The 1st time I heard him play in a documentary was a transcendent experience. I have a severe chronic pain condition & while he played, I felt no pain for the 1st time in 20yrs
There is no question, the therapeutic value of Music ( and other Arts) - in playing or listening. If any musician could remove your pain, it would be JIMI...
You are absolutely right, the music that we know today would have mostly been behind the times by now had he continued to live. I've often wondered what music would sound like today had jimi stayed with us.
@@nine9whitepony526 From my assessment, I really believe Hendrix was slowly forming into more softer and mellow sounds, since he stated in interviews shortly before his death he was finding distortion unbearable. Think, songs like Angel and Drifting.
@@bassinblue his friends have said he wanted to move to a more jazzy sound and those later tracks certaintly seem to have a more jazz influenced sensibility
"Music sweet music I wish I could caress ...Manic depression is a frustrating mess" It's very sad he died so young - He was a phenomenally talented individual.
Jimi Hendrix was indeed one of the greatest guitarists of all time!!!✨ Another sad ending.😔 Thank you for doing this video, I really enjoy when you analyze musicians and authors!❤️
Another interesting study of a famous personality. I agree that he was likely depressed at the time of his death. From what I have read, he was interested in developing a new style of music, & he felt that option was being limited, because the record company's wanted him to continue with his previous style of music. It's a shame that he died at such a young age. An amazing, brilliant guitarist, to say the very least.
It should mention him performing "Cream" with an acoustic guitar and saying "You know I wrote this while I was looking in the mirror, right? I'm serious".
I have always wondered if there is a correlation for mental illness with people who are geniuses. It seems as though musical and mathematical abilities manifest at a young age. Prince was certainly talented and probably a genius. Is there actually more drug usage by musicians in general? It is always sad and seemingly predictable and unsurprising when musicians die this way.
@@beeimaginative To be able to accomplish what Prince did-basically "invent" a whole new sound-takes being able to see beyond what "normal" people might see. Whether that includes drugs or not...maybe. I don't know. We know that Hendrix was into LSD and so while it would very difficult to actually perform under it, it would certainly inform his writing, compositions, etc. I often say that Sgt. Pepper wouldn't have been as "flowery" if it weren't for acid influencing their songs. Certainly Strawberry Fields is an "acid" song. There have been some stories regarding Prince's drug usage, both from when he died and also stories from fellow musicians when I played up in L.A. in the 90s. He apparently stayed up for 2-3 days straight to finish mixing the Purple Rain album. He explains it as being under a deadline and then just getting into your work and also of being infused with a Spirit, implying a spiritual influence. Those that I knew up in L.A. looked at that story with an "I dunno, buddy" cause mixing for that long a time w/o a break can get reeaaalll hectic. The senses need a break. There are stories of him lining his windows with aluminum foil to keep his room pitch black. Also, getting kicked out of the house and living with Andre Cymone and his parents...being a straight-A student...his treatment of women...etc. All would be good fodder for Dr. Grande.
Jimi was also near-sighted and would buy new Corvettes and crash them. I learned a lot about him from the biography Room Full of Mirrors. His buddy and bassist, Billy Cox, was in the Army with Jimi and played Woodstock with him.
Jimi had a difficult childhood. His mother was young when she had him and his brother Leon. She was a free spirit like Jimi and found the responsibility of caring for two young boys difficult and his father Als' personality didn't make family life any easier... Lucille did turn to alcohol to ease her frustrations. After the divorce, the boys rarely saw their mother and their father would denounce her as an alcoholic to his boys. They frequently stayed with relatives, and their were parts of his childhood that he couldn't recall because of the chaos. I have heard more details about the circumstances of his death that suggest foul play, but the man needs to be remembered for his incredible spirit, fashion sense, and musical talent that has influenced countless people over the years. Rest in peace, James Marshall ❤🎆🌹 ✌
Laura...I am one of the top investigators in to Jimi's death...Jimi was murdered without a doubt and Dr Grande here is very possibly doing government disinformation to help cover it up...
@@Exiles800 I know he was murdered.His manager Micheal Jeffery had been in British intelligence... But towards the end he was starting to crack under pressure by exhibiting angry outbursts towards friends. He wanted to get away.The one's trying to control him weren't having it
@curbozer Boomer You saw him play... I'm jelly. I'm 57 but I've known people older than me that got to see him... One of them was at Woodstock. The anniversary of his birth is upon us. Love u Jimi☺💝🎆 🌹
Hendrix, like many others, probably had a good work ethic. He just worked on what he wanted to work on. There is nothing easy about playing excellent guitar, it is hard work. and he was King. Drugs ruined him just as they ruin anyone who over use them.
Drugs do not 'ruin anyone who uses them'. That is such a ridiculous over simplification. And it's dangerous! If you say that to someone and they take your word and never again take any 'drug' they'll probably die very early. Also if you tell people that recreational drug use will ruin them, they will see that that is not the case. And then whatever good advice you might have for them will be seen as silly hyperbole.
@@markbryant4641 I have had many friends die from abusing drugs and other males who developed meth generated lupus. No community could logically have this many lupus cases out of nowhere. Especially a community of just a few hundred people, all male, all meth abusers, not even genetically related people.
Some of this is odd, because from virtually everyone that knew Jimi. He was described as one of nicest, humble, kind, loving, caring, shy, human beings they ever met. In the few incidents he had otherwise, it was probably just the drugs, and the intense stress he was under. Particularly later in his life.
I didn’t know he could be violent and he hit a girlfriend over the head with a vodka bottle causing a wound needing stitches. I’m quite surprised at that and I thought I knew quite a bit about him.
Jimi was a very kind man and sensitive artist. he was confronted with a lot of surrounding criticism for his independent way of dress and thinking. His music was that of a genius . His lyrical writing was poetic description to the deepest sense. I am grateful for our brief but destiny laden meeting and his work .
His BS "analysis" is almost 50% factual error. Jimi had a tremendous work ethic, as evidenced by the hundreds of hours of pro- level recording he did in studios, touring almost constantly. He was, in effect, worked to death. Grande has no idea of the facts of this complrx case.
Hendrix was a brilliant guitarist and composer, no question -- as well as a charter member of the infamous so-called "Dead 27 Club" of rock and related musics, along with Brian Jones (Rolling Stones), Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison (the Doors) and Kurt Cobain (Nirvana), among other gifted artists dead at age 27.
The fact that I let the political ads run without clicking off them is a testament to how much I appreciate Dr. Grande's sense of balance. Normally after 800 I try to protect myself from emotional and intellectual triggers, and nothing trips them like contemporary politics.
Another excellent topic! Dr. Grande, you are certainly improving my downtime as I work from home and stay pretty isolated due to COVID-19. I appreciate these interesting takes.
I’m sure someone has already said this, but Hendrix wrote the song Manic Depression because he had been repeatedly told by (I believe) his manager, “You sound like a manic depressive.” This certainly doesn’t corroborate a diagnosis, but does illustrate that those in Hendrix’s life thought he may have had the disorder.
Jimi Hendrix was young also at a time, when drug use was ubiquitous - not an excuse but just another factor to consider, and Jimi perhaps had some major issues, concerning the death of his mother, no closure, which is sad and heartbreaking.💔
@@Zeldarw104 His mother had him at 16 and she actually died from cirrhosis of the liver. Yeah she was a raging alcoholic. His father drank too. So Jimi inherited that trait for real. I have the biography of Jimi called A Room Full Of Mirrors.
The very reason I don’t drink is because I have a high level of suppressed anger. I stay on top of my emotions, by staying sober. Keeps me problem free. Surprisingly, I feel like there is a general low level of understanding of how substances effect people, and with addiction. As a person who studies addiction and works in addiction treatment, I’m still interacting with a lot of people who don’t understand why someone who doesn’t have substance use disorder (me) would choose not to consume alcohol because they want to stay in control of their emotions. With so much information out there, it’s surprising how little so many people know.
I read & heard the really controversial thing about Jimi's death is the amount of alcohol in his body would have killed him long before he could have consumed all of it even with a huge tolerance. It's like it was poured down his throat even after he was dead. No one was supposed to talk about this. One man did & lost his job. Jimi had just made a huge enemy when he fired his manager who didn't hide the fact he was infuriated. Dr. G didn't mention this. Perhaps it was too controversial?
@curbozer Boomer Monica Danneman was a ditz. A lady named Susan ( can't remember who last name, a journalist who befriended him the last 3 yrs of his life and wrote a great book about him) interviewed Monica... She couldn't give a straight answer about how many Vesparex she had given Jimi that night
Personally i think we all have agressivity, kindness, supressed agressivity, frustrations, anxiety, suppressed feelings inside of us. To learn how to deal with them and how to balance them is healthy and important. For some sports help, others yoga, others having a loving night with their partner etc or a bit of it all. Life itself creates a bit of everything every day. And i think substance use frees this of course, but not in such a positive way. It does Make it more clear and brings it to the surface. The danger is when the substance use is so high that all the suppressed and inconscious feelings come out in an uncontrolled way. Famous people like Jimmy hendricks are under a lot of pressure, which on its own creates a lot of suppressed feelings and few time to get by and relax. Not everybody deals well with this. Also he was still very young and at that time, and on top of it music of the sixties were almost a marriage with substance use and alcohol. So to me the epoc and ideas were inspiring, but the famous were not protected in any way. For some it meant their young ending. I really loved their music, specially janis joplin and jimmy hendricks, their talents were hughe, i think. They just weren t protected and guided well. Luckily not all of them have and had such a bad ending. Some people get easily over this overpessure and over substance use. But the danger is always right behind the corner, specially if noone guides u and protects u in the process. Everyone is different. I really think things around famous people should change a bit, and their private life and resting moments shohld be more protected. My little thoughts on this.
Great analysis once again Dr. Grande. I’m hoping one day you will take my request I’ve been asking for of an analysis of Prince☔️. So many mysterious aspects of his life. How he reacted after the loss of his and Mayte’s son, how confident he appeared and at the same time shy. He was a genius and of the greatest.
Thank you Dr.Todd Grande for this very insightful video on Jimi Hendrix. During quarantine in 2020, I got into his music, bought 2 of his albums, and learned how to play "Hey Joe" on guitar. I agree that Jimi was not nearly as dysfunctional as Jim Morrison. He simply drank too much and died accidentally. He actually was pretty smart for his age. I didn't know what maniac depression was until I was 40. I feel sorry for him dying so young. I am lucky that I quit drinking and smoking when I was 35. I am free!
At the end of his last show in England - Isle of Wight 1970, he dropped his guitar on the stage and walked off head bowed. Looked tired and fed up. Drugs had damaged his mental health and physical appearance. Incredible performer, however!
Dr, Grandma, left out so much information about Hendrix, He's trying to turn Hendrix into a Mental health bad situation, Who wouldn't be depress if you knew you were being Rob of your Money and you might not make it to your 28 Birthday and you have a lot of Snake's around You that want leave you alone, Hendrix knew he was in Danger that last night of his life....
He took too many barbiturates and didn’t have the waking up reflex we normally have to choking. Also, he was a creative person in a very controlling industry.
Absolutely agree with you. Can you imagine what we would have today if he lived? Man, was like Carlos Santana with that instrument, amazing and like no other..
Ross, you simply don't know what you are talking about...I did a radio show to a 3 million demographic in New York in 2019 that proved Jimi could not have died from the barbiturate...A good forensic detective would realize the massive amounts of vomit the ambulance men witnessed on Jimi was from forced drowning because the amount of secobarbital Jimi took was not capable of producing such profuse vomiting...I have seen the Vesparax barbiturate overdose case histories and none of the victims vomited like Jimi was witnessed doing...The unusual vomiting witnessed by the EMS personnel was what you would see from forced drowning, action - reaction by the brain stem motor reflexes...You can't claim any lack of gag reflex and reconcile it with the intense vomiting at the scene like you are doing...That intense vomiting is proof that Jimi was drowned early in to the ingestion period for the pills because of the obvious still-present vomiting reflex...Jimi's murder was covered-up real time by the British authorities (police, medical, and Inquest)...
@@Exiles800 I know it's 1 year late but alcohol will do that. It happened to me. But they should have found alot in his bloodstream so I don't know what to think.
Great vid. I read an account of a pub owner in London who hosted the then unknown Hendrix at an early try-out gig. Apparently he was polite and well-mannered, but the volume was so loud that the glass shattered.
Please please please Dr Grande, can you analyse Kevin from "We Need to Talk About Kevin" and his mother? Other viewers have also requested this as well. Thanks
Yes, Jimmy Hendrix did suffer from depression; but you failed to mention that a big part if his sadness was due in a large part because of the struggle with the relationship between he and his father. His father did not approve of many of his choices in life. Also the many letters written to his father expressing his love and seeking approval from his dad was ongoing. These letters are of public access and in a documentary of Hendrix's life.
Jimi was murdered by his manager. The British guy Mike Jeffrey. He was British intelligence and had connections with the mob. Research that. He drowned Hendrix by pouring wine down his throat. This guy doesn't really know what he's saying on this video. Do your own research
@curbozer Boomer That's simply false and you are an idiot Curbozer...Jimi fired Jeffery 12 hours before his mysterious death with all the people involved lying...Kathy Etchingham got a British cop to interview those who were involved that night and he came back and told Kathy "They are all lying"...In most investigations that would trigger further pressing of the witnesses and police involvement however in Jimi's case the opposite occurred and a criminal British Attorney General lied and said there was no new evidence - even though his own investigation had just shown the main witness, Monika Dannemann, lied about everything she said happened that morning and the time of death was off by 6 hours...6 hours, in forensic terms, is a lifetime that completely invalidates the official cause of death but the Attorney General got around that by lying and shutting the investigation down...Then phony CIA psychiatrists come in and do hit pieces on Jimi's alleged psychological failings and divert people away from all this while blaming the victim...Jeffery killed Jimi because he would have done jail time once his books were scrutinized...Curbozer is a liar and Jeffery was witnessed flush with cash shortly after Jimi's death...He paid Jimi's father $250,000 in cash for his cut of the studio...
Thanks Dr. Grande. I agree with you about alcohol allowing suppressed anger to surface through the lowering of inhibitions. I hadn't thought about it that way. It makes a lot of sense.
From eyewitness testimonies on the night of Jimi's death, Monika was stalking Jimi that night at a party. She left the party very upset that Jimi was ignoring her and flirting with two ladies. She left by herself and Jimi stayed. Monkia came back and still very upset and wanted Jimi to leave the party. Jimi left his guitar at her apartment and wanted to get it. She was very loudly and emotionally arguing at Jimi when they left the party that eyewitnesses said they feared for his safety. Jimi tries to calm her down, and that's how Jimi was. I believe that Jimi arrived at her apartment wanted to get a solid night sleep since Monika was still so mad angry and agitated. He took the pills thinking they were weak (thanks Monika). He OD'd and Monika left him to suffer which caused his death. Jimi was a Victim of a Crime by Passion. She should have been charged at the very least of Involuntary Manslaughter by her admitted guilt leaving him sick in the middle of night to get cigarettes (LOL). RIP Jimi, your were a genius and guible in the ways of mean people. "Hell as no fury as a Woman scorned"
Jimi is someone that once I knew about his life, I could not leave It aside, It is a very unique life, regardless the same type of stupid death situation that other rockstars also experienced. We clearly can see, If someone really look into it, in interviews, he was suffering from some emotional pain, some kind of contradiction inside, that the drug abuse shown to light. There were some issues with the manager, including even frighten Jimi's life. Disrespect on someone can cause serious psychological problems He felt like an object in some way and that also could cause some violent tendencies, specially when on alchool/drugs. I like your video, you analysed him respectfully and that's good for me. Good work Doc.
Yet another great talent lost to booze and drugs. Such a waste. What Jimi could do to a guitar, remember self taught, was astounding. His natural ability gave such pleasure. I watch videos of him just focusing on his hands working his guitar, his genius is undeniable. Thanks Dr. Grant.
Dr. Grande, could you talk about the personality of counselors/mental health professionals? I've been doing my own undergrad research on this topic and wanted to hear some of your thoughts. Love your content, thanks!
Dr. Grande, your insights are deeply valued. I'm learning a lot from you. I have had some severe mental health issues in my family. Learning & understanding gives me peace. Very grateful for you. Thanks so much!
It makes sense, considering that he and Janis both died of overdoses in the same year It’s just tragic though when these talented musicians die way too young. It becomes a what could’ve been situation in a way
Interesting analysis of the best quitarist of all times. Dr grande the case of Marvin Gaye would be a great video. Great talent, fame, women and children but with a horrible father who ended up killing Marvin.
Another Washingtonian! Thank you, Dr. Grande! I LOVED JH's talent. What a history maker this gentleman was! What a shame he had a substance issue, but it is possible that his being high actually led to some elevated level of creativity,... or maybe not; like so many other greatly talented ones, he was apparently a tortured soul. My favorite drummer, John Henry Bonham, also had an alcohol problem and died because of it. The time of death question is an irritating puzzler; that woman might have either been a liar or high,... or maybe both. The O.C.E.A.N. results are interesting; it might be interesting to compare his to the results of the others in the "27 club."
All of your videos are amazing. I watch them almost every day! I would really love to see one on Tupac. Please do one! His interest in machiavellianism makes for a great video, among other things.
You should do a video on Dr. Todd Grande. He's a therapist who makes RUclips videos analyzing athletes, murderers, musicians, but especially criminals. He always starts out his videos by saying that he's only speculating, not diagnosing. His videos are informative and he has a dry sense of humor.
There is nothing that anyone can try and argue this analysis of Jimi. He was talented but , a lost cause. So sad. Thank you Dr. Todd. So on point. This one is my favorite of yours. It just is. ,♥️😔💔
He was a massive user of LSD too, apparently he bought huge amounts into the UK from America in his guitar case. I recall an interview with Lemmy , before he joined Hawkwind, he was a roadie for Hendrix. He would send Lemmy off to score acid for him. On one occasion Lemmy got 10 "hits". He gave Lemmy 3 of them, then took the other 7 himself , all at once !
Thank you DR Grande...i met Jimi when i was 16 and am musician. You cleared up for me more of why and how Jimi died since then. The 1960s were very hard for me growing up and these people were influences I had to measure carefully in my work. It would be great to do a report commentary for John Lennon and George Harrison also.
Great video! I didn't know about the details of his discharge. Just what I had read in a biography, which was the ankle story. I think he had a lot of suppressed rage. Look at what he did to his guitar and amps.
Jimi Hendrix cover of Bob Dylan song, "All Along the Watchtower" - Yes. Hey, I did NOT know Jimi Hendrix played with Tina Turner! That's amazing to imagine. (In that era, it would have been the Ike and Tina Turner Revue, not Tina on her own.)
@curbozer Boomer Thank you for the info. It's similar to what a school superintendent told me once: back in the day, he was on an airplane and members of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue were passengers on the flight. When he said this, I was in awe, right? Then he added emphatically, "Yeah, Ike was a real a$$ h le." Ike could not get along with many people. Good musician though. He would have benefitted from therapy, imo.
For something truly mind-blowing read John Potash’s book “Drugs As Weapons Against Us.” There’s more to the story of Jimi Hendrix’s demise, as well as other musicians.
It's amazing how you are able to produce so many videos of such quality in such a short span of time. You must have thought about this stuff for a very long time! Anyways, great content, very interesting and informative!
On conscientiousness: He was a guitar virtuoso with exceptional technical skill and a prolific song writer who released 3 groundbreaking albums between 1967-1968. These things would be hard without a strong work ethic (work-a-holism is putting it lightly) and he was a neat freak (according to one girlfriend). He was also famously a perfectionist in the studio to a point where he was "driving people mad".
This was a great discussion and I found the review regarding the correlation of suppressed anger and alcohol to be particularly interesting. The educational aspects of your videos are one of my favs! While I can agree that his access to money & substances made it easier to self medicate, it's difficult to assent to the theory that it was the consequence of fame. Firstly, we see a lot of persons who become famous yet don't resort to drug abuse, and secondly, In looking at what we know from his history, we see he started abusing substances before he was even famous. As we are aware, usually, our childhood experiences serve as a buffer in dealing with changing & challenging situations in adulthood and it seemed that Hendrix was without guidance & security from an early age. Maybe he even failed to adjust following his mother's passing. The industry he was in, definitely didn't make it easier, that's a fact.
Can you do more videos over Machiavellianism, like how someone would have those traits or anything that you think would be worth sharing? I find it very interesting and there’s not a lot about of information about it.
Dr. Grande - Interesting analysis, as always. I think pale yellow (your shirt) is your most flattering color. You look very handsome in that color. Second is the pale blue shirt you wear sometimes. I'm amazed by how little time it takes you to write a new, analytical video! First thing every day I look you up and am almost never disappointed after finding, once again, a Dr. Grande video!
He wrote such eloquently fragile lyrics sometimes. Very personal. Written in 3rd person but he clearly didn't have to use his imagination much to write 'Castles Made of Sand', 'Little Wing' and other uniquely brilliant expressions. There was without question a highly sensitive side to him. The other side was as you said what created the Jeckyll and Hyde element. The trouble was he lived 1000 mph and it isn't surprising that he went way too soon
Also, there were multiple motives for Jimi to be killed. His manager Michael Jeffrey had a large insurance policy out on Jimi's life, and Jimi was planning on firing Jeffrey as a manager (rightfully so as he was ripping him off) and Jeffrey owed the Mob lots of money so he couldn't afford to lose his control of Jimi's assets.
@curbozer Boomer you may be right. I read a few biographies and thats what I remember reading. I would have to research again. Doesn’t really matter though. Hes gone but his star still burns bright
I would love to see your take on Lars Von Trier! Such a wonderful filmmaker but, isolated and sad person. His films have changed my life so I would love to see what you think about him. Thank you for another wonderful and entertaining video!
Much thanks, Dr. Grande. Always interesting. Author Sharon Lawrence wrote that Jimi's Dad was often absent and neglectful of his children, though Jimi said he knew his mom had loved him. Jimi and Leon were left without food, and were sometimes fed by charitable neighbors when small. He did not consider himself "black," but more Native American. Hangers-on plagued his life and he lacked the tenacity to evict them. Ms Lawrence was his friend and describes him as a decent man-- conscientious, affable, and careful with his appearance. Still miss the man. His music was an element of our youth.
Good video but I feel like there were a lot of points not addressed especially when it came to Hendrix’s depression, stress, anxiety, and number one his brilliance. When Hendrix was brought to London by Chaz Chandler in 66, he soon exploded on the London scene and was playing in front of the biggest artists in the world at that time. Groups like the Beatles, The Who, Clapton, the stones all saw him play and were blown away. He became an international superstar soon after. A big part of the story not mentioned was that Hendrix signed a terrible contract while being a working musician in New York where he signed most of his rights away to any material he wrote for pennies on the dollar that lasted well into his years of fame. He spent years battling to get out of that contract. When Hendrix died he only had 22k in his bank account. Not much at all considering he was one of the biggest stars on the planet at that time and the most sought after live act. His manager Chaz Chandler also screwed him over and he battled with a lot over the creative direction. His booking agents screwed up his touring schedule and he and the experience endured one of the most grueling touring schedules where they would book a night in Seattle, then Miami the next, then Montreal, etc.... it made no sense and left Hendrix and his band constantly jet lagged and exhausted. He had a grueling schedule, constant pressure to write new material, while being surrounded by hangers on and groupies at every stop. He actually had an incredible work ethic at the studio. Hence the first album “Are You Experienced”being written and recorded in a matter of weeks. He was a very complex man who also dealt with the struggles of a broken family which you did mention. His mother being an alcoholic and dying young left him with his father and younger brother Leon who Hendrix often took care of and helped raise. His father Al was always tough on Jimi and never approved of his music or acknowledged his guitars skills. He also dealt with a struggle to connect with a black audience in the states. Although Jimi was no stranger to drugs and alcohol, you paint him out to be a pretty hardcore violent alcoholic which from all my reading and research on Hendrix has never painted him out to be this. He did have violent outbreaks from time to time but he was not known for them and he was not known as being a heavy alcoholic like many other rockstars of that time period. Also, Hendrix wasn’t really into cocaine either, he was more into psychedelic drugs especially LSD where he would be known to have some in his bandanna before shows and he would not often send his roadie (at one point Lemmy from Motörhead) out to get him his acid). My biggest critique of this video is that if someone who is not familiar with Hendrix’s work stumbles on this video they may be left with poor broken down image of a lazy, violent, depressed drug addict. There is a lot of negativity without the positive attributes mentioned about this mans life. Number one being that is was undoubtedly one of the most brilliant earth shattering musicians/artists Of the 20th century. His career spanned from the summer of 1966 to fall of 1970. What he did in 4 years alone is beyond anything any single musician has done since. He was a flash of lighting that came into the scene and changed music forever. His schedule and lifestyle would of been overwhelming for anyone to endure. His depression and up and down moods are mentioned but if you watch his interviews you also see a beautiful unique soul like no other. He had a great sense of humor, he was also witty and had a sense of sarcasm at times but he was also a very deep thinker. I didn’t feel like any of his positive attributes were really mentioned in the video. There are many different stories and theories about his untimely death. Why did he take 9 pills that night? I can’t imagine all the pressures and things that man was dealing with at that time. In the end regardless of his character defects and struggles he was an absolute genius in his own right and he was unique in every way. I appreciate your video and I hope those that aren’t familiar with his work take a deep dive into music and life because it without a doubt is an Experience worth looking into
Good comment I didn't think he had a problem with Chas, it was slimebag Michael Jefery. I didn't like this video at all It went with many misconceptions about him
@@laurastrobel718 for the most part they had a good relationship at the beginning. Chas actually really went all in for Jimi. He sold a lot of belongings to raise the capital for studio time to record Are You Experienced. He also put his reputation on the line and was responsible for getting him on stage in front of all the biggest players in London. Helping hold auditions which led to hiring of Mitch Michell and Noel Redding. So I shouldn’t paint an all bad picture of him because it was pretty good for the most part. The problems seems to arise in the last year or two. Chas and Jimi butted heads a lot and Chas was trying to push Jimi in a different direction creatively. Jimi felt Chas didn’t understand him and there was a lot of tension between them. I really have to go back and read into to it in more detail. I’ve had the opportunity to speak directly with one of Jimi’s family members who was extremely close to Jimi and he did not have many nice things to say about Chas and how he treated Jimi. He painted a picture of Chas being more about the money and control then about caring for Jimi’s health and well being.
@@detective4719 Thanks for your reply. It's too bad that it got to that point with Jimi and Chas. It seems to be a reoccurring theme in the Hendrix story😔
@@laurastrobel718 yeah unfortunately. It’s like once he stepped in to the live light everyone wanted a piece of him and to control him. I also meant to mention that I absolutely agree with you about Jefferies. The guy was a complete scumbag. Having that contract over your head would lead to anybody to manic depression.
@@detective4719 Yeah, unfortunately Jimi " inherited" Jeffery because he had been the Animals' manager. Very sketchy guy. He had been in British intelligence and was linked to Cointelpro
Would love to see an analysis of any or all the characters in BOJACK HORSEMAN. It's an amazing show that deals with issues like depression, suicide, abortion, childhood trauma, substance abuse etc. in a way I have never seen before on tv. really worth checking out.
VERY interesting! Jimi Hendrix was always my favorite guitar player. I still hold him as one of the greatest, but since those days I've discovered Stevie Ray Vaughan and other great guitarists so it's hard to pick one great out of all of them. This is the first time I have read or heard anything about his personal life though. Thanks so much Dr Grande for another great analysis
Jimi played guitar for twelve years and for several stretches during that time (the army for instance), he wasn't able to further himself on the instrument. Much of his most loved material was written just six years into playing the guitar which, due to poverty, he had to teach himself to play. To quote Billy Cox "Whilst living with him, I saw Jimi squeeze about twenty five years practice into five years". Add to this a gruelling touring and recording schedule, which, quite aside from his highly prolific creative output would be considered demanding by anybody and you have a person who was so high in levels of conscientiousness that he not only reached the top of his chosen field but changed it forever. In short he had a work ethic unimaginable to most. You don't get to be the GOAT by not sweating...All day. Every day.
Hi Dr Grande. As always, this was really interesting to listen to. It’s been said that in spite of Jimi Hendrix’s problems that when he played before an audience it was a very special experience for everyone there, that his playing was downright shamanic. Thanks for the upload. Peace. 🎸 🥁 🎤💙
I have a high level of Openness to the Jimi Hendrix Experience
Dont we all ???
6 could be 9.
Same☺
Who doesn’t?
Agreeableness too.
The 1st time I heard him play in a documentary was a transcendent experience. I have a severe chronic pain condition & while he played, I felt no pain for the 1st time in 20yrs
Don't believe these fools. There is a statement from the guys from the ambulance, you must listen what they are saying Not this fool.
To Ms Jayne
Yeaaaa. No pain!!!!!!!
Congratulations 🎉 🌈
There is no question, the therapeutic value of Music ( and other Arts) - in playing or listening. If any musician could remove your pain, it would be JIMI...
Its really sad he didnt get to make 30 and live through the 70s and countuine to make great rock n roll far ahead of his time!!!
Burl ives worked into his mid-80s. Elvis without drugs could have still been singing in 2015.
You are absolutely right, the music that we know today would have mostly been behind the times by now had he continued to live. I've often wondered what music would sound like today had jimi stayed with us.
@@nine9whitepony526 From my assessment, I really believe Hendrix was slowly forming into more softer and mellow sounds, since he stated in interviews shortly before his death he was finding distortion unbearable. Think, songs like Angel and Drifting.
@@bassinblue his friends have said he wanted to move to a more jazzy sound and those later tracks certaintly seem to have a more jazz influenced sensibility
"Music sweet music
I wish I could caress ...Manic depression is a frustrating mess" It's very sad he died so young - He was a phenomenally talented individual.
A Richard Pryor analysis would be very interesting actually
A most excellent idea, Mr. Non Entity.
I third this
Yes that would be interesting
Has he done Andy Kaufman?
Analyze Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd. There's a guy who needed a team of therapists.
Haha indeed
Syd Barrett, Little Walter, or Miles Davis
And Henry Rollins. That would be kinda interresting
@Johan Hansén Same
Nah just a case of drugs plus Asperger's syndrome. Perhaps schizophrenia. Pretty standard stuff tbh
Jimi Hendrix was indeed one of the greatest guitarists of all time!!!✨
Another sad ending.😔
Thank you for doing this video, I really enjoy when you analyze musicians and authors!❤️
Jimi.
@@iluvj50 Corrected.👍🏼
100% agree
His cover of Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower” got me into him. A legendary version that I think even Dylan liked better
Another interesting study of a famous personality. I agree that he was likely depressed at the time of his death. From what I have read, he was interested in developing a new style of music, & he felt that option was being limited, because the record company's wanted him to continue with his previous style of music. It's a shame that he died at such a young age. An amazing, brilliant guitarist, to say the very least.
Analyzing Prince should be included as well.
Absolutely
It should mention him performing "Cream" with an acoustic guitar and saying "You know I wrote this while I was looking in the mirror, right? I'm serious".
Yeah prince would be an excellent analysis
I have always wondered if there is a correlation for mental illness with people who are geniuses. It seems as though musical and mathematical abilities manifest at a young age. Prince was certainly talented and probably a genius. Is there actually more drug usage by musicians in general? It is always sad and seemingly predictable and unsurprising when musicians die this way.
@@beeimaginative To be able to accomplish what Prince did-basically "invent" a whole new sound-takes being able to see beyond what "normal" people might see. Whether that includes drugs or not...maybe. I don't know. We know that Hendrix was into LSD and so while it would very difficult to actually perform under it, it would certainly inform his writing, compositions, etc. I often say that Sgt. Pepper wouldn't have been as "flowery" if it weren't for acid influencing their songs. Certainly Strawberry Fields is an "acid" song.
There have been some stories regarding Prince's drug usage, both from when he died and also stories from fellow musicians when I played up in L.A. in the 90s. He apparently stayed up for 2-3 days straight to finish mixing the Purple Rain album. He explains it as being under a deadline and then just getting into your work and also of being infused with a Spirit, implying a spiritual influence. Those that I knew up in L.A. looked at that story with an "I dunno, buddy" cause mixing for that long a time w/o a break can get reeaaalll hectic. The senses need a break.
There are stories of him lining his windows with aluminum foil to keep his room pitch black. Also, getting kicked out of the house and living with Andre Cymone and his parents...being a straight-A student...his treatment of women...etc. All would be good fodder for Dr. Grande.
Jimi was also near-sighted and would buy new Corvettes and crash them. I learned a lot about him from the biography Room Full of Mirrors. His buddy and bassist, Billy Cox, was in the Army with Jimi and played Woodstock with him.
Excellent book
Jimi had a difficult childhood. His mother was young when she had him and his brother Leon. She was a free spirit like Jimi and found the responsibility of caring for two young boys difficult and his father Als' personality didn't make family life any easier... Lucille did turn to alcohol to ease her frustrations. After the divorce, the boys rarely saw their mother and their father would denounce her as an alcoholic to his boys. They frequently stayed with relatives, and their were parts of his childhood that he couldn't recall because of the chaos. I have heard more details about the circumstances of his death that suggest foul play, but the man needs to be remembered for his incredible spirit, fashion sense, and musical talent that has influenced countless people over the years. Rest in peace, James Marshall ❤🎆🌹 ✌
@@janej6184 Thank you... Glad someone liked what I had to say☺✌
Laura...I am one of the top investigators in to Jimi's death...Jimi was murdered without a doubt and Dr Grande here is very possibly doing government disinformation to help cover it up...
@@Exiles800 I know he was murdered.His manager Micheal Jeffery had been in British intelligence... But towards the end he was starting to crack under pressure by exhibiting angry outbursts towards friends. He wanted to get away.The one's trying to control him weren't having it
@curbozer Boomer You saw him play... I'm jelly. I'm 57 but I've known people older than me that got to see him... One of them was at Woodstock. The anniversary of his birth is upon us. Love u Jimi☺💝🎆 🌹
'..but the man needs to be remembered for his incredible spirit...' You're right. This is the essential point you highlight.
Hendrix, like many others, probably had a good work ethic. He just worked on what he wanted to work on. There is nothing easy about playing excellent guitar, it is hard work. and he was King. Drugs ruined him just as they ruin anyone who over use them.
Drugs do not 'ruin anyone who uses them'. That is such a ridiculous over simplification. And it's dangerous! If you say that to someone and they take your word and never again take any 'drug' they'll probably die very early.
Also if you tell people that recreational drug use will ruin them, they will see that that is not the case. And then whatever good advice you might have for them will be seen as silly hyperbole.
@@markbryant4641 ok druggie
@@idudheebsbzdudbdhddh I'm not a druggie.
@@markbryant4641 Thanks for altering what I said.... need a little hint? One word that changes that..... don't be an omitter.
@@markbryant4641 I have had many friends die from abusing drugs and other males who developed meth generated lupus. No community could logically have this many lupus cases out of nowhere. Especially a community of just a few hundred people, all male, all meth abusers, not even genetically related people.
Love your content, Dr. Grande! I'm happily surprised to click on this while wearing my favorite Hendrix t-shirt!
OH I'm jelly!! I love JH!!! His music really expressed the atmosphere of that generation!
Me too!
Some of this is odd, because from virtually everyone that knew Jimi. He was described as one of nicest, humble, kind, loving, caring, shy, human beings they ever met. In the few incidents he had otherwise, it was probably just the drugs, and the intense stress he was under. Particularly later in his life.
I agree☺
It is not "odd"...It is deliberate CIA defamation designed to cover-up his murder...It's a hit piece veiled in the trappings of pseudo-psychiatry...
I didn’t know he could be violent and he hit a girlfriend over the head with a vodka bottle causing a wound needing stitches. I’m quite surprised at that and I thought I knew quite a bit about him.
He was probably all those things until he drank and after he drank, he was none of those things. I’ve met many people like this.
@@Exiles800 lol if this were any average joe schmo, would you be saying the same thing? You nutjobs and your conspiracy theories....
I love what you said about "unlocking suppressed anger." I've always been suspicious of "they're such a nice person, but such an angry drunk."
Jimi was a very kind man and sensitive artist. he was confronted with a lot of surrounding criticism for his independent way of dress and thinking. His music was that of a genius . His lyrical writing was poetic description to the deepest sense. I am grateful for our brief but destiny laden meeting and his work .
His legacy is the brilliant music left for the world to enjoy forever - I’m a big fan 💛
Thank you for this analyzes, Jimi Hendrix in my opinion was one of the greatest guitar players.
Voodoo child (slight return) cranked up as loud as you can. Good lord above.....😵
Yyyyyep! 🤘
I agree. Magnificent song 🎸
Drive around town blasting it, is a vibe.
You are always very kind to the people you analyze. I think you must be a very good clinician. Your patients are fortunate.
His BS "analysis" is almost 50% factual error. Jimi had a tremendous work ethic, as evidenced by the hundreds of hours of pro- level recording he did in studios, touring almost constantly.
He was, in effect, worked to death.
Grande has no idea of the facts of this complrx case.
What a brilliant talent.
I love his music!!!
R i p - jimi!
☮️❤️
Gosh, I hadn't realised he was so young when he died. How sad. He was a very talented man.
Hendrix was a brilliant guitarist and composer, no question -- as well as a charter member of the infamous so-called "Dead 27 Club" of rock and related musics, along with Brian Jones (Rolling Stones), Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison (the Doors) and Kurt Cobain (Nirvana), among other gifted artists dead at age 27.
The fact that I let the political ads run without clicking off them is a testament to how much I appreciate Dr. Grande's sense of balance. Normally after 800 I try to protect myself from emotional and intellectual triggers, and nothing trips them like contemporary politics.
Another excellent topic! Dr. Grande, you are certainly improving my downtime as I work from home and stay pretty isolated due to COVID-19. I appreciate these interesting takes.
Another interesting analysis by Dr. Grande! Hendrix was a sublime talent, one of the greats.
I find his lyrics to be dark and existential in theme, haunting, and effective; "is it tomorrow or just the end of time?"
I love all the ideas for videos. Thank you for all you do.
Ohhhh I was waiting for this one Dr!
🔥🔥🔥🔥
I've been waiting since 1983...
Dude you are killing it!
I put a Jimi Hendrix magnet on my parents' refrigerator when I was a teenager. My dad was super-annoyed but he never took it down.
I’m sure someone has already said this, but Hendrix wrote the song Manic Depression because he had been repeatedly told by (I believe) his manager, “You sound like a manic depressive.” This certainly doesn’t corroborate a diagnosis, but does illustrate that those in Hendrix’s life thought he may have had the disorder.
I love Jimi Hendrix's music & guitar playing he's fire! 🔥🔥🤩😍🎸 🎵🎵🎵 Rest in peace.💐😑
Jimi Hendrix was young also at a time, when drug use was ubiquitous - not an excuse but just another factor to consider, and Jimi perhaps had some major issues, concerning the death of his mother, no closure, which is sad and heartbreaking.💔
@@Zeldarw104 IKR!!! Tortured souls need SOME kind of relief!
@@Zeldarw104 His mother had him at 16 and she actually died from cirrhosis of the liver. Yeah she was a raging alcoholic. His father drank too. So Jimi inherited that trait for real. I have the biography of Jimi called A Room Full Of Mirrors.
I loved & still love Jimi & listen to his music. Thank you as always for this analysis, Dr. Grande.💖
The very reason I don’t drink is because I have a high level of suppressed anger. I stay on top of my emotions, by staying sober. Keeps me problem free. Surprisingly, I feel like there is a general low level of understanding of how substances effect people, and with addiction. As a person who studies addiction and works in addiction treatment, I’m still interacting with a lot of people who don’t understand why someone who doesn’t have substance use disorder (me) would choose not to consume alcohol because they want to stay in control of their emotions. With so much information out there, it’s surprising how little so many people know.
Excellent, Dr. Grande! My favorite musician of all time!! 💕 Thank you again for the variety of personalities.
I read & heard the really controversial thing about Jimi's death is the amount of alcohol in his body would have killed him long before he could have consumed all of it even with a huge tolerance. It's like it was poured down his throat even after he was dead. No one was supposed to talk about this. One man did & lost his job. Jimi had just made a huge enemy when he fired his manager who didn't hide the fact he was infuriated. Dr. G didn't mention this. Perhaps it was too controversial?
You are right. Dr G is great but this video was full of holes ... Sadly not the rabbit hole that would have presented a truthful picture😔
Correct
@curbozer Boomer Monica Danneman was a ditz. A lady named Susan ( can't remember who last name, a journalist who befriended him the last 3 yrs of his life and wrote a great book about him) interviewed Monica... She couldn't give a straight answer about how many Vesparex she had given Jimi that night
Personally i think we all have agressivity, kindness, supressed agressivity, frustrations, anxiety, suppressed feelings inside of us. To learn how to deal with them and how to balance them is healthy and important. For some sports help, others yoga, others having a loving night with their partner etc or a bit of it all. Life itself creates a bit of everything every day.
And i think substance use frees this of course, but not in such a positive way. It does Make it more clear and brings it to the surface. The danger is when the substance use is so high that all the suppressed and inconscious feelings come out in an uncontrolled way.
Famous people like Jimmy hendricks are under a lot of pressure, which on its own creates a lot of suppressed feelings and few time to get by and relax. Not everybody deals well with this.
Also he was still very young and
at that time, and on top of it music of the sixties were almost a marriage with substance use and alcohol.
So to me the epoc and ideas were inspiring, but the famous were not protected in any way. For some it meant their young ending.
I really loved their music, specially janis joplin and jimmy hendricks, their talents were hughe, i think. They just weren t protected and guided well.
Luckily not all of them have and had such a bad ending.
Some people get easily over this overpessure and over substance use. But the danger is always right behind the corner, specially if noone guides u and protects u in the process. Everyone is different.
I really think things around famous people should change a bit, and their private life and resting moments shohld be more protected.
My little thoughts on this.
Saw Hendrix play twice in the late 60's . Once at The Oakland Coliseum and once at The Santa Clara County fairgrounds. AWESOME
I'm jelly
Thanks so much for another great video profile. I really learned a lot. The comments are great, too. My 22-year-old son loves playing his music.
Great analysis once again Dr. Grande. I’m hoping one day you will take my request I’ve been asking for of an analysis of Prince☔️. So many mysterious aspects of his life. How he reacted after the loss of his and Mayte’s son, how confident he appeared and at the same time shy. He was a genius and of the greatest.
Thank you Dr.Todd Grande for this very insightful video on Jimi Hendrix. During quarantine in 2020, I got into his music, bought 2 of his albums, and learned how to play "Hey Joe" on guitar. I agree that Jimi was not nearly as dysfunctional as Jim Morrison. He simply drank too much and died accidentally. He actually was pretty smart for his age. I didn't know what maniac depression was until I was 40. I feel sorry for him dying so young. I am lucky that I quit drinking and smoking when I was 35. I am free!
At the end of his last show in England - Isle of Wight 1970, he dropped his guitar on the stage and walked off head bowed. Looked tired and fed up. Drugs had damaged his mental health and physical appearance. Incredible performer, however!
That guitar is on display at London's Hard Rock museum
@curbozer Boomer thanks for the info.
Been waiting for this one! Thank doc!
I know I'm not the only one who recites the words in OCEAN along with Dr Grande.
Guilty!!😬🙂
Yes!
Jimi and Dr.Grande. Legendary duo.
Jimi says: Hey Dr. Grande. Hold my can of lighter fluid. I got a gimmick to do.
I can see it.
purple haze!
Dr, Grandma, left out so much information about Hendrix, He's trying to turn Hendrix into a Mental health bad situation, Who wouldn't be depress if you knew you were being Rob of your Money and you might not make it to your 28 Birthday and you have a lot of Snake's around You that want leave you alone, Hendrix knew he was in Danger that last night of his life....
He took too many barbiturates and didn’t have the waking up reflex we normally have to choking. Also, he was a creative person in a very controlling industry.
Absolutely agree with you. Can you imagine what we would have today if he lived? Man, was like Carlos Santana with that instrument, amazing and like no other..
Ross, you simply don't know what you are talking about...I did a radio show to a 3 million demographic in New York in 2019 that proved Jimi could not have died from the barbiturate...A good forensic detective would realize the massive amounts of vomit the ambulance men witnessed on Jimi was from forced drowning because the amount of secobarbital Jimi took was not capable of producing such profuse vomiting...I have seen the Vesparax barbiturate overdose case histories and none of the victims vomited like Jimi was witnessed doing...The unusual vomiting witnessed by the EMS personnel was what you would see from forced drowning, action - reaction by the brain stem motor reflexes...You can't claim any lack of gag reflex and reconcile it with the intense vomiting at the scene like you are doing...That intense vomiting is proof that Jimi was drowned early in to the ingestion period for the pills because of the obvious still-present vomiting reflex...Jimi's murder was covered-up real time by the British authorities (police, medical, and Inquest)...
@@Exiles800 Truth our dear friend. Gives me a cold shiver and makes me angry.
It happened to me with alcohol. My friend saved my life that time.
@@Exiles800 I know it's 1 year late but alcohol will do that. It happened to me. But they should have found alot in his bloodstream so I don't know what to think.
Great vid. I read an account of a pub owner in London who hosted the then unknown Hendrix at an early try-out gig. Apparently he was polite and well-mannered, but the volume was so loud that the glass shattered.
Wow
Please please please Dr Grande, can you analyse Kevin from "We Need to Talk About Kevin" and his mother? Other viewers have also requested this as well. Thanks
Saw that movie, it was really a creepy slow burn.
Omgosh, yes. Incredibly movie.
@@dirtysanchez941 And the book. I never saw the movie, but read the book.
someone requested that on another video. Ive seen it a few times. I think the mother is the most interesting
Thank you..it was me who requested it..thanks doctor..John Fabio !
Phenomenal piece of work ! Thank you , Dr. Grande. X
Yes, Jimmy Hendrix did suffer from depression; but you failed to mention that a big part if his sadness was due in a large part because of the struggle with the relationship between he and his father. His father did not approve of many of his choices in life. Also the many letters written to his father expressing his love and seeking approval from his dad was ongoing. These letters are of public access and in a documentary of Hendrix's life.
Jimi was murdered by his manager. The British guy Mike Jeffrey. He was British intelligence and had connections with the mob. Research that. He drowned Hendrix by pouring wine down his throat. This guy doesn't really know what he's saying on this video. Do your own research
@curbozer Boomer That's simply false and you are an idiot Curbozer...Jimi fired Jeffery 12 hours before his mysterious death with all the people involved lying...Kathy Etchingham got a British cop to interview those who were involved that night and he came back and told Kathy "They are all lying"...In most investigations that would trigger further pressing of the witnesses and police involvement however in Jimi's case the opposite occurred and a criminal British Attorney General lied and said there was no new evidence - even though his own investigation had just shown the main witness, Monika Dannemann, lied about everything she said happened that morning and the time of death was off by 6 hours...6 hours, in forensic terms, is a lifetime that completely invalidates the official cause of death but the Attorney General got around that by lying and shutting the investigation down...Then phony CIA psychiatrists come in and do hit pieces on Jimi's alleged psychological failings and divert people away from all this while blaming the victim...Jeffery killed Jimi because he would have done jail time once his books were scrutinized...Curbozer is a liar and Jeffery was witnessed flush with cash shortly after Jimi's death...He paid Jimi's father $250,000 in cash for his cut of the studio...
Thanks Dr. Grande. I agree with you about alcohol allowing suppressed anger to surface through the lowering of inhibitions. I hadn't thought about it that way. It makes a lot of sense.
Hendrix playing the Star Spangled Banner at Woodstock - absolutely chilling, genius.
Amazing talent
I would love your opinions on HOWARD HUGHES, one of the oddest man who ever lived. Please Please Dr. Grande with sugar on top💖
Yes. This would be fascinating.
From eyewitness testimonies on the night of Jimi's death, Monika was stalking Jimi that night at a party. She left the party very upset that Jimi was ignoring her and flirting with two ladies. She left by herself and Jimi stayed. Monkia came back and still very upset and wanted Jimi to leave the party. Jimi left his guitar at her apartment and wanted to get it. She was very loudly and emotionally arguing at Jimi when they left the party that eyewitnesses said they feared for his safety. Jimi tries to calm her down, and that's how Jimi was. I believe that Jimi arrived at her apartment wanted to get a solid night sleep since Monika was still so mad angry and agitated. He took the pills thinking they were weak (thanks Monika). He OD'd and Monika left him to suffer which caused his death. Jimi was a Victim of a Crime by Passion. She should have been charged at the very least of Involuntary Manslaughter by her admitted guilt leaving him sick in the middle of night to get cigarettes (LOL). RIP Jimi, your were a genius and guible in the ways of mean people. "Hell as no fury as a Woman scorned"
Jimi is someone that once I knew about his life, I could not leave It aside, It is a very unique life, regardless the same type of stupid death situation that other rockstars also experienced. We clearly can see, If someone really look into it, in interviews, he was suffering from some emotional pain, some kind of contradiction inside, that the drug abuse shown to light. There were some issues with the manager, including even frighten Jimi's life. Disrespect on someone can cause serious psychological problems He felt like an object in some way and that also could cause some violent tendencies, specially when on alchool/drugs. I like your video, you analysed him respectfully and that's good for me. Good work Doc.
🎸Jimi Hendrix: I felt that he was the greatest and most creative guitarist I have ever heard. Their were those who idolized him. R.I.P Jimi.
@curbozer Boomer Hendrix's level of talent as a musician has been acknowledged by many from the 1960's on.
Yet another great talent lost to booze and drugs. Such a waste. What Jimi could do to a guitar, remember self taught, was astounding. His natural ability gave such pleasure. I watch videos of him just focusing on his hands working his guitar, his genius is undeniable. Thanks Dr. Grant.
Great commentary and again I learned a lot about someone I thought I knew. Have a great night Dr Grande!!
You gotta do Syd Barrett man, keep up with the vids💯
Dr. Grande, could you talk about the personality of counselors/mental health professionals?
I've been doing my own undergrad research on this topic and wanted to hear some of your thoughts.
Love your content, thanks!
I think he already has.
Dr. Grande, your insights are deeply valued. I'm learning a lot from you. I have had some severe mental health issues in my family. Learning & understanding gives me peace. Very grateful for you. Thanks so much!
It was a time when excessive drug use was very common, especially in the world of rock and roll.
It makes sense, considering that he and Janis both died of overdoses in the same year
It’s just tragic though when these talented musicians die way too young. It becomes a what could’ve been situation in a way
It hasn't changed, excessive money, gotta spend it as fast as you get it😅
Interesting analysis of the best quitarist of all times. Dr grande the case of Marvin Gaye would be a great video. Great talent, fame, women and children but with a horrible father who ended up killing Marvin.
They say Marvin Gaye was one of the nicest people you'd want to meet
Love 💕 the yellow shirt! Also, Dr Hunter did Jimmy on his show Autopsy.
Another Washingtonian! Thank you, Dr. Grande! I LOVED JH's talent. What a history maker this gentleman was! What a shame he had a substance issue, but it is possible that his being high actually led to some elevated level of creativity,... or maybe not; like so many other greatly talented ones, he was apparently a tortured soul. My favorite drummer, John Henry Bonham, also had an alcohol problem and died because of it. The time of death question is an irritating puzzler; that woman might have either been a liar or high,... or maybe both. The O.C.E.A.N. results are interesting; it might be interesting to compare his to the results of the others in the "27 club."
All of your videos are amazing. I watch them almost every day!
I would really love to see one on Tupac. Please do one! His interest in machiavellianism makes for a great video, among other things.
I have a suggestion. Could you analyse Abraham Lincoln? He was a truly interesting individual often described as extremely melancholic.
It's really cool you doing videos on musicians keep it coming.
Can you please do Andy Kaufman.
thank you for doing a video on him. one of my favorite musicians.
You should do a video on Dr. Todd Grande. He's a therapist who makes RUclips videos analyzing athletes, murderers, musicians, but especially criminals. He always starts out his videos by saying that he's only speculating, not diagnosing. His videos are informative and he has a dry sense of humor.
Beautiful work. Thank you 🙏
I'll always remember when Jimi said, "If you could just get your mind together....." Something I relate to a smidgeon
Love the channel Doctor.
Would love to see a video on:
Chris Benoit
Tony Soprano
Budd Dwyer
L.Ron Hubbard
Never give up!!!! I'm with u on Benoit. 👋👋👋
There is nothing that anyone can try and argue this analysis of Jimi. He was talented but , a lost cause. So sad. Thank you Dr. Todd. So on point. This one is my favorite of yours. It just is. ,♥️😔💔
I've always found him to be the most deepest kindred spirt, along with Keith Moon and Jim.
If I were a genius musician and 27, I'd be careful everywhere I go.
Id be less concerned with where I went, and more concerned with what I put in my body lol
And then that paranoia of being careful could be what gets you killed
He was a massive user of LSD too, apparently he bought huge amounts into the UK from America in his guitar case.
I recall an interview with Lemmy , before he joined Hawkwind, he was a roadie for Hendrix. He would send Lemmy off to score acid for him.
On one occasion Lemmy got 10 "hits". He gave Lemmy 3 of them, then took the other 7 himself , all at once !
The Wind Cries Grande.
lol
Thank you DR Grande...i met Jimi when i was 16 and am musician. You cleared up for me more of why and how Jimi died since then. The 1960s were very hard for me growing up and these people were influences I had to measure carefully in my work. It would be great to do a report commentary for John Lennon and George Harrison also.
Great video! I didn't know about the details of his discharge. Just what I had read in a biography, which was the ankle story. I think he had a lot of suppressed rage. Look at what he did to his guitar and amps.
Jimi Hendrix cover of Bob Dylan song, "All Along the Watchtower" - Yes.
Hey, I did NOT know Jimi Hendrix played with Tina Turner! That's amazing to imagine.
(In that era, it would have been the Ike and Tina Turner Revue, not Tina on her own.)
@curbozer Boomer Thank you for the info. It's similar to what a school superintendent told me once: back in the day, he was on an airplane and members of the Ike and Tina Turner Revue were passengers on the flight.
When he said this, I was in awe, right? Then he added emphatically, "Yeah, Ike was a real a$$ h le."
Ike could not get along with many people. Good musician though. He would have benefitted from therapy, imo.
You should do Mary Kay Letourneau. Background very interesting, especially her family (father).
He may have... check his video catalogue
@Lori Anne You are right. 3 Months ago. I'll have to watch that one.
For something truly mind-blowing read John Potash’s book “Drugs As Weapons Against Us.” There’s more to the story of Jimi Hendrix’s demise, as well as other musicians.
Shill channels like this guy will never, ever talk about any of that history.
It's amazing how you are able to produce so many videos of such quality in such a short span of time. You must have thought about this stuff for a very long time! Anyways, great content, very interesting and informative!
On conscientiousness: He was a guitar virtuoso with exceptional technical skill and a
prolific song writer who released 3 groundbreaking albums between
1967-1968. These things would be hard without a strong work
ethic (work-a-holism is putting it lightly) and he was a neat freak (according to one
girlfriend). He was also famously a perfectionist in the studio to a
point where he was "driving people mad".
This was a great discussion and I found the review regarding the correlation of suppressed anger and alcohol to be particularly interesting. The educational aspects of your videos are one of my favs!
While I can agree that his access to money & substances made it easier to self medicate, it's difficult to assent to the theory that it was the consequence of fame. Firstly, we see a lot of persons who become famous yet don't resort to drug abuse, and secondly, In looking at what we know from his history, we see he started abusing substances before he was even famous. As we are aware, usually, our childhood experiences serve as a buffer in dealing with changing & challenging situations in adulthood and it seemed that Hendrix was without guidance & security from an early age. Maybe he even failed to adjust following his mother's passing.
The industry he was in, definitely didn't make it easier, that's a fact.
Can you do more videos over Machiavellianism, like how someone would have those traits or anything that you think would be worth sharing? I find it very interesting and there’s not a lot about of information about it.
Dr. Grande - Interesting analysis, as always. I think pale yellow (your shirt) is your most flattering color. You look very handsome in that color. Second is the pale blue shirt you wear sometimes. I'm amazed by how little time it takes you to write a new, analytical video! First thing every day I look you up and am almost never disappointed after finding, once again, a Dr. Grande video!
He wrote such eloquently fragile lyrics sometimes. Very personal. Written in 3rd person but he clearly didn't have to use his imagination much to write 'Castles Made of Sand', 'Little Wing' and other uniquely brilliant expressions. There was without question a highly sensitive side to him. The other side was as you said what created the Jeckyll and Hyde element. The trouble was he lived 1000 mph and it isn't surprising that he went way too soon
Also, there were multiple motives for Jimi to be killed. His manager Michael Jeffrey had a large insurance policy out on Jimi's life, and Jimi was planning on firing Jeffrey as a manager (rightfully so as he was ripping him off) and Jeffrey owed the Mob lots of money so he couldn't afford to lose his control of Jimi's assets.
@curbozer Boomer you may be right. I read a few biographies and thats what I remember reading. I would have to research again. Doesn’t really matter though. Hes gone but his star still burns bright
I would love to see your take on Lars Von Trier! Such a wonderful filmmaker but, isolated and sad person. His films have changed my life so I would love to see what you think about him.
Thank you for another wonderful and entertaining video!
Much thanks, Dr. Grande. Always interesting. Author Sharon Lawrence wrote that Jimi's Dad was often absent and neglectful of his children, though Jimi said he knew his mom had loved him. Jimi and Leon were left without food, and were sometimes fed by charitable neighbors when small. He did not consider himself "black," but more Native American. Hangers-on plagued his life and he lacked the tenacity to evict them. Ms Lawrence was his friend and describes him as a decent man-- conscientious, affable, and careful with his appearance. Still miss the man. His music was an element of our youth.
So many videos! I’m not complaining 🙌❤️
Good video but I feel like there were a lot of points not addressed especially when it came to Hendrix’s depression, stress, anxiety, and number one his brilliance. When Hendrix was brought to London by Chaz Chandler in 66, he soon exploded on the London scene and was playing in front of the biggest artists in the world at that time. Groups like the Beatles, The Who, Clapton, the stones all saw him play and were blown away. He became an international superstar soon after. A big part of the story not mentioned was that Hendrix signed a terrible contract while being a working musician in New York where he signed most of his rights away to any material he wrote for pennies on the dollar that lasted well into his years of fame. He spent years battling to get out of that contract. When Hendrix died he only had 22k in his bank account. Not much at all considering he was one of the biggest stars on the planet at that time and the most sought after live act. His manager Chaz Chandler also screwed him over and he battled with a lot over the creative direction. His booking agents screwed up his touring schedule and he and the experience endured one of the most grueling touring schedules where they would book a night in Seattle, then Miami the next, then Montreal, etc.... it made no sense and left Hendrix and his band constantly jet lagged and exhausted. He had a grueling schedule, constant pressure to write new material, while being surrounded by hangers on and groupies at every stop. He actually had an incredible work ethic at the studio. Hence the first album “Are You Experienced”being written and recorded in a matter of weeks. He was a very complex man who also dealt with the struggles of a broken family which you did mention. His mother being an alcoholic and dying young left him with his father and younger brother Leon who Hendrix often took care of and helped raise. His father Al was always tough on Jimi and never approved of his music or acknowledged his guitars skills. He also dealt with a struggle to connect with a black audience in the states. Although Jimi was no stranger to drugs and alcohol, you paint him out to be a pretty hardcore violent alcoholic which from all my reading and research on Hendrix has never painted him out to be this. He did have violent outbreaks from time to time but he was not known for them and he was not known as being a heavy alcoholic like many other rockstars of that time period. Also, Hendrix wasn’t really into cocaine either, he was more into psychedelic drugs especially LSD where he would be known to have some in his bandanna before shows and he would not often send his roadie (at one point Lemmy from Motörhead) out to get him his acid). My biggest critique of this video is that if someone who is not familiar with Hendrix’s work stumbles on this video they may be left with poor broken down image of a lazy, violent, depressed drug addict. There is a lot of negativity without the positive attributes mentioned about this mans life. Number one being that is was undoubtedly one of the most brilliant earth shattering musicians/artists Of the 20th century. His career spanned from the summer of 1966 to fall of 1970. What he did in 4 years alone is beyond anything any single musician has done since. He was a flash of lighting that came into the scene and changed music forever. His schedule and lifestyle would of been overwhelming for anyone to endure. His depression and up and down moods are mentioned but if you watch his interviews you also see a beautiful unique soul like no other. He had a great sense of humor, he was also witty and had a sense of sarcasm at times but he was also a very deep thinker. I didn’t feel like any of his positive attributes were really mentioned in the video. There are many different stories and theories about his untimely death. Why did he take 9 pills that night? I can’t imagine all the pressures and things that man was dealing with at that time. In the end regardless of his character defects and struggles he was an absolute genius in his own right and he was unique in every way. I appreciate your video and I hope those that aren’t familiar with his work take a deep dive into music and life because it without a doubt is an Experience worth looking into
Good comment I didn't think he had a problem with Chas, it was slimebag Michael Jefery. I didn't like this video at all It went with many misconceptions about him
@@laurastrobel718 for the most part they had a good relationship at the beginning. Chas actually really went all in for Jimi. He sold a lot of belongings to raise the capital for studio time to record Are You Experienced. He also put his reputation on the line and was responsible for getting him on stage in front of all the biggest players in London. Helping hold auditions which led to hiring of Mitch Michell and Noel Redding. So I shouldn’t paint an all bad picture of him because it was pretty good for the most part. The problems seems to arise in the last year or two. Chas and Jimi butted heads a lot and Chas was trying to push Jimi in a different direction creatively. Jimi felt Chas didn’t understand him and there was a lot of tension between them. I really have to go back and read into to it in more detail. I’ve had the opportunity to speak directly with one of Jimi’s family members who was extremely close to Jimi and he did not have many nice things to say about Chas and how he treated Jimi. He painted a picture of Chas being more about the money and control then about caring for Jimi’s health and well being.
@@detective4719 Thanks for your reply. It's too bad that it got to that point with Jimi and Chas. It seems to be a reoccurring theme in the Hendrix story😔
@@laurastrobel718 yeah unfortunately. It’s like once he stepped in to the live light everyone wanted a piece of him and to control him. I also meant to mention that I absolutely agree with you about Jefferies. The guy was a complete scumbag. Having that contract over your head would lead to anybody to manic depression.
@@detective4719 Yeah, unfortunately Jimi " inherited" Jeffery because he had been the Animals' manager. Very sketchy guy. He had been in British intelligence and was linked to Cointelpro
Thank you, Dr.Grande for your synopsis on Jimi Hendrix. I appreciate it.
John Keating
Would love to see an analysis of any or all the characters in BOJACK HORSEMAN.
It's an amazing show that deals with issues like depression, suicide, abortion, childhood trauma, substance abuse etc. in a way I have never seen before on tv. really worth checking out.
I agree
Yes!!!!!!!
VERY interesting! Jimi Hendrix was always my favorite guitar player. I still hold him as one of the greatest, but since those days I've discovered Stevie Ray Vaughan and other great guitarists so it's hard to pick one great out of all of them. This is the first time I have read or heard anything about his personal life though. Thanks so much Dr Grande for another great analysis
Jimi played guitar for twelve years and for several stretches during that time (the army for instance), he wasn't able to further himself on the instrument. Much of his most loved material was written just six years into playing the guitar which, due to poverty, he had to teach himself to play. To quote Billy Cox "Whilst living with him, I saw Jimi squeeze about twenty five years practice into five years". Add to this a gruelling touring and recording schedule, which, quite aside from his highly prolific creative output would be considered demanding by anybody and you have a person who was so high in levels of conscientiousness that he not only reached the top of his chosen field but changed it forever. In short he had a work ethic unimaginable to most. You don't get to be the GOAT by not sweating...All day. Every day.
Hi Dr Grande. As always, this was really interesting to listen to. It’s been said that in spite of Jimi Hendrix’s problems that when he played before an audience it was a very special experience for everyone there, that his playing was downright shamanic. Thanks for the upload. Peace. 🎸 🥁 🎤💙
Falling off of analysis from Dr. G and coming back to an abundance of them is like coming out of the washroom and finding your food waiting you.