Goto page 1, 2  Next
View previous topic :: View next topic
StefanR10
Music Genius
Gender: Male

Age: 30

Location: Deutschland
Germany
  • View user's profile
  • #1
  • Posted: 07/25/2019 20:05
  • Post subject: What do you like about Jimi Hendrix
  • Reply with quote
I ask while this great guitarist will get lost of memory
911Turbo
Gender: Male

Location: Toronto
Canada
  • View user's profile
  • #2
  • Posted: 07/25/2019 23:04
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
Well , for 50 -60 years, jimi has changed many lives with his guitar playing.
Is he going to be a distant memory? Possibly. Who can predict the future.
Certainly not in my life time.
PurpleHazel

United States
  • View user's profile
  • #3
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 07:15
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
Hendrix' popularity has never flagged a huge amount.

The archival collection Heaven, Hell and Angels (2013) reached #2 on the U.S. album charts. Valleys of Neptune (2010) reached #4 and Both Sides of the Sky (2018) reached #8.

Posthumous albums that went gold:

The Cry of Love (1971) [Platinum]
Rainbow Bridge (1972)
Hendrix in the West [Live] (1972)
Crash Landing (1975) (boo!)
BBC Sessions (1998)
Live at Woodstock (1999)

Of course, his albums do pretty well on here, with Are You Experienced? at #31 and Electric Ladyland at #69.

Given where rock guitar was when he emerged, I think he's the greatest rock guitarist of all time. You don't hear enough about his influence on heavy metal, but who had a bigger, heavier guitar sound in 1967? Big influence on Sonic Youth. The whole subgenre of shoegaze owes something to him (Sethmadsen touched on his influence on alternative rock guitar). He might not have invented the use of feedback in rock, but he's the first rock guitarist to make it central to his sound and explored its possibilities more thoroughly than any other guitarist of the 60s. He thoroughly explored the possibilities of a whole bunch of guitar effects and used and blended them with great musicality.

He was a great improviser. When he got a chance to stretch out, he never played the same notes the same way twice, had a stream of consciousness quality to his soloing that might've been influenced by John Coltrane.

He was a terrific blues player too. There were many rock guitarists in the 60s who were trying to build on the electric blues, but Hendrix had a great blues foundation, having toured the chitlin' circuit with The Isley Brothers and Little Richard and rubbing shoulders with many blues greats like B.B. King and Buddy Guy (he and Guy were friends).

He was very admired among jazz musicians. He jammed with Rahsaan Roland Kirk, John McLaughlin and Larry Young. He and Miles Davis were in negotiations to make an album with Tony Williams on drums when he died. He and Gil Evans were also planning an album featuring Hendrix with Evans' orchestrations. Evans went on to record an album of Hendrix songs, The Gil Evans Orchestra Plays the Music of Jimi Hendrix (1974). Hendrix tunes were a staple of Evans' concerts until his death in 1988 (the live versions are generally much better than the ones on the studio album, and Evans put out quite a few live albums).
Fischman
RockMonster, JazzMeister, Bluesboy,ClassicalMaster
Gender: Male

Location: Land of Enchantment
United States
  • View user's profile
  • #4
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 13:15
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
PurpleHazel wrote:


He and Miles Davis were in negotiations to make an album with Tony Williams on drums when he died.


Now that would have been somethin'! Throw in a solid bassist and you'd have a unique and supremely talented ensemble. I would have loved to have heard what they would have produced.

Oh, and in response to the OP, of all the rock musicians destined to land on the heap of long term anonymity, Jimi's about the last who might suffer that fate. Really, in terms of long term staying power, he's right up there with The Beatles, Rolling Stones, and Led Zeppelin.
Hayden

Location: Vietnam
Canada
  • View user's profile
  • #5
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 14:13
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
His hair.
_________________
Doubles & Conch
Skinny
birdman_handrub.gif
  • View user's profile
  • #6
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 16:13
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
Hayden wrote:
His hair.


He did have great hair.
_________________
2021 in full effect. Come drop me some recs. Y'all know what I like.
craola
crayon master

Location: pdx
United States
  • View user's profile
  • #7
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 16:34
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote

_________________
follow me on the bandcamp.
mickilennial
The Most Trusted Name in News
Gender: Female

Age: 36

Location: Detroit
Poland
  • View user's profile
  • #8
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 23:35
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
i like when he does the guitar stuff
CharlieBarley
Gender: Male

Age: 50

Location: Mount Olympus
United Kingdom
  • View user's profile
  • #9
  • Posted: 07/26/2019 23:56
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
His charisma, his talent, his versatility and his unique and peerless way of playing guitar.

As well as having cool hair he had a cool singing voice too.

I have a question:

Does the song "You Can't Always Get What You Want" by the Rolling Stones reference Jimi Hendrix?

I always thought it was spooky that the Jimmy/Jimi in the song looked " pretty ill " in the drug store then Jimi Hendrix died the next year after Let It Bleed came out. In 1970. It's almost as if Jagger and Richards predicted Jimi Hendrix' death.
indieshins

Age: 27

Australia
  • View user's profile
  • #10
  • Posted: 07/27/2019 06:35
  • Post subject:
  • Reply with quote
I think PurpleHazel pretty much covered it, honestly. For me, it comes down to the simple fact that he played with an incredible amount of feeling and with a fluidity that is to be envied. There's a video of Jeff Beck playing Little Wing on Youtube somewhere, and even though the whole thing is a lot cleaner and the notes are more defined, it lacks something. That's what Jimi had. While players like Clapton played all the right notes, but always seemed to be thinking about the notes to play (even if they weren't), Jimi sometimes played wrong notes, but played them with more conviction and feeling than almost anyone before or since. So many players playing the same sort of stuff as him felt kind of bland in their technicality - their fingers had memorised classic licks and they played them by rote over simple blues structures. Jimi took all of that and added creative flair that few of his peers had.

Of course, this is entirely subjective. Some people love Clapton and Beck. I find Clapton mostly boring, and can't comment on Beck. That's an argument for a different time. With Jimi, I think it was the added artistry of it, beyond the simple virtuosity. The man played as if the guitar were an extension of his body, and he made it cry like no-one else.
_________________
Top 40 Greatest Music Albums by indieshins
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   This topic is locked: you cannot edit posts or make replies.
All times are GMT
Goto page 1, 2  Next
Page 1 of 2


 

Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Similar Topics
Topic Author Forum
[ Poll ] Was Jimi Hendrix a solo artist? RoundTheBend Music
[ Poll ] [Closed] Best Ever Guitarist: Jimi He... RockyRaccoon Games
Surreal, Psychedelic Jimi Hendrix Art... 40footwolf Music
Blasphemy! Noel Redding synergy to Ji... RoundTheBend Music
Album of the day (#3607): Band Of Gyp... albummaster Music

 
Back to Top