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- Content-ID: <0_6572_823996199@emout04.mail.aol.com.301165>
- Content-type: text/plain
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- Name: Jason Rush
- Language: English
- Subject: U.S. History
- Title: Jimi Hendrix
- Grade: 92%
- System: High School
- Age: 17
- Country: U.S.A
- Comments: A good report on Jimi Hendrix'x music career
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- Content-ID: <0_6572_823996199@emout04.mail.aol.com.301166>
- Content-type: text/plain;
- name="HENDRIX.TXT"
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- Jimi
- Hendrix
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- Jason Rush
- Am. History, Hr. 2
- Mr. Marsh
- May 23, 1995
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- Jimi Hendrix
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- Jimi Hendrix, the greatest guitarist in rock history,
- revolutionized the sound of rock. In 1967, the Jimi Hendrix
- Experience rocked the nation with their first album, Are You
- Experienced?. Hendrix's life was cut short by the tragedy of drugs in
- 1970, when he was only twenty seven years old. In these three years
- the sound of rock changed greatly, and HendrixÆs guitar playing was a
- major influence.
- Jimi was born in Seattle, Washington on November 27, 1942.
- As a young boy, whenever the chance came, Jimi would try to play
- along with his R & B records. However, music was not his life long
- dream. At first, the army was. In the late 1950Æs, Hendrix enlisted in
- the 101st Airborne Division. After sustaining a back injury during a
- jump, he received a medical discharge. After his army career came to
- an abrupt end, he decided to go into the music field. By this time he
- had become an accomplished guitarist, and was soon to become
- known as the greatest guitarist ever (Stambler, pg. 290).
- However, he did not start out at the top. Jimi started out
- playing as part of the back-up for small time R & B groups. It did not
- take long before his work was in demand with some of the best
- known artists in the field, such as B.B. King, Ike and Tina Turner,
- Solomon Burke, Jackie Wilson, Littler Richard, Wilson Pickett, and
- King Curtis (Clifford, pg. 181). Using the name Jimmy James, he
- toured with a bunch of R & B shows, including six months as a
- member of James BrownÆs Famous Flames (Stambler, pg. 290).
- At the Cafe Wha! in New York, in 1966, Hendrix decided to
- try singing. Jimi lucked out when a man by the name of Charles
- ôChasö Chandler from Eric Burdon's Animals heard him at the club
- and thought he was sensational. When Chas heard him again later
- that year, he talked Jimi into moving to England where he would
- really get the chance to start his career (Stambler, pg. 290).
- Along with Chas, Hendrix auditioned some musicians to
- complete the new Hendrix group. They choose Mitch Mitchell, a
- fantastic drummer, and Noel Redding, one of England's best guitar
- and bass players (Stambler, pg. 290).
- In 1966, at the Olympia in Paris, the Experience debuted. One
- year later, the Experience was breaking attendance records right and
- left at European clubs. When the Monkees toured England in 1967,
- they heard Jimi and liked him. The Monkees asked Hendrix to join
- them on their tour through the U.S., and Jimi was on his way home
- (Stambler, pg. 290).
- "Jimi's erotic stage actions, suggestive lyrics, and guitar-
- smashing antics..." did not go over well with the Monkees' fans or
- many adults. Being criticized over and over again forced the
- Experience to be dropped from the tour (Stambler, pg. 290).
- This however did not get Hendrix down. By the end of the
- year, the group was invited to the Monterey Pop Festival. Jimi won a
- standing ovation for the "...nerve-shattering sounds from the group's
- nine amplifiers and eighteen speakers, topped by Jimi dousing his
- guitar with lighter fluid and burning it..." (Stambler, pg. 291).
- Hendrix became popular overnight, and his shows became
- standing room only. His stage acts were so wild, Time magazine
- described it as: "He hopped, twisted and rolled over sideways
- without missing a twang or a moan. He slung the guitar low over
- swiveling hips, or raised it to pick the strings with his teeth; he thrust
- it between his legs and did a bump and grind, crooning: 'oh, baby,
- come on now, sock it to me.'...For a symbolic finish, he lifted the
- guitar and flung it against the amplifiers." Time (April 25, 1968). His
- specialty became the way he used feedback, which up until now was
- an undesired sound. Using his guitar and the feedback it created, he
- was able to generate sounds which were used to his advantage in
- creating his unique style. This style is copied today by modern rock
- artists; however, this style is duplicated today with the use of special
- equipment, such as synthesizers.
- Are You Experienced?, Electric Ladyland, Axis: Bold as Love,
- and Smash Hits were all platinum albums. For the year of 1968,
- Billboard named him Artist of the Year; and in August he played a
- heart-stopping performance of the Star Spangled Banner at
- Woodstock. His fame did not last forever though. In 1969, the
- Experience broke-up. However, Hendrix claimed it was not forever,
- but was just a chance for the members to develop their musical
- abilities. Then Jimi's drug addiction became worse. In Toronto, he
- was arrested for possession of heroin (Stambler, pg. 291).
- None of this held him back from his music though. He played
- with other rock artists such as Buddy Miles and Billy Cox, and their
- album, Band of Gypsy's, won a gold record. In 1969, he was chosen
- as the Artist of the Year by Playboy. His career seemed limitless, but
- the heroin use caught up with him (Stambler, pg. 291).
- On September 18, 1970, he was found dead in his room from a
- drug overdose. He was only twenty seven years old. His music has
- not been forgotten, as it is still popular today. If his addiction had not
- overcome him, he could still be revolutionizing the style of rock
- today
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- Bibliography
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- 1. Stambler, Irwin. The Encyclopedia of Pop, Rock, and
- Soul. New York: St. MartinÆs Press, 1989.
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- 2. Clifford, Mike. The Harmony Illustrated Encyclopedia of
- Rock. New York: Harmony Books, 1988
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