noticed some similiarities in their playing. I guess it is possible, though improbable.
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Reply #27 posted 11/29/05 6:41am

beauhall

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JesseDezz said:

I remember in an early interview, guitarist Stevie Salas said that he never listened to Hendrix growing up, though later on other listeners noticed some similiarities in their playing. I guess it is possible, though improbable.

Okay, homeboy must be LYING. Have you ever heard "Indian Chief"? It sounds extremely derivative of "Castles Made of Sand"

But okay. Sure.
www.beaurocks.com Trees are made of WOOD!
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Reply #28 posted 11/29/05 1:21pm

JesseDezz

beauhall said:

JesseDezz said:

I remember in an early interview, guitarist Stevie Salas said that he never listened to Hendrix growing up, though later on other listeners noticed some similiarities in their playing. I guess it is possible, though improbable.

Okay, homeboy must be LYING. Have you ever heard "Indian Chief"? It sounds extremely derivative of "Castles Made of Sand"

But okay. Sure.


Actually, "Indian Chief" was the song that started the Hendrix comparisons. It's in an old issue of Guitar World around the time he came out with Stevie Salas Colorcode. I don't get it, either...
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Reply #29 posted 11/30/05 9:28am

kstrat

JesseDezz said:

Prince's greatest influence in my life has been as a gateway to other music/musicians. I first was drawn in by his funk guitar playing, which led me to rediscover Sly Stone, James Brown and all the funk records lying around the house. They were always there but I never LISTENED to them until I got seriously into Prince. Same with his rock guitar playing. Listening to Bambi and Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad led me to discover Jesse Johnson, then Hendrix, which led to Van Halen, Vito Bratta and other heavy guitar cats.

I remember in an early interview, guitarist Stevie Salas said that he never listened to Hendrix growing up, though later on other listeners noticed some similiarities in their playing. I guess it is possible, though improbable.




My experience as far as the Prince influence goes was similar to yours.
Prince was my gateway to discovering other guitarist. Santana is one of the few guitarist Prince freely admitted to being influenced by, so that's where I started. Santana got me to alot of the blues & fusion guys. From there each cat I checked out got me over to look into someone else. I kept hearing other folks talk of the Prince/Hendrix comparison....so I got into Hendrix for a while the realized that at least to me Prince did not have much in common with Hendrix as far as what he played was concerned.

Yeah, I "saw" the influence as far as the visuals & histronics were concerned but I didn't and still don't "hear" it. Prince is probably least "Hendrixy" of any guitarist I've heard, yet Prince always seemed to have the Hendrix label hung on him.

Guitar World years ago ran an article about black guitarist and how they were dealing with the comparisons to Hendrix even though what they played bore little or no resemblence to his music. If I remember correctly the guitarist were,Vernon Reid, Michael Hill, Jerome Harris, Michael Hampton, Jean Paul Bourelly.
It also delt with how the Hendrix label hurt some players who played "Hendrixy"stuff when his type of playing fell out of popular fashion for a while in the mid 80's.


But influence doesn't always have a direct. It can be subline I know with my own playing that some stuff has creapt in that wasn't deliberate. Suprised the heck out of me as this wasn't stuff I consciously worked on.


-KSTRAT-
[Edited 11/30/05 9:45am]
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