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Jimi Hendrix's best album? Are you experienced, bold or Ladyland?
Personally i vote for Are you experienced. | |
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its hard to pick the best songs on AYE but here is how i would put them:
1. Red House 2. Stone Free 3. Purple Haza 4. Hey Joe 5. The Wind Cries Mary 6. Fire 7. Foxy Lady 8. Manic Depression 9. Third stone from the sun
yup i am including the reissiue songs | |
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Definetly Are You Experienced? | |
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Electric Ladyland - fairly easy. | |
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My vote is for Electric Ladyland | |
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They are all essential!!! Are you Experienced: Full of Hits! Axis Bold As Love: Jimi Stretching out, Experimenting and showing other moods.. ie: gentle Soulful classic tunes like "Little Wing" Electric Ladyland: The most effort that Jimi was able to put into a record in his brief time on earth, and the one with the most amount of input from Jimi (Production/Song choices) and full of Classics.. Voodoo Chile, Crosstown Traffic, ect.... I say get all three... But to be perfectly honest my favorite Hendrix era was the last stuff he was doing before he died, with Mitch Mitchell on Drums and Billy Cox on Bass... Get: Rainbow Bridge & The Cry of Love for that kinda stuff...
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Electric Ladyland. The studio wizardry caught up with the guitar pyrotechnics in some really cool ways. Case in point: 1983
The Voodoo twins rep pretty well for those desiring him to just flat-out play some blues. | |
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Electric Ladyland! 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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I like Axis the most. I'm quite fond of the material he did prior to his death too.
Most people would probably say either Are You Experienced or Electric Ladyland. | |
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Mindbells9 said: My vote is for Electric Ladyland Agreed! | |
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i am curious as to why people prefer Ladyland over AYE. Ofcourse, there is nothing wrong with it, its a matter of personal preference. But i always thought the writing on AYE was stronger. | |
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Electric Ladyland is just more interesting. The first album has most of the "classic rock" singles, but Jimi was capable of so much more.
btw, I'm never quite sure which version of Are You Experienced? people are referring to, as the UK / US versions were quite different. Almost like two different records. | |
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I love 'Axis' as it's his tightest album but all 3 are amazing works of art. 3121... Don't U Wanna Come? | |
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hhhhdmt said: i am curious as to why people prefer Ladyland over AYE. Ofcourse, there is nothing wrong with it, its a matter of personal preference. But i always thought the writing on AYE was stronger. AYE is mainly hard rock. EL simply has more variety. From the 60s pop of Little Miss Strange to the rock of Crosstown Traffic and the instrumental wanderings of the final tracks. And the blues! I'd love this LP for Voodoo Chile alone! It starts like the old style delta blues and ends somewhere in outer space. And he stole All Along the Watchtower from Dylan! If it wasn't for Jimi, this would have been just another track on his John Wesley Harding LP that no one would care about any more or less that any other Dylan song. The simple fact that Bob still plays it in concert is thanx to Jimi. | |
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Neither. "First Rays Of The New Rising Sun" is Jimi's best album to me. Jimi never got to release this album while alive, but I love how soulful Jimi sounded. The funk workout "Izabella" should be considered a funk classic and played today. The music pointed to the direction that Stevie, The Isleys, Curtis Mayfield and others would use as a basis for their music. 3121 #1 THIS YEAR | |
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^That's exactly why we cannot call it an "album". We don't know what Jimi had in mind and we never will. So even though I agree that Jimi recorded some of his best stuff in the year before he died, I really think unfinished albums don't count. | |
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I love "Axis: Bold As Love"! That album just had a sound to it I just can't explain. But in all honesty, "Electric Ladyland" was friggin' amazing too. I just wish the sound quality was better for it...... الحيوان النادلة ((((|̲̅̅●̲̅̅|̲̅̅=̲̅̅|̲̅̅●̲̅̅|)))) ...AND THAT'S THE WAY THE "TITTY" MILKS IT!
My Albums: https://zillzmp.bandcamp.com/music My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/zillz82 | |
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What no BoG as an option?
That said...Axis.
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She has robes and she has monkeys, lazy diamond studded flunkies.... | |
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Even though i gave my opinions above *I prefer the last things he was recording. If i had to choose between the 1st 3 albums AXIS is the most enjoyable one to me!
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** [Edited 5/14/13 2:53am] | |
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I've pulled my takes on the 3 albums out of my The Ultimate Hendrix Thread because the accompanying videos are loading down the post. 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 (led by The Beatles and The Rolling Stones), 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 initiated by the 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" or a to use more philosophical terminology, music designed to raise conscienciousness. Some cite folk-rock pioneers like 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 included an 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 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 shot captured of the look on Mama Cass Elliot's face 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... [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/hendrix_15.jpg[/img:$uid] ...Here I come baby. I'm comin' to gitcha! =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Covers/c779507m8eo.jpg[/img:$uid] 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. There are a few distinct musical playgrounds established with this record that will be revisited (in varying degrees) and fine tuned in the next two albums. 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 =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Covers/c779510l797.jpg[/img:$uid] 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. Noel 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 =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Covers/c77953wcp15.jpg[/img:$uid] 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 and 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. [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/covaltel.jpg[/img:$uid] --- 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 ... [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/covelnot.jpg[/img:$uid] 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. [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/Jimi20Hendrix.jpg[/img:$uid] 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. [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/HendrixConsole.jpg[/img:$uid] "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). [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/stockholm.jpg[/img:$uid] "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 on record based on pics... [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/Hendrix_Jimi_4074-27.gif[/img:$uid][img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/jimi401.jpg[/img:$uid] "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 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... [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/joint_st_paul.jpg[/img:$uid] ...ssssssssssmmmmp...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 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... [img:$uid]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v140/audience/Hendrix/lucillejimio2.jpg[/img:$uid] ...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 "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 All Along The Watchtower Jimi - bass Dave Mason - 12 string acoustic guitar =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Music for adventurous listeners tA 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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^^Break it down theAudience-
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I'ma go with Are You Experienced but Electric Ladyland holds a special place in my heart. The first jimi album i heard was Electric Ladyland and i was high when i heard it. That whole album is trippy but when i heard the songs 1983(a Merman i should be) and House Burning Down, man that stuff changed me forever. Jimi's death was probably the greatest musical loss ever. Its still sad.
This is off topic but when i lived in Renton Washington i lived a block or so from jimi's boyhood home(and gravesite). They had moved his home from its original location in Seattle to a location across the street from his Burial place. What happened was they were going to tear the house down (in Seattle) but this guy who owned a trailer park in Renton wasn't going to let that happen so he took possession of the home and put it on his property. It was kinda creepy because the road that the house and cemetery were(are)on is long, dark, up in the hills and spooky. This was around 2007 so I'm not sure if the house is still there. They were looking for donations to restore the house. I hope they succeeded. Rest in Peace Bettie Boo. See u soon. | |
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Bummer, looks like they tore it down in 2009. Full article for anybody interested. http://seattletimes.com/h...ix31m.html
Seattle Times staff reporter RENTON — The demolition crew has been working at a fast pace, and the tiny, 900-square-foot house where Jimi Hendrix lived from ages 10 to 13, and first showed his love for music, was down to its shell Monday. Despite an eight-year, $100,000-plus effort by Pete Sikov — a Seattle real-estate investor who at first wasn't a Hendrix devotee, but became one — the historic structure is gone. If you're a fan, vanished will be the chance to drive by and imagine how it would have been in the early 1950s for Jimi Hendrix, who died in 1970 at age 27 in London, apparently choking on his vomit after an unintentional combination of sleeping pills and alcohol. The value of the intact home, however dilapidated, was that it allowed visitors to imagine the poverty and simple beginnings of one of rock 'n' roll's greatest musicians. That was when a young Jimi played a ukulele with one string, remembered Leon Hendrix, 61, Jimi's younger brother by five years. Leon Hendrix remembered how his brother used the ukulele to strum the hip, jazzy "Peter Gunn Theme" from the hit TV detective show by the same name, "because you could play it using only one string."
Rest in Peace Bettie Boo. See u soon. | |
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I love all of them with a passion, but probably Electric Ladyland is my favorite. There's stuff on there that is so incredibly far out!!!
I also really like the period leading up to his death, when his music became more funky and soulful. So sad that man died so young, imagine all the music we would have gotten from him had he stayed alive... RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time... | |
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They are all great, but my personal preference has always been are you experienced, the hits but the whole sound of it, and the fact they were all still hungry for success them.
Jimis playing is pretty amazing too. But there are bits I like more on Ladyland, his vocal on the title track is amazing and its definitely more sonic than AYE.
Still these three sets are tight and the consistent level of quality is evident. They were so far ahead of their time its not true.
Now I am changing my mind, its probably Axis, theres so many spacey type songs on it, You got me floating, If 6 was 9 etc. [Edited 5/15/13 3:29am] Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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But my favourite Jimi track of all time is "The burning of the midnight lamp" the guitar and organ on that track are out of this world and Jimi's vocals add the punch. Its a joy to listen to. The best part is the guitar part after the second verse. [Edited 5/15/13 3:30am] Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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