ChatterBank4 mins ago
Jimi Hendrix died 40 years ago today, anyone have any thoughts?
A major pioneer of the rock guitar. Died in London 40 years ago today in 1970.
Last ever gig. Would you believe he was booed when entering the stage....the crowd were annoyed at the weather and having to wait. He soon shut them up!
http://www.youtube.co...VLNrU&feature=related
Last ever gig. Would you believe he was booed when entering the stage....the crowd were annoyed at the weather and having to wait. He soon shut them up!
http://www.youtube.co...VLNrU&feature=related
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I think you are on your own there Doc Spock!
It's not just hendrix's original playing style - and it was original - it was his inovate use of feedback that made him unique, and such a major influence. Add to that the leve of flamboyants howmanship he brought to the table - unheard of before rememebr, and you have a blueprint for electric guitarists that lasts to this day.
Remember, this is a musician who was fired for allegedly upstaging Little Richard in his heyday - and that can't have been easy!
It's not just hendrix's original playing style - and it was original - it was his inovate use of feedback that made him unique, and such a major influence. Add to that the leve of flamboyants howmanship he brought to the table - unheard of before rememebr, and you have a blueprint for electric guitarists that lasts to this day.
Remember, this is a musician who was fired for allegedly upstaging Little Richard in his heyday - and that can't have been easy!
Sorry TTG - I could never see what people liked about Jimi Hendrix other than the persona maybey. His guitar playing just seemed like a noise.
I've always seen Chuck Berry as one of the guitar greats. I saw him at Hammersmith in 1988. No fancy stage or light show, no backing group - just him standing at the front of the stage with a guitar and a mike. That's pure talent. He was entrancing.
I've always seen Chuck Berry as one of the guitar greats. I saw him at Hammersmith in 1988. No fancy stage or light show, no backing group - just him standing at the front of the stage with a guitar and a mike. That's pure talent. He was entrancing.
trt - Hendrix's guitar / lighter interfacce was all about making the maximum impact possible - which certainly worked! Remember, this is a musician who played with Little Richard, one of the most electric live peformers ever - and Hendrix learned the value of leaving them talking ... and it stood him in good stead.
missnemesis - of course he was loud black and showy - which is eaxctly why his impact was so immediate and massive. You have to remember the context - no-one else was doing anything remotely like this anywhere until Hendrix came along. Yes, there were a lot of technically gifted players around, but they were quietly earnest - hendrix was not only a brilliantly technical musician, he had the looks, the moves, the impact and the overall package to totally change the way the electric guitar is not only played, but viewed, and on that basis, his impact cannot be underestimated.
missnemesis - of course he was loud black and showy - which is eaxctly why his impact was so immediate and massive. You have to remember the context - no-one else was doing anything remotely like this anywhere until Hendrix came along. Yes, there were a lot of technically gifted players around, but they were quietly earnest - hendrix was not only a brilliantly technical musician, he had the looks, the moves, the impact and the overall package to totally change the way the electric guitar is not only played, but viewed, and on that basis, his impact cannot be underestimated.
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