Mitchells drumming on Manic Depression is a masterclass on its own. Bearing in mind Hendrix was so so illusive was so free style to keep up up and keep it tight all kudos to to Mitchell
Jimi live video at Berkeley doing Johnny B.Goode or Purple Haze. Jimi live video at Woodstock Voodoo Child(Slight return) Jimi live video at Filmore East Band of Gypsys doing Machine Gun or Stone Free.All will blast your mind
He was literally never without. And you can tell by what raises him above anyone else. He was the guitar. It was simply an extension of him, physically and his whole being
In the fall of '69 Jimi sent a message to Apple Records to Paul McCartney suggesting forming a supergroup with himself, McCartney, and Ginger Baker. But by then Paul was up on his farm in Scotland and wouldn't have seen it. Nothing further ever came of it.
Holy crap I can’t believe I’ve never heard these live tracks! This is the best thing I’ve ever heard by Hendrix hands down. Incredible performance and Mitch is blowing my mind too!
"Manic Depression" is one my favorites. That and "1983, A Merman I Should Turn to be". The latter should probably be considered a forerunner of progressive rock. Of course, everyone likes Voodoo Child (slight return).
It’s psychedelic rock, or psychedelic blues rock. Some think psychedelic rock is precursor to prog. I think they are quite distict. A world of difference between anything Hendrix compared with anything Genesis, Yes, Rush, Renaissance, or the like. I know a guy who thinks rock is either metal or prog, thus missing at least a dozen sub-genres of rock over the last 65 or 70 years.
@@thescrewfly I’m not worried one bit. But I do appreciate a modicum of accuracy, and enjoy being a student of genres and how they came about. Besides, he raised the subject.
I love Voodoo Child! Hearing it for the first time. 68?!! 🤯 WOW, I’ve never heard anything like it. It’s so good! This is my favorite Jimi song now. Thank you, Lee!
Awesome reaction Lee yet again❤ I'm happy that my pick won the flash because it was a lot of fun watching you go crazy and bug Out listening to it LOL😊
I'm one o' those lucky teens who was in the right place at the right time (Houston 1968) to see Jimi 'n The Experience perform these songs live. As much o' a life changin' experience as that was I wanna impart to you the importance o' listenin' to the studio versions o' these two tracks. Gwine blow yer mind...guaranteed!
The electric guitar has been in existence since the 1930's, it took 30 years for Jimi Hendrix to arrive and change EVERYTHING! Many guitarists have had a chance to do what he did, but they couldn't.
Love "Manic Depression", right at the top of my Hendrix list. Tip of the hat once again to Scott, keep "em coming. Wow does this take me back. Great reaction, Lee, as always. Blessings.
You’ve done Band of Gypsies- Machine Gun, I would put that as my #1. Not sure if you can access this album on line, but from Jimi Hendrix Concerts there is “Stone Free” (live from the Royal Albert Hall, London, UK, February 24, 1969) that is an absolute banger. It was the original Jimi Hendrix Experience and it will take you to outer space. (Nice drum solo by Mitch also)
ruclips.net/video/qFfnlYbFEiE/видео.htmlsi=mTf7VhkXTLjZypeT This is Jimi in Hawaii 1970 playing Voodoo Child. My go to live performance of Jimi. Let's just say it's incredible and kids having great time, especially the girl sitting down from 4.01 in
This cat was amazing. He just did it all. He was unmatched as a guitarist, and he had such stage presence, like actors speak of, and was a genuinely humble person. He never thought of himself as the greatest this or that, he just enjoyed playing music for himself and his fans.
Hendrix: the first and still the greatest. Mitch Mitchell was hugely influenced by Elvin Jones. Great reaction. He was Prometheus - a titan among musicians. Or demi-god. Take your pick. And agreed about the chaos in Hendrix' music; it's one of the things I absolutely love about it and partly what sets him apart from many of those who came after.
He thrives in that chaos. I’ve noticed his “best” (which is everything usually but those absolute what the fuck moments) is when it’s just pandemonium. He is a titan for sure. I’m gonna start calling him Prometheus lol
do yourself a favor and listen to the studio versions for yourself too. The Winterland shows were epic. At the end of Manic Depression there where he says "...I don't give a damn!" He launches into Sunshine of Your Love by Cream. Cream had played earlier and then announced they were breaking up. They were likely in the crowd. These were probably the Experience's tightest/best recorded shows.
Man I almost did that sunshine of your love cover too! Shit I should have just done that. I switched it at the last second cuz I saw the slight return one I hadn’t heard yet 🤣🤷
@@L33Reacts it's all good brother, just more epic-ness for later, plus you can listen to manic depression again lol. You literally can't go wrong with Jimi. LOVE the Jimi journey!
Mind blowing as always with Jimi. There’s an incredible vinyl album called ‘The Jimi Hendrix Concerts’ (it has a great, abstract painting of Jimi on the cover) which I highly recommend. I used to listen to it in the car with my Dad, who was a massive Hendrix fan. The versions of ‘Stone Free’ and ‘Redhouse’ are beyond stunning. The way Jimi weaves from rhythm to lead is unreal. You need to hear it man.
Jimi live at Berkeley doing "Hear My Train a Comin'" Jimi doing Voodoo Chile at Atlanta Pop or Royal Albert Hall Jimi extended Purple Haze with Improvisation section
It was so much fun learning these songs and performing them with my local bands in those days - such fun times and such fabulous music to immerse myself in... Noel player through my bass amp (an Acoustic 360/361) at a local club once in Ft. Lauderdale with Mitch and Mike Pinera of Blues Image & Iron Butterfly. So cool! Later I sold that amp to Jaco Pastorius.
When I was a teen I bought everything Hendrix the record collection topped at 33 albums and yes I know there was only 4 but any boot leg any recording I bought but I never heard this recording before. Thank you for sharing.
Concert? San Diego Sports Arena 5/25/1969. Best show I have heard. And I have heard pretty much all available, and not supposed to be available shows. In his prime. They were on tour so they were very tight. The show was well recorded for a live album that never happened.
Mitch was the perfect foil to Jimi's playing, it gave him the room to stretch out in a way I doubt any other drummer could've. Purple haze from Berkeley and Johnny B Goode grom Berkeley are a must watch and listen. If you can find it the full length Voodoo Chile from Woodstock is outstanding, usually you only find the cut version on RUclips. Also Voodo Chile and Hey Joe/Sunshine of Your Love from the BBC TV show Happening with Lulu. Sgt.Pepper, Foxey Lady and Wild Thing from Kensington Olympia (labelled incorrectly as from Stora Scenen) are also worth a look.
Yep I bought the Are you Experienced Album May 1967. Took it home and played it on the old record player. Like you said 'like nothing you had ever heard before' or will ever hear again.
The SRV version of Slight Return is basically his interpretation of the Hendrix version found on Electric Ladyland. In fact, it’s so close to the original that on the SRV documentary, the comments by his contemporaries were there was no point to having done it at all.
Jimi as Prometheus. Great insight, brother: disseminating the fire of the gods to humankind, a game-changer, redrawing the landscape, inner and outer -forever !! 🤟🏼😘🎶💜🌈🌉✨️🕊
I've said it many times - when it comes to guitar players, there's Jimi and then everyone else. As for best live cut, 'Johnny B. Goode' from Hendrix In The West is incredible, and it's a live video, so you can watch him doing it all. He was unreal.
"Manic Depression" have been one of my all time favorite songs for forty years. Mitchells drumming got so much drive to it. I remember a drummer talking about the rythm pattern in the song as "waltz". I'm not a drummer myself so I'm not a good judge of that.
Thanks for the Live Reaction! I prefer Jimi live more often than not. The Winterland and Fillmore shows from February and October 1968 are special. You need a nice Fillmore West poster on your wall. Can I send you one?
🌸 please refresh my memory... have you done his performance at Monterey Pop? if my memory serves me on that part I believe he burned his guitar onstage.
I was at the Oct.11 show at Winterland. 🎸👍☝🔥🔥🔥❤🔥♥ Lee, here's a few from my playlist: Little Wing 10-12 @Winterland (4:02), The South Bank Show (1:03-52), Hendrix, Winwood, Casady, Mitchell, Take #2 of Voodoo Chile (9:45), Driving South, BBC (5:31), Hoochie Coochie Man, BBC (5:30), Wait until Tomorrow, BBC (2:55). Belly Button Window is one of the many documentary channels about Jimi.
That entire disc from 10/12/68 show at Winterland is beyond belief, do Hey Joe, make sure it is from the 12th, the intro to the song is one of Jimi's very best solos from any song, it still gives me chills. You have to hear it, it is that good. Enjoy! 🔥🎵🎸🎤🎶🔥
Wait Until Tomorrow Album: Axis: Bold as Love Released: 1967 The Jimi Hendrix Experience - The Wind Cries Mary (Live In Paris, October 9, 1967) There is also an official Jimi Hendrix RUclips channel.
One reason this songs sticks is 1983 camping and my boom box record button broke. So it taped about 20 seconds of bullfrogs on this song. Yeah we were stoned.
They left the planet and when somewhere else for about 2 minutes in the middle of "Manic.." There are times when you are playing with a band and you are in the middle of jam, or improvisation segment, where you don't know where it's going, and you aren't sure what you are doing, and the music plays itself. Those moment are why people play the guitar. But when those moments happen-- After that you have to play.
I know this seems redundant so you probably won’t react to another, but you’re listening to the wrong voodoo child. Try the one from The Royal Albert Hall. Much more up beat and ripping. That one was released on the original issue of Hendrix in the West and wrongly identified as from the San Diego sports arena. The reissue of Hendrix in the west replaced Voodoo Child when it was discovered to be from Royal Albert Hall and not California. If you don’t listen to it with us, PLEASE do yourself a favor and find this one. You won’t be disappointed. It’s my favorite live track from Hendrix. ✌️❤️
There was a Hendrix Tribute record that came out about 25-30 years ago with only Warner Bros artists (could have been better choices, IMO), but the Seal/Jeff Beck version of this song is one of my favorites as is PM Dawn's very unique cover of "You Got Me Floatin'".
That performance of "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" is my favourite version of the song. By anyone. I know SRV did a nice cover, but that one there smokes all the others that came after it.
Hello my friend. My name is Gary I’m 74 years old like I’m sure many of your Hendrix Thursday listeners are. I would like to recommend a song off of Band of Gypsies that you might miss and I’m sure you will enjoy. “Power of Love” especially the intro. The whole song is great. I got to see Hendrix in 1968 in Detroit.
Kudos to your taste, my man. The word genius is overused and I’ve only heard three acts in my lifetime I’d give that accolade to and you seem to have been hooked by all three - Jimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan and the Beatles. Keep it going 👍
There are funny little anecdotes Jimi said on a consistent basis. He was 24 ok. They were somewhat funny. There's the one about--"dedicated to the girl in the second row with the yellow/purple under where" There's, "I'll take my hat off if you take you pants off" There's (prior to playing "Rolling stone) He would point at Noel and say, "There's Bob Dylan's Grandmother" See:pic of Noel And my favorite- I can't remember how it goes, but part of it is- "The all night social workers on the corner with mattresses tied to their backs yelling 'curb service' 'curb service'" If you know how that one goes, let me know
Give me your best live cut by Hendrix. The one with the most likes will get done next week for our weekly Jimi vid.
More from these Winterland shows.
Johnny B. Goode from Berkeley
Wild Thing ("the joint US/UK national anthem") at the Monterey festival.
@@KenHunter-lt8wm ...yessss, agreee🎸
check out ‘The Stars That Play With Laughing Sams Dice’
When Hendrix was at his best and into his playing there wasn't anybody that could touch him.
Listening to Hendrix always just makes me want to listen to more Hendrix... which is still a good thing nearly 60 years later.
Mitchells drumming on Manic Depression is a masterclass on its own. Bearing in mind Hendrix was so so illusive was so free style to keep up up and keep it tight all kudos to to Mitchell
He reckoned it was his best work with Hendrix on that track.
There’s nothing better in this world and sharing music with like-minded people. Thanks to all y’all
totally agree Bruder!! You said it Man, Amen.... Play on Mitch, Jimi & Noel.
This man changed our lives when he hit the scene and I include in that all the top guitarists of the time who thought fuck it we’re finished
What can I say? Jimi was the GOAT
Never forget Mitch and Noel !!!!!!!
I even like when Jimi tunes his guitar.
Jimi.... that is all that needs to be said.
Jimi live video at Berkeley doing Johnny B.Goode or Purple Haze.
Jimi live video at Woodstock Voodoo Child(Slight return)
Jimi live video at Filmore East Band of Gypsys doing Machine Gun or Stone Free.All will blast your mind
A friend of my dad’s shared a flat with him in Nottingham hill and said he permanently had a guitar strapped to him the whole time they lived there
No shit, really??? That’s crazy! I heard that in the chat this morning. The guitar and him went places together 😂😂🤯🤯🤯🤯
He was literally never without. And you can tell by what raises him above anyone else. He was the guitar. It was simply an extension of him, physically and his whole being
I remember reading the he even took his morning piss with his guitar 🎸
Jimi was the best for a reason, he played all the time.
In the fall of '69 Jimi sent a message to Apple Records to Paul McCartney suggesting forming a supergroup with himself, McCartney, and Ginger Baker. But by then Paul was up on his farm in Scotland and wouldn't have seen it. Nothing further ever came of it.
Wow! Can you imagine?
Amazing. Paul adored Hendrix and said if there was one other musician he wished he could be, it’d be Jimi.
ALL ALONG THE WATCH TOWER…. MAN I WAS LISTENING TO THE BASS N DRUMMIN MY ASS OFF N HIS GUITAR WAS DANCING THROUGH MY HEAD. 👏 ROCK ON MAN 👊🖖
Yep, Jimi was folding space here!
"What was that?" is probably the best summary of listening to Jimi Hendrix live possible.
and he played guitar with his teeth...... stone free, freedom, still raining, still dreaming. these 2 tracks ..... jammin thanks, scott and lee!
Holy crap I can’t believe I’ve never heard these live tracks! This is the best thing I’ve ever heard by Hendrix hands down. Incredible performance and Mitch is blowing my mind too!
"Manic Depression" is one my favorites. That and "1983, A Merman I Should Turn to be". The latter should probably be considered a forerunner of progressive rock. Of course, everyone likes Voodoo Child (slight return).
It’s psychedelic rock, or psychedelic blues rock. Some think psychedelic rock is precursor to prog. I think they are quite distict. A world of difference between anything Hendrix compared with anything Genesis, Yes, Rush, Renaissance, or the like. I know a guy who thinks rock is either metal or prog, thus missing at least a dozen sub-genres of rock over the last 65 or 70 years.
@@36karpatoruski All these categories are a dead end. Listen to any kind of thing you think you might like and stop worrying about how to label it.
@@thescrewfly You got that right :)
@@thescrewfly I’m not worried one bit. But I do appreciate a modicum of accuracy, and enjoy being a student of genres and how they came about. Besides, he raised the subject.
gotta treat rainy day dream away, 1983, moon turn the tides and still raining still dreaming as one track lol
There is a surprising cover of "Manic Depression" on the 1993 Hendrix tribute album Stone Free - with Jeff Beck on guitar and Seal on vocals.
I am a huge fan. I bought Electric Lady Land album when I was in college and I listened to it every day. I saw him in concert in 1968. Awesome,
Incredible.
I love Voodoo Child! Hearing it for the first time.
68?!! 🤯
WOW, I’ve never heard anything like it. It’s so good!
This is my favorite Jimi song now.
Thank you, Lee!
The deep chugging 🔥!!
Definitely check out the studio version of Manic Depression off the Are You Experienced album.
Incredible live cuts, but please do the studio version of "Manic Depression" for comparison.
This was a joy to listen to Lee. Thank you.
Awesome reaction Lee yet again❤
I'm happy that my pick won the flash because it was a lot of fun watching you go crazy and bug Out listening to it LOL😊
👍👍👍👍😋😋😋😋❤
Have you seen the Dirty Mac? John Lennon on vocals and rhythm guitar. Eric Clapton on lead. Keith Richards on bass. Mitch Mitchell on drums.
I'm one o' those lucky teens who was in the right place at the right time (Houston 1968) to see Jimi 'n The Experience perform these songs live. As much o' a life changin' experience as that was I wanna impart to you the importance o' listenin' to the studio versions o' these two tracks. Gwine blow yer mind...guaranteed!
Hey, I agree with you on the Prometheus allegory
Oh Lee, sure do wish you were born in "our time." One of your best reactions. Thanks Scotty. Anything Jimi, I'm there. 😂❤
I'm with you on Manic Depression. I don't think I've heard it live before though. That was blistering.
Wasn’t that wild?? I gotta hear the studio cut now.
The electric guitar has been in existence since the 1930's, it took 30 years for Jimi Hendrix to arrive and change EVERYTHING! Many guitarists have had a chance to do what he did, but they couldn't.
My will is instructed to play Voodoo Chile at my funeral. My family knows the reason. 🫡
I'm thinking of the Woodstock Star Spangled Banner for mine .....and I'm not even American
Jimi.
Enough said.
Love "Manic Depression", right at the top of my Hendrix list. Tip of the hat once again to Scott, keep "em coming. Wow does this take me back. Great reaction, Lee, as always. Blessings.
You’ve done Band of Gypsies- Machine Gun, I would put that as my #1.
Not sure if you can access this album on line, but from Jimi Hendrix Concerts there is “Stone Free” (live from the Royal Albert Hall, London, UK, February 24, 1969) that is an absolute banger. It was the original Jimi Hendrix Experience and it will take you to outer space. (Nice drum solo by Mitch also)
ruclips.net/video/qFfnlYbFEiE/видео.htmlsi=mTf7VhkXTLjZypeT
This is Jimi in Hawaii 1970 playing Voodoo Child. My go to live performance of Jimi. Let's just say it's incredible and kids having great time, especially the girl sitting down from 4.01 in
This cat was amazing. He just did it all. He was unmatched as a guitarist, and he had such stage presence, like actors speak of, and was a genuinely humble person. He never thought of himself as the greatest this or that, he just enjoyed playing music for himself and his fans.
That's a great live show.
Your Prometheus analogy is incredibly apt.
Hendrix: the first and still the greatest. Mitch Mitchell was hugely influenced by Elvin Jones. Great reaction. He was Prometheus - a titan among musicians. Or demi-god. Take your pick. And agreed about the chaos in Hendrix' music; it's one of the things I absolutely love about it and partly what sets him apart from many of those who came after.
I know what you .mean - sometimes everything feels on the verge of falling apart - he takes such chances, like juggling balls in thr air
He thrives in that chaos. I’ve noticed his “best” (which is everything usually but those absolute what the fuck moments) is when it’s just pandemonium. He is a titan for sure. I’m gonna start calling him Prometheus lol
Yeah, man, if even one percent of the people who read this comment get hip to Elvin Jones, we've scored a victory!
do yourself a favor and listen to the studio versions for yourself too. The Winterland shows were epic. At the end of Manic Depression there where he says "...I don't give a damn!" He launches into Sunshine of Your Love by Cream. Cream had played earlier and then announced they were breaking up. They were likely in the crowd. These were probably the Experience's tightest/best recorded shows.
Man I almost did that sunshine of your love cover too! Shit I should have just done that. I switched it at the last second cuz I saw the slight return one I hadn’t heard yet 🤣🤷
@@L33Reacts it's all good brother, just more epic-ness for later, plus you can listen to manic depression again lol. You literally can't go wrong with Jimi. LOVE the Jimi journey!
Mind blowing as always with Jimi.
There’s an incredible vinyl album called ‘The Jimi Hendrix Concerts’ (it has a great, abstract painting of Jimi on the cover) which I highly recommend. I used to listen to it in the car with my Dad, who was a massive Hendrix fan. The versions of ‘Stone Free’ and ‘Redhouse’ are beyond stunning. The way Jimi weaves from rhythm to lead is unreal. You need to hear it man.
Noel was like "release the Krakkon" on Voodoo Chile. Nice to hear.
Jimi live at Berkeley doing "Hear My Train a Comin'"
Jimi doing Voodoo Chile at Atlanta Pop or Royal Albert Hall
Jimi extended Purple Haze with Improvisation section
‘Johnny B Goode’ and ‘Little Wing’ from Hendrix in the West….also ‘Hey baby (new Rising Sun)’ and “Hear My Train a’ Coming’ from Rainbow Bridge
Love this song , thank you.
Jimi stretching the extreme❤️
Red House My Favorite.
It was so much fun learning these songs and performing them with my local bands in those days - such fun times and such fabulous music to immerse myself in... Noel player through my bass amp (an Acoustic 360/361) at a local club once in Ft. Lauderdale with Mitch and Mike Pinera of Blues Image & Iron Butterfly. So cool! Later I sold that amp to Jaco Pastorius.
When I was a teen I bought everything Hendrix the record collection topped at 33 albums and yes I know there was only 4 but any boot leg any recording I bought but I never heard this recording before. Thank you for sharing.
im exited for this one!
excited
Noel and his 8 string Hagstrom bass
One of the best live
Anything Jimi Live is the Goat brotha
Please don't forget Billy Cox as Jimi's bassist as well. Billy's good.
Concert?
San Diego Sports Arena 5/25/1969. Best show I have heard. And I have heard pretty much all available, and not supposed to be available shows.
In his prime. They were on tour so they were very tight. The show was well recorded for a live album that never happened.
🌸Jimi ...🤍
Mitch was the perfect foil to Jimi's playing, it gave him the room to stretch out in a way I doubt any other drummer could've.
Purple haze from Berkeley and Johnny B Goode grom Berkeley are a must watch and listen. If you can find it the full length Voodoo Chile from Woodstock is outstanding, usually you only find the cut version on RUclips.
Also Voodo Chile and Hey Joe/Sunshine of Your Love from the BBC TV show Happening with Lulu.
Sgt.Pepper, Foxey Lady and Wild Thing from Kensington Olympia (labelled incorrectly as from Stora Scenen) are also worth a look.
Manic Depression - the most ferocious waltz (1 2 3, 1 2 3, 1 2 3) ever written! Imagine hearing this when it came out, like nothing ever heard before
Yep I bought the Are you Experienced Album May 1967. Took it home and played it on the old record player. Like you said 'like nothing you had ever heard before' or will ever hear again.
The SRV version of Slight Return is basically his interpretation of the Hendrix version found on Electric Ladyland. In fact, it’s so close to the original that on the SRV documentary, the comments by his contemporaries were there was no point to having done it at all.
Jimi as Prometheus. Great insight, brother: disseminating the fire of the gods to humankind, a game-changer, redrawing the landscape, inner and outer -forever !! 🤟🏼😘🎶💜🌈🌉✨️🕊
The master
Pali Gap is a fairly little known track, but it may be my favourite of his.
🌸 YOU GOT STABBED IN THE EYE????
I've said it many times - when it comes to guitar players, there's Jimi and then everyone else. As for best live cut, 'Johnny B. Goode' from Hendrix In The West is incredible, and it's a live video, so you can watch him doing it all. He was unreal.
Oh yeah, and the rhythm section was pretty f-ing good!
"Manic Depression" have been one of my all time favorite songs for forty years. Mitchells drumming got so much drive to it. I remember a drummer talking about the rythm pattern in the song as "waltz". I'm not a drummer myself so I'm not a good judge of that.
Crazy 🎸but his voice 🎇❤️
Jimi had some fun with Red House and Wild Thing on Live at Winterland.
Thanks for the Live Reaction! I prefer Jimi live more often than not. The Winterland and Fillmore shows from February and October 1968 are special. You need a nice Fillmore West poster on your wall. Can I send you one?
He said the 17th century. Jimi's way of saying it was a long time ago (2 years!!). Lee, check out some more Winterland tracks. The band were on fire.
Yeah he did
Perfect Seattle song from home town boy Jimi is Rainy day, dream away from Electric Ladyland.
🌸 please refresh my memory... have you done his performance at Monterey Pop? if my memory serves me on that part I believe he burned his guitar onstage.
If 6 was 9.
that's Jimi's way of joking that the song is old lol
Little short version of electric ladyland on loose ends lp simple but beautiful.
I was at the Oct.11 show at Winterland. 🎸👍☝🔥🔥🔥❤🔥♥ Lee, here's a few from my playlist: Little Wing 10-12 @Winterland (4:02), The South Bank Show (1:03-52), Hendrix, Winwood, Casady, Mitchell, Take #2 of Voodoo Chile (9:45), Driving South, BBC (5:31), Hoochie Coochie Man, BBC (5:30), Wait until Tomorrow, BBC (2:55). Belly Button Window is one of the many documentary channels about Jimi.
Hard to pick a favoiite Hendrix song, but I'd like you to hear Spanish Castle Magic.
The Hendrix jam at the end of Woodstock. I think it's called Villanova junction, but it wasn't called that on my Woodstock album.
That entire disc from 10/12/68 show at Winterland is beyond belief, do Hey Joe, make sure it is from the 12th, the intro to the song is one of Jimi's very best solos from any song, it still gives me chills. You have to hear it, it is that good. Enjoy! 🔥🎵🎸🎤🎶🔥
Wait Until Tomorrow
Album: Axis: Bold as Love
Released: 1967
The Jimi Hendrix Experience - The Wind Cries Mary (Live In Paris, October 9, 1967)
There is also an official Jimi Hendrix RUclips channel.
One reason this songs sticks is 1983 camping and my boom box record button broke. So it taped about 20 seconds of bullfrogs on this song. Yeah we were stoned.
They left the planet and when somewhere else for about 2 minutes in the middle of "Manic.."
There are times when you are playing with a band and you are in the middle of jam, or improvisation segment, where you don't know where it's going, and you aren't sure what you are doing, and the music plays itself.
Those moment are why people play the guitar. But when those moments happen--
After that you have to play.
Tony Glover once wrote that Hendrix played delta blues--but the delta was on Mars
Electric Ladyland version is perfection
Purple Haze Atlanta Pop Festival
He was JOKING.about Red House.
All that guitar soloing in a trio requires a great rhythm section. The myth of Hendrix owes a lot to Mitch.
I know this seems redundant so you probably won’t react to another, but you’re listening to the wrong voodoo child. Try the one from The Royal Albert Hall. Much more up beat and ripping. That one was released on the original issue of Hendrix in the West and wrongly identified as from the San Diego sports arena. The reissue of Hendrix in the west replaced Voodoo Child when it was discovered to be from Royal Albert Hall and not California. If you don’t listen to it with us, PLEASE do yourself a favor and find this one. You won’t be disappointed. It’s my favorite live track from Hendrix. ✌️❤️
There was a Hendrix Tribute record that came out about 25-30 years ago with only Warner Bros artists (could have been better choices, IMO), but the Seal/Jeff Beck version of this song is one of my favorites as is PM Dawn's very unique cover of "You Got Me Floatin'".
That performance of "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" is my favourite version of the song. By anyone. I know SRV did a nice cover, but that one there smokes all the others that came after it.
Hay baby and Hear my train a coming from rainbow bridge
Yes!
Anything from Monterey, but Wild Thing will do
Hello my friend. My name is Gary I’m 74 years old like I’m sure many of your Hendrix Thursday listeners are. I would like to recommend a song off of Band of Gypsies that you might miss and I’m sure you will enjoy. “Power of Love” especially the intro. The whole song is great. I got to see Hendrix in 1968 in Detroit.
Listen to Jimi, live in Maui... None of the drum mic's were on so Mitch had to overdub his drums just by watching the film of the concert....
"Wild Thing" from Monterey Pop Festival.
No spoilers but a yellow can of Ronsonol is involved.
Kudos to your taste, my man. The word genius is overused and I’ve only heard three acts in my lifetime I’d give that accolade to and you seem to have been hooked by all three - Jimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan and the Beatles. Keep it going 👍
There are funny little anecdotes Jimi said on a consistent basis.
He was 24 ok. They were somewhat funny.
There's the one about--"dedicated to the girl in the second row with the yellow/purple under where"
There's, "I'll take my hat off if you take you pants off"
There's (prior to playing "Rolling stone)
He would point at Noel and say, "There's Bob Dylan's Grandmother"
See:pic of Noel
And my favorite-
I can't remember how it goes, but part of it is-
"The all night social workers on the corner with mattresses tied to their backs yelling 'curb service' 'curb service'"
If you know how that one goes, let me know