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Thread started 09/10/11 10:28am

free2bfreeda

September 18, 2011 Marks 41yrs Since Jimi Hendrix' departure

This 1969 photo at a California rock festival inspired the "Sound Wave Wall" cutout of Jimi Hendrix.

RICHARD PETERS / AUTHENTIC HENDRIX, LLThis 1969

September 18, 2011 marks 41yrs since the passing of Jimi Hendrix. I've posted a few sites that

express the musical greatness of Jimi Hendrix to express my admiration and celebration to the memories of his life.

1. titled: 'Jimi Hendrix (1942-1970) The Jimi Hendrix Experience.

http://www.great-guitar-p...ndrix.html

2. James Marshall "Jimi" Hendrix

http://www.murashev.com/d...?artist=34

Live at Woodstock '69 (DVD)
3. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - (pls skip 1st paragraph)
Jimi Hendrix
Thanks to the cosmos for bringing Jimi Hendrix into this life, and providing him a genesis power in guitar sounds that shifted forward the many styles of rock music, stage dress and etc.
I hope there will be some rare and beautiful Jimi Hendrix music and pictures added to this thread in celebration of the life of Jimi Hendrix.
dove

[Edited 9/10/11 20:31pm]

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Reply #1 posted 09/10/11 4:26pm

WetDream

avatar

Thanks very much for this post and the links within. Refreshing to have an actual post about real music in detail.
This Post is produced, arranged, composed and performed by WetDream
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Reply #2 posted 09/10/11 8:26pm

dalsh327

I love the theory that Obama's mama hooked up with Jimi. She did frequent the Seattle coffeehouses, and so did Jimi. They were very close in age.

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Reply #3 posted 09/10/11 8:33pm

free2bfreeda

dalsh327 said:

I love the theory that Obama's mama hooked up with Jimi. She did frequent the Seattle coffeehouses, and so did Jimi. They were very close in age.

don henley: "dirty laundry"

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Reply #4 posted 09/11/11 5:05pm

free2bfreeda

WetDream said:

Thanks very much for this post and the links within. Refreshing to have an actual post about real music in detail.

your very welcome guitar

[Edited 9/12/11 7:48am]

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Reply #5 posted 09/12/11 12:17pm

free2bfreeda

Jimi Hendrix: Live at the Isle of Wight - 1970

found this at a dvd, record store close to my local. it's on vhs and the audio quality is great. got the system hooked up to sony speakers. right i'm holding on to my vhs/cable ready tv.

these are tracks: (with Mitch Mitchell and Billy Cox)

Message to Love

God Save the Queen

Sgt Pepper's Lonly Hearts Club Band

Spanish Castle Magic (i luv this one)

All Along the Watchtower

Voodoo Chile

Freedom

Machine Gun

Bolly Bagger

Red House

In From the Storm

awesome sounds to start my week off.

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Reply #6 posted 09/12/11 2:08pm

SPYZFAN1

That's kind of sad that Seattle doesn't want to honor Jimi. I wonder if they're doing the same thing to Kurt Cobain?

In case anyone didn't know, The 4 CD set "Live At Winterland" hit the streets not too long ago.

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Reply #7 posted 09/12/11 8:46pm

theAudience

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SPYZFAN1 said:

In case anyone didn't know, The 4 CD set "Live At Winterland" hit the streets not too long ago.

Tuesday, September 13th marks the worldwide release of Jimi Hendrix Experience Winterland, a four-CD box set that documents the band’s historic performances at San Francisco’s legendary Winterland Ballroom through the course of six concerts over three nights in October of 1968. Winterland is the latest authorized release from Experience Hendrix, LLC, the family owned company entrusted with preserving, nurturing, and promoting the music, name and likeness of Jimi Hendrix. The set is the latest through its ongoing partnership with Sony Music’s Legacy division.

In recognition of the release and of The City of San Francisco’s relationship with the life and legacy of Jimi Hendrix, September 13th has been proclaimed JIMI HENDRIX - WINTERLAND DAY by the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco through the good offices of District 8 Supervisor Scott Wiener.

The day will be capped off by a celebration at Amoeba Music at 7 PM with Experience Hendrix CEO (and Jimi’s sister), Janie Hendrix as well as the one and only Bootsy Collins. Bootsy’s affinity for Jimi Hendrix is well known, a fact underscored by the fact that he voiced the actual words of Hendrix on the documentary film Voodoo Child that is included in West Coast Seattle Boy, the Jimi Hendrix boxed set released last year.

Bootsy’s current album release, The Funk Capital of the World, includes “Mirrors Tell Lies,” a track that incorporates the speaking voice of Jimi Hendrix in cooperation with Experience Hendrix. Bootsy will be signing copies of the album and will premiere the video for “He’s Still The Man,his tribute to the late James Brown in whose band he played as a teenage prodigy.

Rare Jimi Hendrix video clips will also be shown in the store over the course of the evening.

http://www.amoeba.com/liv...rtist.html

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

Music for adventurous listeners

tA

peace Tribal Records

"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 #8 posted 09/13/11 7:51am

free2bfreeda

theAudience said:

Tuesday, September 13th marks the worldwide release of Jimi Hendrix Experience Winterland, a four-CD box set that documents the band’s historic performances at San Francisco’s legendary Winterland Ballroom through the course of six concerts over three nights in October of 1968.

In recognition of the release and of The City of San Francisco’s relationship with the life and legacy of Jimi Hendrix, September 13th has been proclaimed JIMI HENDRIX - WINTERLAND DAY by the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco through the good offices of District 8 Supervisor Scott Wiener.

The day will be capped off by a celebration at Amoeba Music at 7 PM with Experience Hendrix CEO (and Jimi’s sister), Janie Hendrix as well as the one and only Bootsy Collins. Bootsy’s affinity for Jimi Hendrix is well known, a fact underscored by the fact that he voiced the actual words of Hendrix on the documentary film Voodoo Child that is included in West Coast Seattle Boy, the Jimi Hendrix boxed set released last year.

peace

this is awesome news. i wish i could attend. eek

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Reply #9 posted 09/13/11 7:37pm

free2bfreeda

By Jas Obrecht December 24 2010

Stevie Ray Vaughan: Our 1989 Interview About Jimi Hendrix

http://jasobrecht.com/ste...i-hendrix/

Like his hero Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan was part bluesman, part rock and roller. And Stevie, bless his heart, was always quick to credit the musicians who influenced him. These ranged from lesser-known figures like Larry Davis, who recorded the original “Texas Flood,” to movers and shakers like Chuck Berry, Albert King, Buddy Guy, and Albert Collins. But no influence loomed larger in his repertoire than Jimi Hendrix, many of whose songs he mastered note-for-note. He recorded live and studio versions of “Voodoo Child (Slight Return),” “Little Wing,” and “Third Stone from the Sun,” and often played Hendrix songs in concert.

While working at Guitar Player magazine in 1989, I was asked to write a cover story to accompany a Soundpage of an unreleased version of Jimi Hendrix’s “Red House.” To flesh-out the article, I interviewed Jimi’s former bandmates Noel Redding and Billy Cox, as well as Joe Satriani and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Quotes from these conversations appeared as part of my “Celebration of ‘Red House’,” but the interviews themselves were never fully transcribed. So here, for the first time, is my complete February 9, 1989, interview with Stevie Ray Vaughan. It covers not only Jimi Hendrix, but some of what Stevie was going through as he recorded In Step.

* * * *

When did you first become aware of Jimi Hendrix?

The first time I ever heard him knowingly was, uh – well, I say that because the first time I ever heard his name was when my brother brought a record of his home in the mid ’60s. I guess it was around ’67, ’68. And Jimmie had found it in a trash bin! Behind it. He was playing a gig at this show in Dallas called Sumpin Else, and he found this record. He recognized it because he’d seen a little blurb in a magazine, just a short paragraph about Jimi Hendrix. He knew he was supposed to be something really happening, and he just happened to see this record that had gotten thrown out with a bunch of other stuff, because it didn’t fit in with the show perfectly or something, you know. And he brought it home and put it on the record player, and we just about – what can you do? [Laughs.] What can you do but say, “Yeah!” It really knocked my socks off.

I’m not sure exactly the year, and I’m not sure which song it was. It’s kind of a blur, because around the same time my brother Jimmie, he had this knack of figuring out who was really happening. And why! [Laughs.] And he would bring home these records. It seemed to me that Jimmie would all of a sudden bring home stuff, and it would be months before you would hear it anywhere else. He would get into a certain style of music, and he would bring a lot of that stuff home about the same time. It just seemed as if for some reason he could just come up with a style and all of a sudden he had all the if’s, and’s, and but’s around it. All of the things by people who were in the same school – that went to school together, you know, instead of a different school. So a lot of the different influences that were on Jimi Hendrix, I heard those things at the same time.

So you were listening to people like Albert King and hearing the relationship.

Albert King and Lonnie Mack and Albert Collins and Muddy. Jimmie would bring home all that stuff at the same time. It seemed as if it was like within a month or two.

Did you sit down and learn to play from that first Hendrix record Jimmie brought home?

Sure! Hey, man, I remember getting my little stereo – it was one of those Airlines with the “satellite speakers.” That’s what they called them, but they were really these cardboard boxes with a long wire. I would set that up, mike that up. I had a Shure P.A. in my room – this is in my bedroom. For some of my first gigs, I’d go and rent like four Super Reverbs, and I’d have all this set up in my room. [Laughs.] Of course, the parents were at work. I would go in there and floorboard it, you know. Dress up as cool as I could and try to learn his stuff. It all went together. I would try to learn his stuff, and I did the same thing with a lot of B.B. King records. I think back and I must have really – if somebody had walked into the room, they probably would have gone, “What are you doing?!” Because I wouldn’t stop at one place – I’d go for every bit of it I could find. I remember doing it a lot with Axis: Bold as Love, even though I didn’t have the phasing deals, and I’m sure I didn’t have a lot of the sounds. But some of them I could find.

Were you playing a Stratocaster?

Well, at different times, different things. Jimi had a Strat, and a lot of times I would use a Telecaster, but I had a little bit different pickups. I’d rebuilt the guitar myself, so there was some blood in it, you know. I would go as far as I could to get as close as I could.

Did you think of Jimi as coming out of the blues tradition?

Some people don’t see it. Some people really do see it. See, I don’t know whether to call Hendrix a blues player along with a lot of the originals, but he did go and play with a lot of those people. He did do a lot of it during that heyday, before he got famous. It’s like he was on the tail end of something.

That whole R&B movement.

Yeah. And a lot of it wasn’t even the tail end. A lot of it was the peak of it. He was doing that stuff as it was going on, you know. See, in his music, I hear not just the newer stuff that everybody seems to think was a lot different – and a lot of it is – but to my ears, there’s just as much of the old-style warmth.

The blues style.

Yeah! Like “Red House.” I hear it in that. I hear it in just the way he approaches things. Even though he was not ashamed at all of doing some things different, I still hear the roots of the old style. I mean, not just roots, but the whole attitude of it.

Jimi’s sometimes not that far removed from Muddy Waters.

To me, he’s like a Bo Diddley of a different generation. If you were a kid and you heard Bo Diddley for the first time, back when all that was going on, wouldn’t you think that was the wildest thing you ever heard?

Yeah, sure.

Okay. [Laughs.] I’m not saying that Jimi Hendrix was a Bo Diddley, but in that sense, there’s not that much difference. Or Muddy Waters or Chuck Berry. It was that different. He just happened to have those influences as well.

Jimi used a right-hand guitar that he flipped over, so his high-E string had a shorter scale length than the low-E string. Could this have affected the way his string bends sounded?

Yeah. I have guitars where the necks are set up that way, and there is a difference. However, to me the bigger difference is the shape of the neck. I’ve got a left-handed neck on an old Strat that I have – someone gave me a left-handed neck – and the main thing I notice about it is the neck feels different because it’s shaped backwards. I didn’t know about it until I put one on there. The neck feels different. The tension of the strings does work well that way. One thing that I noticed [about playing a flipped-over Stratocaster] that’s a lot different is where the wang bar is – if it’s on the top or on the bottom. Whether I hold it with the same grip as if it was in the other place or not, it still feels different to me at the top. It seems more approachable or something.

What have you observed about Jimi using a whammy bar while playing blues?

I think he did it cool! I think if somebody else had thought about it first, they would have done it too.

Do you think Jimi was one of the first?

Uh, no. I say that because there’s a record that I think Hendrix must have heard this guy and gone, “My God! I need to check this out!” It sounds like something Hendrix would do, except it was recorded in ’58. The album is called “Blues in D Natural” – it’s a compilation album – and the number is 005. The label is Red Lightnin’, an English import. The songs are called “Boot Hill” and “I Believe in a Woman.” It’s by Sly Williams. Go get you a copy and listen to it, and you’ll go, “Shit!” [Laughs.] I’ve never heard anybody other than Hendrix get this intensity and play as wild as this guy. He uses a wang bar, and he uses it real radical in places. (To hear “Boot Hill”: http://www.youtube.com/wa...re=related; for “I Believe in a Woman”: http://www.youtube.com/wa...i9gGVRoTCw.)

Do you know anything about the guy? Where he was from?

From what I’ve been told, it’s Syl Johnson a long time ago. Now, I don’t know if it is or not, but that’s what I’ve been told by someone who’s real checked-out about their information. What it says under it [the song title] is something to the effect of “Sly Williams, guitar and vocals,” and then it says something like, “Bass, drums, and piano and horn, unknown. California? 58-59.” It’s unbelievable. It’s like this guy’s teeth are sticking out of the record! [Laughs.] It’s unbelievable. And ever since I ever heard it, every time I hear it, it seems impossible that Hendrix didn’t hear this guy. And some people seem to think that it might be him playing guitar.

I haven’t heard of that artist.

I hadn’t either. That’s the only record I ever heard by this guy.

What made Jimi’s blues playing so distinctive from other guitarists?

[Pause.] I think a lot of it’s his touch and his confidence. I mean, his touch was not just playing-wise, but the way he looked at it, like his perspective. His perspective on everything seemed to be reaching up – not just for more recognition, but more giving. I may be wrong about that, but that’s what I get out of it. And he did that with his touch on the guitar and his sounds and his whole attitude – it was the same kind of thing.

What pickups settings did he tend to go for while playing blues?

Well, I have my own ideas about that, but I tend to not necessarily get that right [laughs]. The way I play, sometimes I tend to play harder than I need to, therefore I don’t get as much out of it.

Tonally, I hear a similarity between your Texas Flood album and some of Jimi’s records.

I’m trying to get as close to a natural, old-style sound as possible, and I think a lot of his tones were that way. He was just reaching for the best tone that he could find. Actually, I kind of think a lot of his tones were just that’s the way he heard them, and he didn’t have to worry about it – which is something that I do a lot!

You worry?

Yeah, I’m a worry wart! [Laughs.] Sure.

That doesn’t come across at all onstage.

There’s not a whole lot of time to get stuck in it. I know that either I can turn up or I can turn down [laughs], so if it’s not working right, I usually stomp my foot and turn it up! You know, I have a real hard time with amps, and I’m having a hard time right now with them. They keep dying.

Are you using older ones?

A combination. With this record we’re doing now [In Step], I brought 32 amps with me.

How can you possibly need 32 amps?

They keep dying like flies! I brought them for different configurations to see which ones sound the best in the studio, because we haven’t been in the studio for a long time. And many times an amp will sound good at home, and when you put it in the studio and you close-mike it, its little quirks stick out a lot more.

You hear all the buzzing and rattle . . .

That you wouldn’t necessarily hear in a concert situation. But so far I’ve ended up having to have everything I brought rebuilt – either rebuilt, or just put it back in the case. And it’s real frustrating. However, sometimes an amp when it’s dying, it sounds better than it has in a long time – with every last breath, it really wants to live! [Laughs.] I think the quality of the amps for guitar and for warm sounds, the quality of the parts themselves used to be better. Therefore they worked better. And with some of the old effects, when they don’t work properly, that’s when they sound so good.

You never found one amp that had everything you were looking for?

I bought these Dumble amps – I bought the first one because I was really amazed. After it broke down the first time, it’s never sounded the same. I’ve bought several of them, and every one of them sounds different and is built different, and I keep wanting the same one that I bought in the first place.

A final question about Jimi Hendrix. Right now, he’s more popular than he ever was during his career. He’s selling more records, getting a lot of coverage in the press, his videos are on TV. Why is this?

He’s not putting out more things. It’s a good question. A great question. Why I might think so? I think a lot of people need what he had to offer musically – there was a lot of honesty in it. Yeah, there was a lot of drugs and things, but people are looking back because they miss something that’s here. A lot of people tend to look somewhere else for something that they want to fix them. His music, though, is wonderful. It’s full of emotion. It’s full of fire. At different points it’s full of different things. It’s full of light and heavy things, you know, feelings. By “light feelings” I mean uplifting feelings, and “heavy” – well, you know what “heavy” means! It could mean anything from one day to the next, really. But I think a lot of people miss what his music was doing for them. A lot of new people are coming around to going, “What’s this?!” In very few instances has anybody surpassed what he did. And it should be popular! It’s a damn shame that he’s dead and gone, and now is when people are listening. But, at the same time, I’m glad they’re listening!

I know you have to get back in the studio, so one last question. You recently performed at President George H.W. Bush’s inaugural party and were photographed onstage with many important politicians. Notice any good guitar players among them?

Steve Cropper. [Laughs.] Joe Louis Walker. Bo Diddley was up there! You know, that whole thing – I mean, the guy won, and there was a great show being put on. So a lot of us wanted to go be part of the show.

Absolutely. I don’t think playing a presidential inauguration necessarily makes a political statement.

Well, some people seem to think it did.

But who’d turn down a gig like that?

I mean, it was quite an honor. If Joe Blow was president, it would be an honor. Maybe the guy’ll do some good. I found out the hard way – sometimes I can remember it and sometimes I can’t – that contempt prior to investigation is a real drag. It can keep you ignorant for the rest of your life. We’ve got to give ourselves and everybody involved a chance.

Stevie Ray Vaughan's music is so fun to listen to while driving on the freeway early on a saturday morning. he was a great musician, and also missed.

rainbow

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Reply #10 posted 09/16/11 8:04am

free2bfreeda

Five Great Jimi Hendrix Samples in Hip-Hop Songs

Categories: Hip-Hop, Local Frequency
5. Digital Underground, "The Way We Swing"
Sample: "Who Knows?
Shock G's astute sample ear was seemingly so smitten with Jimi's brooding and bluesy opening guitar riff on "Who Knows?" that he flipped it into the signature sample for the Underground's freaky statement of intent. "You're just a sucker hip-hop borrower," spits Shock at one point in the song, although were Jimi around to hear "The Way We Swing" we suspect he'd likely appreciate the homage.


4. A Tribe Called Quest, "If The Papes Come"
Sample: "EXP"
Blue Note jazz organist Lou Donaldson's "Pot Belly" forms the basis of the beat for what is effectively a solo sure-shot from Q-Tip here. But Tribe's leader gets props for utilizing a vocal grab from Jimi's leftfield-leaning "EXP" to close out the proceedings, as the warped voice warns, "Thank you. As you all know you just can't believe you see and hear, can you? Now if you'll excuse me, I must be on my way..."

3. The Pharcyde, "Passing Me By"
Sample: "Are You Experienced"
The Pharcyde's "Passing Me By" is one of hip-hop's few tender love songs. The rapped laments about unrequited crushes may take place over a production formed from Quincy Jones's "Summer In The City," but the quirky Left Coast crew invoked the backwards-sounding tape-loop effects from Jimi's "Are You Experienced" to spark things off with suitably poignant effect.

2. K.M.D., "Constipated Monkey"
Sample: "Belly Button Window"
Before he donned a metal mask and spent his days cultivating an impressive beer-belly, MF Doom cast himself as Zev Love X and headed up the group K.M.D. with his brother Sub Roc and Onyx the Birthstone Kid. The group's second album is enshrined in the annals of rap folklore after being originally shelved by Elektra over its cover artwork and title (Black Bastards). The track "Constipated Monkey" snuck out, however, as the B-side to the intended lead single "What A Nigga Know?" The Hendrix link comes from the way Zev hooked up the opening snatch of the stripped-down "Belly Button Window" to carry the K.M.D. message.


1. Beastie Boys, "Jimmy James"
(Selected) Samples: "EXP," "Foxy Lady," "Happy Birthday," "Still Raining, Still Dreaming."
More than just a case of sampling Jimi's music, here the Beasties penned something of a tribute to the rock god's life -- although that didn't stop the Hendrix estate from at one point attempting to halt the song's release. (The estate eventually relented, hence the existence of the "Original Original Version" of the song.) Culled from the Beastie's Check Your Head album, the track is a top slice of scuzzy, distorted funk, being brilliantly propelled by a liberal helping of "Happy Birthday," Jimi's own collaboration with Curtis Knight.

videos can be listened to at: http://blogs.sfweekly.com...sample.php

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Reply #11 posted 09/16/11 1:42pm

SPYZFAN1

Thanks for posting that Stevie Ray interview. Nice read.

Picked up "Winterland" yesterday. I've listened to Disc 4 so far and it's killer! Can't wait for

"Albert Hall" and "Miami Pop" next year.

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Reply #12 posted 09/16/11 2:17pm

free2bfreeda

SPYZFAN1 said:

Thanks for posting that Stevie Ray interview. Nice read.

Picked up "Winterland" yesterday. I've listened to Disc 4 so far and it's killer! Can't wait for

"Albert Hall" and "Miami Pop" next year.

your welcome hug guitar

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #13 posted 09/17/11 8:40am

free2bfreeda

Music Reviews: Jimi Hendrix - In The West & Winterland [Box Set]

By Richard Marcus

Published 5:56pm Thurs, Sept 15, 2011


[edited] Sat, Sept 17, 2011

Jimi Hendrix(it is stated) "The only way to truly appreciate Hendrix is to listen to him. While there have been plenty of reissues of his work over the years, most of them have been of dubious quality and haven't really managed to capture his magic. It now finally looks like the record is being set straight as the latest series of releases from Legacy Recordings shows. While his studio work was inspired, it was live that Hendrix really showed what he was made of, and both Hendrix In The West and the four-CD box set Winterland coming out on September 13, 2011 are stirring examples of what made him so special.


In The West was originally released posthumously by Polydor Records in 1972 and was intended as a memorial to Hendrix's ability as a performer. The producers gathered together material recorded at concerts during the last two years of his life, performing with both the original Jimi Hendrix Experience, with Mitch Mitchell on drums and Noel Redding on bass, and the 1970s version with Billy Cox replacing Redding.


The venues ranged from the Isle Wight Festival of 1970, the San Diego Sports Arena, Berkeley Community Centre and two tracks recorded at the Royal Albert Hall in London. As the last two were used without proper legal permission-they were listed in the original credits as being taken from the San Diego concert-and have been reissued properly somewhere else, on this version of the disc, they've been replaced with a version of "Little Wing" recorded at the Winterland and the actual version of "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" recorded in San Diego. (On the original, the record company even misspelled the latter calling it "Voodoo Chile"). As well as the replacements, the new version of the disc included three tracks not on the original recording: "Fire", "I Don't Live Today" and "Spanish Castle Magic," which was taken from the San Diego concert."


Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/...173214.php

Well fellows and fellowetts of music one more day (18, sept) to express memories past and current. imo, jimi hendrix was the a true captain of sound during his fifteen minutes of fame upon this our planet.

color me the color of luv and appreciation rainbo

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #14 posted 09/17/11 2:22pm

Timmy84

James Marshall Hendrix: a true genius.

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Reply #15 posted 09/17/11 2:27pm

Timmy84

Studio version of "Machine Gun":

Just as good (if not as great) as the live version. nod

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Reply #16 posted 09/17/11 2:29pm

mjscarousal

Legend never dies... a true musical prophet...

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Reply #17 posted 09/18/11 4:37pm

free2bfreeda

Jimi Hendrix: rare and unseen photos revealed
Jimi Hendrix playing with The Experience at London's Saville Theatre, 4 June 1967.

[Edited 9/18/11 19:41pm]

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Reply #18 posted 09/18/11 4:49pm

RnBAmbassador

avatar

As a part of Patti Smith's Meltdown Festival in 2005 in London, Jeff Beck played a tribute to Jimi Hendrix. Patti Smith warbles "Crosstown Traffic".

http://www.youtube.com/wa...mSvMEe4Dbo

The set included:

"Hey Joe"

"The Wind Cries Mary"

"Red House"

"Crosstown Traffic"

"Manic Depression"

Jeff Beck - guitar

Jimmy Hall - vocal

Jason Rebello - keyboards (he has been with Beck since 2005)

Pino Palladino - bass guitar

Vinnie Colaiuta - drums

Beck and Hendrix first met when Hendrix came over to London after Beck was out of The Yardbirds in 1966. They jammed together in 1968 several times at The Scene Club in NYC. One night at The Scene, Eric Clapton joined in the jam session on a Cream off day.

Music Royalty in Motion
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Reply #19 posted 09/18/11 7:50pm

Gunsnhalen

Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener

All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen

Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce

Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive
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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > September 18, 2011 Marks 41yrs Since Jimi Hendrix' departure