independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Best Hendrix album..your opinion
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 1 of 3 123>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 07/04/07 6:59am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

avatar

Best Hendrix album..your opinion

I have owned Jimi's big 3 albums (Are You Experienced, Axis, Electric Ladyland) and recently bought "First Rays of the New Rising Sun". Needless to say, I was hooked right off the bat and after considering his first three albums as unbeatable (IMO), I have to say that FROTNRS is much better than Axis. I rank them as followed:

1)Electric LAdyland-This thing is so sweeping and epic in scope that you get lost in the songs.

2)Are you experienced?-This album was just loaded with hits, so no explanation needed.

3)FROTNRS-This album sounds like Hendrix was moving in a new direction. Very funk like and bluesy on some parts, but still rock.

4)Axis-This album has my favorite HEndrix track (Spanish Castle Magic), and is a great album, but not FROTNRS great.

I know there are tons of albums released after his death as well and I want to get educated on all of them, so experts please chime in with your opinions smile
"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 07/04/07 7:00am

jami0mckay

avatar

electric ladyland, it was so 'out there' and blew my away when i first heard it
It's a mess, ain't it, sheriff?
If it ain't, it'll do till the mess gets here
OWB
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 07/04/07 7:05am

Anxiety

for pure pop perfection, "are you experienced" is my favorite. it's a sentimental favorite, because i learned how to play a drum set by playing along to this album. it's also one of my mom's top favorite albums ever, so it's music i grew up with. plus, "third stone from the sun" makes me very happy every time i hear it.

though there's something about the "axis: bold as love" album that i really really like. i love the "mod" sound happening through much of it, and the title track and "little wing" are two of my favorite hendrix songs.

i've never been able to get into "electric ladyland" for some reason. boxed
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 07/04/07 7:06am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

avatar

jami0mckay said:

electric ladyland, it was so 'out there' and blew my away when i first heard it


I never, EVER get board of that album!
"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 07/04/07 7:07am

IstenSzek

avatar

yeah i'd like to know some more about hendrix' music as well.

i have his 'regular' albums, released before his deat and i'm
happy with them since i like m all.

but i've never been enough of a fan to get into that whole big
mess of releases that's still pouring out till this day.

are there any real albums inbetween there, like for instance,
finished albums he was about to release or something he kept
to himself (like prince scrapping the black album etc).

or is it just like a lot of prince boots, everything contains a
new song here, an alternate take there and everyone just tries
to cash in on it.

is there a definitive set of this kind of material, like we got
with prince on "The Work" volumes 1-6 or whatever.

??
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 07/04/07 7:07am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

avatar

Anxiety said:

for pure pop perfection, "are you experienced" is my favorite. it's a sentimental favorite, because i learned how to play a drum set by playing along to this album. it's also one of my mom's top favorite albums ever, so it's music i grew up with. plus, "third stone from the sun" makes me very happy every time i hear it.

though there's something about the "axis: bold as love" album that i really really like. i love the "mod" sound happening through much of it, and the title track and "little wing" are two of my favorite hendrix songs.

i've never been able to get into "electric ladyland" for some reason. boxed


eek
"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 07/04/07 7:08am

Anxiety

OH: i've really wanted to revisit "band of gypsies" since i haven't listened to that album probably since high school. are there any fans of this album on here?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 07/04/07 7:10am

Cheek

Electric Ladyland is my favourite one... cool

I don't really care about which considered "best"... smile
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 07/04/07 7:12am

jami0mckay

avatar

Anxiety said:

OH: i've really wanted to revisit "band of gypsies" since i haven't listened to that album probably since high school. are there any fans of this album on here?



yeah i do like that one a lot, it took a while for me to get into it but to be honest i go back to that one more than axis or are you experienced. Probably cos I played them to death when i was younger.
It's a mess, ain't it, sheriff?
If it ain't, it'll do till the mess gets here
OWB
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 07/04/07 7:13am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

avatar

COMPUTERBLUE1984 said:

jami0mckay said:

electric ladyland, it was so 'out there' and blew my away when i first heard it


I never, EVER get board of that album!


board=bored
"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 07/04/07 7:16am

ThreadBare

Electric Ladyland. His playing had been awe-inspiring up til then, but he turned the corner for me on that one. And, his soloing guitar's tone on "Long Hot Summer Night" drooling
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 07/04/07 7:20am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

avatar

I'm not surprised Electric Ladyland is doing so well here, but where is the love for Are You Experienced or First Rays? sad
"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 07/04/07 7:22am

ThreadBare

COMPUTERBLUE1984 said:

I'm not surprised Electric Ladyland is doing so well here, but where is the love for Are You Experienced or First Rays? sad


comfort

Actually, my introduction to Jimi was "Smash Hits" (the U.S. release). For purely sentimental value, I gotta give that a shout-out.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 07/04/07 7:25am

jami0mckay

avatar

ThreadBare said:

COMPUTERBLUE1984 said:

I'm not surprised Electric Ladyland is doing so well here, but where is the love for Are You Experienced or First Rays? sad


comfort

Actually, my introduction to Jimi was "Smash Hits" (the U.S. release). For purely sentimental value, I gotta give that a shout-out.


my introduction was hearing purple haze on the radio and thinking 'what the f**k was that, that was amazing' then my dad getting the LP (which i had always ignored as i thought the cover was cheesy lol) and gave it to me. which for a ten year old was pretty cool
music
It's a mess, ain't it, sheriff?
If it ain't, it'll do till the mess gets here
OWB
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 07/04/07 7:33am

icke4presidant

ELECTRIC LADYLAND

Apart from the minute of jimi making noises with his mouth and noel's vocal this album is perfect. Maybe the best album ever

Cry of love is brilliant too
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 07/04/07 7:44am

ThreadBare

jami0mckay said:

ThreadBare said:



comfort

Actually, my introduction to Jimi was "Smash Hits" (the U.S. release). For purely sentimental value, I gotta give that a shout-out.


my introduction was hearing purple haze on the radio and thinking 'what the f**k was that, that was amazing' then my dad getting the LP (which i had always ignored as i thought the cover was cheesy lol) and gave it to me. which for a ten year old was pretty cool
music


Actually, I bought "Smash Hits" after seeing (and this is BACK IN THE DAY -- I must've been 13) the "Moonlighting" pilot episode that featured an action segment with "Manic Depression."


"That's Jimi Hendrix," I thought to myself. "I've never heard this song before, but that's GOT to be Jimi Hendrix..." When I found "Smash Hits" and saw "Manic Depression" listed on the cassette, I knew I was going to be hooked. I heard "Red House" on that thing, and I was hooked.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 07/04/07 7:48am

silverchild

avatar

Have you ever been to Electric Ladyland? Well, I have over a million times and it's the best trip I've ever had. music



But even though Ladyland is the best record he's ever done, I haven't heard anyone hardly talk about Axis. It's probably tightest slice of spaced-out rock I've ever heard...
Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul
"Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 07/04/07 10:11am

prettymansson

my fav is Axis bold as love !
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 07/04/07 10:48am

emilio319

If you already have the 3 main albums (Are you Expericenced, Axis Bold as Love, Electric Ladyland) and are looking to get some of the stuff that was released after he died, I HIGHLY recommend getting "First Rays of the New Rising Sun" which includes a lot of the stuff that was released on separate, shorter albums in the years following his death.

"First Rays..." is really funky with Billy Cox playing bass on most of the tracks. Also "South Saturn Delta" has some really good stuff too.

"First Rays..." is my favorite album of his. I really like the direction his music was going in right before he died.

[Edited 7/4/07 10:49am]
[Edited 7/4/07 10:52am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 07/04/07 11:20am

silverchild

avatar

emilio319 said:

If you already have the 3 main albums (Are you Expericenced, Axis Bold as Love, Electric Ladyland) and are looking to get some of the stuff that was released after he died, I HIGHLY recommend getting "First Rays of the New Rising Sun" which includes a lot of the stuff that was released on separate, shorter albums in the years following his death.

"First Rays..." is really funky with Billy Cox playing bass on most of the tracks. Also "South Saturn Delta" has some really good stuff too.

"First Rays..." is my favorite album of his. I really like the direction his music was going in right before he died.

[Edited 7/4/07 10:49am]
[Edited 7/4/07 10:52am]


That's one of my favorites also because even though it wasn't able to be released before his tragic death, you could sense he was moving futher away from the whole Experience formula. He was trying to explore more of the funk and R&B approach and prepare himself for a whole new era, which was the 1970's. "Belly Button Window" is utterly groovy from beginning to end!
Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul
"Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 07/04/07 11:24am

Stax

avatar

EL
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 07/04/07 11:40am

NDRU

avatar

As an "album" I'd pick Electric Ladyland for it's creativity, depth, & flow.

For the style of music I like the best I'd pick his last (available in many forms, but I know it as The Cry Of Love)

But his most classic album is his first. Nearly every song is a rock staple. It's one of those self contained greatest hits albums. Incredible.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 07/04/07 11:43am

theAudience

avatar

Here we go again...smile

A slightly edited repost (of a repost of a repost) of something I did regarding the Big 3 albums (and Hendrix in general) pretty extensively some time ago.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

The sonic depth of Electric Ladyland makes Are You Experienced? and Axis: Bold As Love sound like demo recordings. However all 3 records have their place within the Hendrix lexicon.

To understand the significance of the releases, you have to know what was out there around this time period. The main forces in pop music were the continuing onlsaught of the British Invasion[b] (led by The Beatles and The Rolling Stones), [b]Motown (Supremes, Martha & The Vandellas,The Temptations, The Four Tops, Little Stevie Wonder, etc.), R&B in general (Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, etc.), Folk-Rock (probably led by Bob Dylan going electric in '65), a thing later called Funk[b] initiated by the [b]James Brown releases of that period and to a lesser degree the Surf sound (Beach Boys, Jan and Dean, Dick Dale).

And then you have this thing that came to be known as "Psychedelic" music. To some a "soundtrack for dopers[/i]" or a to use more philosphical terminology, music designed to raise conscienciousness. Some cite folk-rock pioneers like [b]The Byrds tune "Eight Miles High" - '66 (original version '65) as a beginning point because of the trippy lyrics, use of the word "high" and raga-like guitar solo. The album that included this tune, Fifth Dimension also a included the up-tempo (kinda goofy sounding) arrangement of "Hey Joe" that every bar-band used (that's until Hendrix rewrote the book on the tune by using an arrangement more befitting the song's storyline).

Eight miles high and when you touch down
You'll find that it's stranger than known


(btw, if you're looking for the antecedent to the "jangly-rock" of groups like Tom Petty and R.E.M. check out [b]The Byrds version of Dylan's Mr. Tambourine Man, especially the intro.)

Others will point to The Shapes of Things by The Yardbirds ('66), Norwegian Wood - lyrics ('65) & Tomorrow Never Knows - sound ('66) or even Good Vibrations by The Beach Boys ('66).

Some will go even deeper by calling out more obscure bands like The Holy Modal Rounders, 13th Floor Elevators or The Charlatans.

The psychedelic genre then explodes into the public consciousness with the flower-power movement, Haight-Ashbury and San Francisco bands like The Jefferson Airplane, The Grateful Dead and Moby Grape.

In terms of the Jazz mood of this period, you'd naturally have to check in on what Miles was doing. "Nefertiti" was his album of the day. A pre-cursor or one of the setup punches for the knockout In a Silent Way which was lurking around the corner. Modal and Free Jazz was also prevalent (Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, John Coltrane, Sun Ra, etc.)

This all leads to the multi-genred outdoor 3 day music festival that was Monterey Pop (June 16,17,18 1967).

Enter Jimi Hendrix.

Who is this black gypsy-garbed guitarist who's muscial range stretched from the controlled but powerful delivery of Dylan's Like A Rolling Stone (featuring stellar rhythm guitar work, an element frequently overlooked in the arsenal) to the show-stopping incendiary (literally) performance art treatment of The Troggs Wild Thing. And during his guitar solo, in true Jazz improv fashion, he incorporates the main musical theme from the Frank Sinatra hit Strangers In The Night. Was this a tip of the hat or firmly placed tongue-in-cheek aside? Who cares. To me it's an indication of unrestricted "big ears" on his part. Those that have seen the performance, must have noticed the reaction shots captured as an indication of the stunned shocking this performance put on the audience.

If folks were inclined to trip-out when Grace Slick urged them via White Rabbit to, "Feed your head" (2/67), when Jim Morrison told them to "Break on through to the other side" (1/67) or John Lennon's plea to, "Turn off your mind, relax and float down stream" (8/66) little did they know what Jimi Hendrix had in store for them.

That historic Monterey Pop performance had stated loud and clear to the Tune in, turn on, drop out crowd...



...Here I come baby. I'm comin' to gitcha!


=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


Are You Experienced? (August 1967)
Recording starts on 10/66 and is completed on 4/67.

Who is this Jimi Hendrix?
The question generated by the buzz created by his Monterey Pop performance was answered (and a ton of others generated no doubt) with the release of this album.

From the now famous intro of Purple Haze to the closing verse of Are You Experienced?...

Trumpets and violins, I can ah, hear in the distance
I think they're callin' our name
Maybe now you can't hear them, but you will (hah, huh)
If you just, take hold of my hand

Ooooh, but Are You Experienced?
Have you ever been Experienced?

Not, necessarily stoned but...beautiful
.


WTF just happened?
You were warned to Get Experienced, now you were.

They a few distinct musical playgrounds established with this record that will be revisited (in varying degrees) and fine tuned in the next 2. This is important as few of these fusions would become popular full blown genres (specifically Jazz-Rock and Funk-Rock ) in the future.

Rock - Purple Haze, Love or Confusion, I Don't Live Today, Foxey Lady
Jazz Rock - Manic Depression, Third Stone from the Sun
Funk Rock - Fire
Blues Rock - Hey Joe
Space Ballad - May This Be Love, The Wind Cries Mary
(not necessarily a ballad in the traditional sense but slow to mid-tempo imagery filled tunes)

And then there's something that I can only describe as the construction of the Hendrixian Universe. Soundscapes that are uniquely his.
The foundation being laid with tunes like Are You Experienced? & Third Stone from the Sun.

"First off I don't want people to get the idea it's a collection of freak-out material. I've written songs for teeny boppers like "Can You See Me" and blues things. "Manic Depression" is so ugly you can feel it and "May This Be Love" is a kind of "get your mind together" track. Imagination is very important, our music can not be categorised. Free form is the best way to explain our sound, unrestricted and uninhibited creative expression ..."

~Jimi Hendrix


Extra info on specific cuts:

Are You Experienced?
Jimi - piano

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


Axis: Bold As Love (January 1968)
Sessions for this record commence one month (5/67) after the final tracks of Are You Experienced? are finished (4/67). The record is completed 10/67.

The themes established in Are You Experienced? are continued

Rock - Spanish Castle Magic, She's So Fine
Jazz Rock - Up from the Skies, If 6 Was 9
Funk Rock - Little Miss Lover, Wait Until Tomorrow, You Got Me Floatin'
Blues Rock - Ain't No Telling
Space Ballad - Little Wing, One Rainy Wish

Hendrixian Universe - The foundation being laid on AYE?, the walls go up with EXP and Bold As Love.

Kramer also recalled when he first figured out how to do stereo phasing - using a pair of 2-track machines - during the recording of Hendrix's Axis: Bold as Love. "We experimented for about two weeks with stereo phasing," he said. "I brought Jimi in the studio one day and said, `Jimi, check this out.' I'm phasing away, and the drums kick in, and Jimi says, `Oh my god, oh my god. That's in my dream!' He was sitting on the couch behind me, and he fell on the floor. He said, `Oh my god, play it again.' And we played it about ten times. He said, `Man, I gotta have that sound on everything.'"

Eddie Kramer from a 9/1/2000 "Mixing with a Master" interview


With the exception of She's So Fine (written by Noel), this set of tunes shows more sophisticated lyrics and of the 3 albums probably has Jimi's best vocal performances. There's also been a progression in the recording quality of this record overall. Keep in mind that both these records were done on 4-track machines. (Something for all budding musicans to keep in mind.)

Supposedly after tiring mixing sessions, Jimi took the 2 finished tapes with him to a party. On his way back to the studio, he left one of the tapes in the cab. No was drafted to scour every cab in town while Jimi, Chas Chandler and Eddie Kramer started mixing the lost cuts again. 11 hours later the remix session was completed.

". . . it was mixed beautifully, but we lost the original mix so we had to re-mix it. Chas and I and the engineer, Eddie Kramer, all of us had to re-mix it the next mormng within 11 hours and it's very hard to do that. We're going to take more time ..."

~Jimi Hendrix

Extra info on specific cuts:

Spanish Castle Magic
Jimi - piano
Noel - Hagstrom 8-string bass

Little Wing
Jimi - glockenspiel

If 6 Was 9
Jimi - wooden flute

Bold As Love
Jimi - harpsichord

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


Electric Ladyland (October 1968)
Recording begins on 1/68 with All Along The Watchtower and the album is completed 8/68.

This is the record that Hendrix finally gets to take the reins as producer an attempt to create his 1st true concept record. His solo flight as pilot, with a few instances of turbulence, was a successful voyage suffering no crash landing.

It's amazing that even with the success of the first 2 albums, he still cannot get the full cooperation of the record company as evidenced by them thwarting his request for specific things regarding the record's artwork and layout.

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Dear Sirs,
Here are the pictures we would like for you to use anywhere on the LP cover.
Preferably inside and back. Without the white frames around some of the B/W ones. And with most of them next (aside) to each other in different sizes and mixing the color prints at different points.

For instance:
Please use color picture with us and the kids on the statue for front or back cover - (outside cover) and the other back or front side, (outside cover) please use three good pictures of us. In B/W or color.




---
We would like to make an apologize for takeing so very long long to send this but we have been working very hard indeed doing shows and recording.
(...)
Please, if you can, find a nice place and lettering for the few words I wrote named "Letter to the room full of mirrors" on the L.P. cover.
The scetch on the other page is a rough idea of course ...




but please use the pictures and the words - any other drastic change from these directions would not be appropriate according to the music and our group's present stage - and the music is most important. And we have enough personal problems without haveing to worry about this simple yet effective layout. Thank you.

Jimi Hendrix

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

The Record Plant's 12-track recorder allows The Masterpiece to be realized.



With the recording of the Electric Ladyland album, Hendrix turns the recording studio itself into an instrument. This is the biggest and broadest sounding record of the 3.



"Some of the mix came out kind of muddy, not exactly muddy, but kind of bassy, because we didn't get a chance to do it completely till the end. We mixed it all and produced it and all this mess. But then when it was time for them to press it quite naturally they screwed up, 'cause they didn't know what we wanted. There's 3-D sound on there that's been used that you can't appreciate because like they didn't know how to cut it properly. They thought it was out of phase!"

~Jimi Hendrix


The "Hendrixian Universe" lives. While listening to ...And The Gods Made Love, you are transported to its very center, Electric Ladyland itself...

Have you ever been (have you ever been) to Electric Ladyland?
The magic carpet waits, for you. So don't you be late


Once again the main themes are apparent though not so easily categorized because of the seamless synthesis of styles within a single song.

Rock - Voodoo Child (Slight Return), All Along The Watchtower, Little Miss Strange
Jazz Rock - Rainy Day, Dream Away, Still Raining, Still Dreaming
Funk Rock - Crosstown Traffic, Long Hot Summer Night
Blues Rock - Come On, Voodoo Chile, Gypsy Eyes
Space Ballad - Have You Ever Been (To Elecric Ladyland)
Hendrixian Universe - ...And The Gods Made Love, , 1983..., Moon, Turn The Tides..., Burning Of The Midnight Lamp, House Burning Down[/]

Quite a few tunes can fall into multiple categories.

The tunes groove better on this album.
Part of this can be attributed to the fact that Hendrix himself ends up laying many of the bass tracks (along with a few other instruments).



[i]"There were some things where it was just faster to work just Jimi and myself. Some were cut guitar and drums, some just bass and drums, there was no set gauge for that."


~Mitch Mitchell

When asked if Jimi playing drums and organ or record based on pics...




"Not organ, but he did play harpsichord on Electric Ladyland, and he was pretty good on the piano. Drums he would play on demos, but not actually on a finished product. He sounded a bit like Stevie Wonder on drums."

~Eddie Kramer


The sound of his guitar on Voodoo Chile is the best i've heard on any of the 3 records.
It's nice to get to hear him display his rhythm chops with someone to play off of for a change.
Recorded live in the studio (at least the band was), Stevie Winwood's organ gives him the chance to be a looser, responsive player and not have to carry the full load.

"Out in the corridor were all these musicians waiting to be given their chance to play. Jimi came out and said "Hi, come in." There were no chord sheets, no nothing. He just started playing. It was a one-take job, with him singing and playing at the same time."

~Steve Winwood


Outside of the album's opening 4 tunes, the [i]heart
of this album starts with Burning of the Midnight Lamp and continues with the conceptually perfect Rainy Day, 1983, Moon Turn The Tides..., Still Raining dream sequence...



...sssssmmmmp...Yeah I see what you mean brother. Lay back and groove.


On tunes like Burning of the Midnight Lamp, Rainy Day, Still Raining and Voodoo Child he certainly laid down the law on wah-wah guitar playing.

In true mystical psychedelic form this trip ends with the apologetic and eerily prophetic lines from Voodoo Child...

I didn’t mean to take up all your sweet time
I’ll give it right back to ya one of these days
I said I didn’t mean to take up all your sweet time
I’ll give it right back one of these days
If I don’t meet you no more in this world then uh
I’ll meet ya on the next one and don’t be late


Don’t be late


Quite fitting that this would be the last studio recording that he had complete control over.
However, I always felt that he was just getting started and had a few more surprises in store.

When asked in 2001 what he thought Hendrix would be doing now if he were alive...

"Here's my take: He'd probably be the president of his own record label. He'd be directing movies. He'd have absorbed some of the hip-hop dance techniques, sampling. Since he was such a maverick and leader and well ahead of his time, he would have been ahead of the curve before hip-hop even occured! Certainly jazz and fusion were part of his vocabulary, but classical music and hearing his own music performed by a large orchestra were also possibilities."

~Eddie Kramer


Extra info on specific cuts:
. . . And The Gods Made Love
Jimi - Tympani

Have You Ever Been (To Elecric Ladyland)
Jimi - bass

Crosstown Traffic
Jimi - piano, kazoo (explanation on the kazoo can be found on the VH-1 Classic Albums DVD)

Little Miss Strange
Jimi - guitar solos
Noel - guitar, bass, acoustic guitar

Long Hot Summer Night
Jimi - bass

Gypsy Eyes
Jimi - bass

A song written about his Mother...



...Lucille (coincidentally, that's my Mom's name also)

1983 . . . (A Merman I Should Turn To Be)
Jimi - bass, percussion

House Burning Down
Jimi - bass

Burning Of The Midnight Lamp
Jimi - harpsichord, mellotron

All Along The Watchtower
Jimi - bass
Dave Mason - acoustic guitar

"Jimi was a musical sponge, and I often remember going up to his hotel room to deliver tapes and spying Bach, Handel and Mozart on the player. He got inspiration from the stuff."

~Eddie Kramer

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

So even though there's more I could add i'll end it by saying based on my personal tastes, at no time up to this point had the combination of unbridled energy, innovation, freedom, creativity and musicianship been allowed to be categorized as mainstream. Quite remarkable.

Kramer spoke reverently about Hendrix and let the students in on some interesting inside observations. Despite his drugged-out public persona, for example, Hendrix was all business when he was recording. He had a keen musical mind and knew precisely what he was doing in the studio. "He knew before he walked in the studio exactly where each note was going," said Kramer. "He was so prepared. Every detail was in his mind. It was the antithesis of what you would think Jimi Hendrix is all about."

Eddie Kramer from a 9/1/2000 "Mixing with a Master" interview



=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431
[Edited 7/4/07 15:40pm]
"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 07/04/07 11:48am

LittleBLUECorv
ette

avatar

Electric Lady Land
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #24 posted 07/04/07 12:35pm

icke4presidant

Theaudience

great post but one thing inaccurate

Jimi played bass on all along the watchtower

the alternative version on voodoo child is better imo and jimi is killing it on bass on that track; even moreso than on the album cut
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #25 posted 07/04/07 2:49pm

SPYZFAN1

"Axis" is my pick. Funky, soulful, poppy, rockin', trippy and beautiful.
Jimi had the Strat of my dreams tone on that joint.

"B.O.G" is a close second.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #26 posted 07/04/07 3:08pm

Dewrede

avatar

Ain't no telling smile
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #27 posted 07/04/07 3:12pm

magnificentsyn
thesizer

theAudience said:

Here we go again...smile



=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


tA

peace Tribal Disorder

http://www.soundclick.com...dID=182431



Thanks for the repost, tA! horns
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #28 posted 07/04/07 3:20pm

magnificentsyn
thesizer

Oh, i forgot to answer.
Wow. This is tough!

i'm gonna have to go with Are You Experienced?

And that's for sentimental reasons. AYE, was there when I began opening my eyes and mind to music.

i remember my dad giving me beat up copies of AYE & ELL when i was 12 or 13. The funny thing is that one of the channels on our stereo was blown, so I vaguely heard the vocals and would only catch the echoes that floated from channel to channel. i think EL was too mature for me at the time and AYE was something i could grasp hold of better because of the structure of the songs.

the other thing about AYE is that i had no experience at my age, so the whole thing seemed mysterious to me. what a wonderful journey! ufo
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #29 posted 07/04/07 3:39pm

theAudience

avatar

icke4presidant said:

Theaudience

great post but one thing inaccurate

Jimi played bass on all along the watchtower

the alternative version on voodoo child is better imo and jimi is killing it on bass on that track; even moreso than on the album cut

Thanks for the reminder.
The last time I looked at this my intent was to fix it. Forgot all about it.


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."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 1 of 3 123>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Best Hendrix album..your opinion