What still blows my mind is that Hendrix’s mainstream career was only 3 years long and over 50 years later he has influenced nearly every guitarist to ever pick up a guitar since 1970
@stlrockn2 жыл бұрын
Probably since 1967
@rich98902 жыл бұрын
You can do this when you are THE HIGH PRIEST!
@vencenzodemarco43932 жыл бұрын
You Sure have that Right. Can any of us imagine, what he would have done had he survived??? Unreal for certain.
@dkelley96612 жыл бұрын
I’m not trying be argumentative, but Hendrix played with lots of folks, especially on the Chittlin’ circuit, that helped to make him the great artist he became. You can’t replace that experience.
@rich98902 жыл бұрын
@@dkelley9661 That experience was more blues not rock and roll, in fact wasn't he kicked out of one band because its leader said that there could only be one showman. Go back and look at the bands, they were blues bands or groups like The Isley Brothers. If he played briefly with Little Richard, that would be the only band that you could say was Avant Garde. No, musically, talent wise, Hendrix was literally decades ahead of everyone else, at the time. If you look at any documentaries addressing WHY HE WAS SO GREAT, they usually centered around his ability to play the guitar coupled with the many complexities associated with riffs and chord changes. Lastly, if you look up Greatest Guitar Player of Al Time, he is usually at the top or near the top.
@leighdee2084 Жыл бұрын
As a 17 yr old in a garage band in 1967 it’s impossible to express how different he played compared to everybody at that time. It literally “blew our minds”. The first notes of Purple Haze were like nothing anybody had ever heard before. The Wind Called Mary, Manic Depression, Foxy Lady, nobody did that! Unbelievable, mind boggling, etc, set the guitar world upside down. I know his stage presence was also on another level but it’s the music that was so epic. Glad I lived thru that time. Historic
@nabumali Жыл бұрын
Agree to every word. Must have been amazing to have been there at the time. Hope you're still playing. Best wishes, Grm.
@luisfguitar Жыл бұрын
Awesome, man.
@brucesances902 Жыл бұрын
I am jealous and wish I lived through that time when he was alive . I remember going out for a work lunch with my future wife and Purple Haze came on the radio as I was driving - everyone in the car except me was chinese, so when it came on it was great for me, since I loved the song so much. The looks I got from those coworkers - you hit the nail on the head, it blew their minds and some of them liked it, like nothing they ever heard before too....too funny how your words lined up with my 'Experience'.
@SuperSedingAngeL-yr0 Жыл бұрын
The wind cries, Mary.
@Mcperson823 Жыл бұрын
Quite literaly "set his guitar upside down"
@gtrriffs2 жыл бұрын
My moment of "Ohh, that's why hendrix is unique" was learning castles made of sand... then being like "He is singing and playing that riff at the same time"
@Blaatann532 жыл бұрын
Same for me when I learned Bold As Love
@gtrriffs2 жыл бұрын
@@Blaatann53 💯😆
@Miki-xh6fb2 жыл бұрын
In some songs you can hear when jimi, summs the exact thing that he is playing, his music was in him the guitar was just the tool to let it out
@drax132 жыл бұрын
I came to post that exact same thing. I used to think he was overrated, then I learned that tune and began to get it.
@gtrriffs2 жыл бұрын
@@drax13 🤟💯
@naomimoore47 Жыл бұрын
The difference is that Hendrix had a soul background, not just blues. He'd learnt that the blues had progressed into that lovely major sounding soul sound, and he blended the two. Also, he mixed up timing between a swinging sound chug and a flourish of classical sounding trills. He just soaked everything up; jazz, Indian music, psychedelic, you name it, if it was happening, he took it in.
@Romulus9802 жыл бұрын
Jimi Hendrix was a fearless pioneer and was not bothered to be technically perfect. He was in a way a good example of what Beethoven once said he can forgive a player playing a false note but playing without feeling was unforgivable.....
@jameskennedy7212 жыл бұрын
Talking about perfection with Hendrix is silly . Sure he would play a riff , find it lacking , and play it differently a moment later . But everybody knows he invented the style that still can be heard constantly in today's players , who have the style down , but lack the vision to create their own .
@Romulus9802 жыл бұрын
@@jameskennedy721 Exactly he created and others followed....
@OkTr3y2 жыл бұрын
@@jameskennedy721 tbh a lot of people say his playing is easy or we have it down but really don’t. We haven’t seen anyone play or make music remotely the same since his death. Listen to nine to the universe and you’ll understand no one makes music that can touch your inner soul like that
@jameskennedy7212 жыл бұрын
@@OkTr3y Yes indeed .
@justinstern-obstfeld2 жыл бұрын
Technically perfect doesn't sell 99% of the time.
@tulyar572 жыл бұрын
Before Hendrix electric guitar was simply an electrified guitar. He single handedly turned it into an industry of guitars, amps, pedals and the rest as followers tried to re-create it. Other players created musical lines, Hendrix created soundscapes.
@TeutobergForestryService2 жыл бұрын
Hendrix is OK. I enjoy most of his music. He is very sloppy though. There is not a lot of variety in the music he plays. There is no good reason to even mention Hendrix in the goat talk.
@tulyar572 жыл бұрын
@@TeutobergForestryService G.O.A.T talk is always subjective in any field, there are strong arguments but no definitive answers. I am merely saying Hendrix was incredibly influential and his legacy is as great as anybody else.
@robertrice50972 жыл бұрын
Before hendrix there was clapton, the yardbirds, Garcia, and so many more. I wouldn't say that hendrix completely changed electric guitar from an "electrified guitar" he just did something different. Btw I love hendrix but I dont think he made the electric guitar a different instrument as you propose.
@tulyar572 жыл бұрын
@@robertrice5097 Yes, there were great players as you say but please see the attached on when Hendrix first jammed with Cream . Jack Bruce says "Eric was a guitar player, Jimi was a force of nature". Chas Chandler at the same gig says that when Clapton left the stage he tried to light a cigarette but his hands were shaking saying "Is he really that good?". Other top guitar players felt the same. I am not saying that Hendrix was 'the best', that is being subjective, but the evidence shows that he changed electric guitar playing forever. kzbin.info/www/bejne/gYGtmKeHrNmJjKM
@hansolo95852 жыл бұрын
@@robertrice5097 Nobody else in the world would think of to play Star Spangled Banner the way he did or how to even approach something like that. That moment changed how the electric guitar was seen forever.
@Dave062YT Жыл бұрын
His voice is so under rated because his guitar playing is so good .I love his singing
@mderline4412 Жыл бұрын
Drifting!
@corcoransullivan1562 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree, I like his lyrics too.
@ronaldpalmore570 Жыл бұрын
Thing is he never considered himself a singer. But the thing is the man seemed to half style with everything. Guitar, voice, dress.
@Georgia-Vic Жыл бұрын
His singing complemented his guitar playing; his vocals and guitar go together like a hand in a glove!
@brooksphillips2234 Жыл бұрын
He didn't have a great voice but it was unique. There have been singers throughout history that aren't great singers but they make their music their own. Bob Dylan, Shannon Hoone, Kurt Cobain, and a few others.
@randylahey82079 ай бұрын
My favorite part of Hendrix, even as an enthusiast of the technical shredding, was his ability to develop a mood. Songs like Castles Made of Sand still resonate to this day because he ties every aspect of song writing and performance together into a piece that creates the same feeling for me now as it did the very first time I heard it 30 years ago. He even accomplished that with covers, which is extremely difficult when the song is already known. Best line about Hendrix was from Dylan. After watching Jimi perform All Along the Watchtower for the first time, he was asked what he felt about seeing his song performed by Hendrix. His answer? "It's not my song anymore..."
@mervynsullivan2 жыл бұрын
I think the secret to Hendrix was that he was a born natural musician who did it his way. He didn't over-analyse but simply played from the heart with pure feeling and now, today, people like to analyse his style because it certainly was very unique. And that uniquness is what made him so great.
@RebuttalRecords2 жыл бұрын
Jimi Hendrix was so uniquely great there will never be another guitar player like him. He was the first electric guitarist to make listening to guitar feedback enjoyable.
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@Mervyn Sullivan: Well said!!!
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@@RebuttalRecords WORD!!!
@herrbonk3635 Жыл бұрын
Uniquness?? There are thousands of guitarist like that :D Good ones as well as bad ones. I personally know half a dozen, a couple of them being really good. (I'm a piano and percussion player myself.)
@RebuttalRecords Жыл бұрын
@@herrbonk3635 How many are as proficient and advanced as Hendrix was while still maintaining their own sound? This is the same question all the guitarists in London England were asking shortly before Hendrix showed up to a London club one evening and changed many people's lives forever, especially Eric Clapton's.
@cjsmith8319 Жыл бұрын
I guarantee you, had Jimi never picked up a guitar……..can’t even imagine the world we would live in. He impacted everything.
@Sweptupbottle Жыл бұрын
For once or maybe what
@moonasha Жыл бұрын
nothing would be different besides the fact we had a bit less good music
@Silverado-pq6xe Жыл бұрын
@@moonashaalright grandpa it’s time for your meds
@vincentlussier8264 Жыл бұрын
Everything would be the same except we wouldn't have Jimi Hendrix. And we wouldn't have anyone who sounded like him
@MM-sq5pf11 ай бұрын
Eh
@benjaminmcclelland24642 жыл бұрын
As a trumpet player, I feel the same way about miles davis. His music was completely unique, his style is easily recognizable, and his playing matches his outward persona of coolness with the suits (and his later fashion) and the raspy voice, and the way he would never introduce his band, or a tune, and would turn his back to the audience while he played, and would just walk off stage when he was done. Miles was friends with hendrix and really liked his music, and even wanted to do some collaborations with him, although it never happened. A lot of his guitar players in the 70s were very hendrix esque with their sound, especially Pete Cosey.
@jamesturner33112 жыл бұрын
Young man I'm 64 I discovered Hendrix when I was 10. I'm impressed with your observations.
@ucbookman2 жыл бұрын
Miles admitted that he wasn't even close to being the best of the best trumpet players in his bio. You're correct. To Miles is was all about a recognizably unique tone and a "round sound". That's why bebop died, because Miles figured out how to play 3-4 notes to replace 25 and it would give audiences the same excitement. Oh, one thing Miles was that he never admitted: the best talent scout in jazz.
@thebeatnumber2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if Miles knew that Jimi was sleeping with his wife
@tommakkoo13572 жыл бұрын
Yes, Roundabout. ❤
@tommakkoo13572 жыл бұрын
@@thebeatnumber he had a big sleeping bag everyone knew it
@haroldwiggins46689 ай бұрын
I was blessed to Hendrix perform in Miami about a month before he passed. I am still excited about that that show!!!!
@capitalistraven Жыл бұрын
So my favorite thing about Hendrix is how he played around with syncopation. It gave his playing this kind of groove that you don't usually see outside of jazz. He would do these beautifully subtle rhythmic changes that are near impossible to replicate. Sometimes in a solo he would drag ever so slightly behind the beat, then shred to "catch up" and land right on the down beat. I always hear covers of Hendrix and miss that swaying unpredictable flavor he mixed in.
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@capitalistraven: I agree w/u for the most part. But when I hear really good covers of Jimi's music I'm simultaneously able to enjoy how well the artist is able to capture so much of the beauty of Jimi's artistry, yet fall a bit short of his unparalleled instinctive genius. That only enhances my level of appreciation for his unique ability that u have stated so well.
@UncleDansVintageVinyl Жыл бұрын
Yes! He was constantly pushing and pulling at the beat. And his dynamics were also gorgeous. A lot of imitators just play the notes. They miss all those nuances, and the nuances are key.
@chizorama Жыл бұрын
Jimi didn't played to the metronome, the metronome played to him. Incredible genius.
@RichardHowells1234 Жыл бұрын
Yeh man that's music
@fra5248 Жыл бұрын
that's the best way i've ever read someone describe Hendrix
@Cajunman1977-k3f2 жыл бұрын
Jimi was from another planet. An assault on the senses. A genius.
@ChuckTaylorixonmedia1 Жыл бұрын
Eddie Hazel Mercenary
@edski8536 Жыл бұрын
@@ChuckTaylorixonmedia1 😴😑💤
@ampersand6375 Жыл бұрын
No. He was the closest to the Earth.
@tepoztlitlacatl634 Жыл бұрын
He was just ok
@bikeman1x11 Жыл бұрын
he sucked
@jimkonen19132 жыл бұрын
In the context of his time, Jimi was like no other. He took the instrument far beyond the boundaries of what guitarist of the day could of never imagined. He didn't just play the guitar, he played into it with incredible imagination and fearlessness.
@earl-larsen2 жыл бұрын
"He killed God, man!"
@jimmyjohnson4723 Жыл бұрын
...,right! & Heartfelt fluidity of spiritual expression!!!!!!
@elementsofphysicalreality Жыл бұрын
I don’t think Hendrix spent that much time practicing. He was high as balls and didn’t care to learn anything about the instrument. Just lit it on fire and fucked it so white people wouldn’t feel racist. It’s an act. There’s multitudes of better guitarists.
@earl-larsen Жыл бұрын
@@elementsofphysicalreality So ignorant and wrong 🤣. Nobody likes an elitist
@jusjay3834 Жыл бұрын
@@elementsofphysicalrealitynot true he was documented to eat and sleep practicing his guitar.not too much footage of it tho
@rosewoodsteel66564 ай бұрын
I don't know any guitar players that hate Jimi. He was a brilliant innovator and songwriter. He changed the way guitar is played. -Rest his soul.
@gben24572 жыл бұрын
Little Wing is one of the greatest progressions to play lead over. It truly never gets old.
@alkholos2 жыл бұрын
A uniquely Hendrix invention. Had he never existed, no one would ever imagine it. There are many others that I love, but Little Wing is my favorite.
@AnonYmous-ez4es Жыл бұрын
Greatest nigga to pick up a guitar.
@honeychicken1216 Жыл бұрын
Also ridiculously hard to play for how god damn smooth it sounds 🙏🏽 at least for me. favourite guitar song ever
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@@alkholos Def ONE of my top favs of his... ❤
@theironsheik6322 Жыл бұрын
Little Wing needs to be banned.
@neaituppi73062 жыл бұрын
One thing that people tend not to mention with Hendrix is. He is considered one of the most influential guitarists and is known as a guitarist. But there are many guitarists that make albums, but the songs a merely backing tracks for their guitar playing, unmemorable songs. But all of Jimi's studio albums, are full of memorable and often iconic songs. I don't think of him as his stage presence so much. He had it, but he didn't need it.
@whammy7612 жыл бұрын
Completely agree. Hendrix may have been a better composer than he was a player which is saying a lot.
@aquamarine999112 жыл бұрын
Really, all that matters is the song. The art of songwriting. And yes, Jimi was a top tier songwriter. Little Wing, or Castles Made of Sand, or Wind Cries Mary. Waterfall. And so many others. Spanish Castle Magic. He even turns a straight jam (Rainy Day) in to a great song. And he used his guitar to sound out the song that already existed in perfect form in his mind. One can admire the technique of Jeff Beck or Steve Vai or SRV. One can rock out to Page's or Blackmore's memorable riffs and great solos, although I'd say Eddie Van Halen was the only comparably unique talent as an overall song composer. It helped that Eddie was a classically trained pianist (Jump is no accident). But Hendrix was the total package - singer, songwriter, arranger, performer. It's impossible to separate out any one element.
@MrDragonkarp2 жыл бұрын
I like to think of hendrix being a perfect mix of Buddy Guy, Wes Montgomery and Curtis Mayfield.
@gtrriffs2 жыл бұрын
Great comment👏
@theethnicist56782 жыл бұрын
What he SAID 👆🏾
@JoshAintSoCool Жыл бұрын
You can hear in his music that Jimi loved the blues but he played It with a psychedelic style that took on a whole new sound and I think that’s one reason why guitarists love him. He transcended the norm. There are many, many great guitarists through history.. but as a guitar player, when I hear Jimi’s music It almost sounds spiritual.. sounds corny but you really get a feel that this guy was using that instrument to paint the most colorful pictures.
@chizorama Жыл бұрын
There is a ton of Mississippi Delta in his style, turned him into a Voodoo Child.
@BlindMellowJelly Жыл бұрын
He would really appreciate that. He heard music in his head on a continuous basis. I talked with Billy Cox and he would tell stories of how he would be in the middle of a conversation then just go blank. Something would hit him and he would run and find a guitar. To call it an obsession could be fitting but he viewed music as spiritual for sure. He would tell Billy he went to church for a min when he blanked out and would smile because he knew Billy had to repeat what he was saying because he knew Jimi did not hear a thing he was saying. billy also spoke on the zz top experience when they were booked to do shows with him. They were not nice to him but after his death started saying how Jimi said things about their music that were not true at all. Things like that never bothered him but he was not tuned in to saying anything about it. I think he wanted his playing to be spiritual and would play extended versions when in concert.
@sd3457 Жыл бұрын
@@chizorama Really recommend the Biography of Jimi "Cross Town Traffic" by Charles Shaar Murray. CSM makes a strong case that Jimi was the last of the line of Delta Bluesmen.
@chizorama Жыл бұрын
@@sd3457 Thank you for the recommendation, I'll have to look into that.
@angebrowne1371 Жыл бұрын
He was SOUL BLUES THOSE RIFFS ARE 2 PENERATE UR SOUL EVERY BING PERCIES UR SOUL ❤
@feynmanschwingere_mc22702 ай бұрын
The INSANE thing is that we probably never even saw the BEST VERSION of Jimi Hendrix. When he died his music (imo) was actually getting BETTER and more original and more effusive in my opinion. He was JUST getting started. In that sense he's a bit like Ramanujan and Mozart, an incredible prodigal talent who died FAR too soon but was so brilliant at a young age that they became legends in spite of there short lives. He's the greatest talent in rock & roll history and I don't think it's even close. He wasn't even taught professionally. He didn't OWN a proper guitar for two years after he started. His musical prime was very short due to his early death (just 27) and yet he's STILL regarded as (by far) the greatest guitarist to ever live (according to Rolling Stones). Genius. Genius. GENIUS. Rest in perfect peace, there will never be another Jimi Hendrix...the greatest rock and roll talent to ever live.
@MoneyIsSilver Жыл бұрын
What makes a guitarist the GOAT is having a combination of technical skills x songwriting (commercial success) x stage presence x innovation. Jimi had it all.
@RStevenPage Жыл бұрын
Don't forget influence. It is impossible to over-state his influence on guitar players still to this day.
@thatdude39779 ай бұрын
He influenced me to do drugs and smoke purple haze mire than anything 😂
@Jabba-le-feminist-hating-Hutt9 ай бұрын
He wasn’t exactly big on the commercial compared to others tbh, people in mainstream don’t like him cos they don’t understand
@bloodcards30849 ай бұрын
he's got the soul too. it's more rare than you think
@6ft7guy8 ай бұрын
Did you ever see his live shows he had terrible amp settings and was out of tune. He couldn't even read music
@daveylee4677 Жыл бұрын
You can be totally unschooled in music, never had a lesson, and still become a great musician. It’s a talent granted to the few that are gifted enough to figure it all out. Jimmy had “it”. He could create music in his head like he was hearing it, and spontaneously transfer that thought into guitar notes at live venues. We call it musical genius. He called it FUN!!! ✌️
@lucasgoudie1851 Жыл бұрын
what youre describing is being a professional improvising musician lol
@alondathomas293 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, Electric Ladyland is literally a head and mind trip to listen to in and of itself. It's truly unique, like it was made by someone from another planet who decided to do their own version of a psychedelic blues album, lol. That's how damn weird, deep, and spaced the hell out it is, lol😄😄😄.
@Kevinschart Жыл бұрын
it's really not that uncommon. think of how many people just have a knack for drawing, writing, singing, or comedy. when you combine natural gifts with a strong work ethic you get humans like Jimi. My older brother could draw his as off since the age of 5.
@bigstink9 Жыл бұрын
I like this guy but his analysis of Hendrix is too academic. Jimi didn't have this approach to music. Hendrix played the music he 'heard' in his head.
@jackdud8793 Жыл бұрын
More and more you are seeing self taught musicians that never took any sort of classes or lessons, and making it big for example Elton John or Kurt Cobain were both self taught, but I don't believe that it is just something you have. Music is a passion, and the ones who truly enjoy it rather than being forced to go to classes or lessons excel because memorizing something that you want to do is so much easier than memorizing something that you were forced to. I call it skill and not talent because in the end, Jimi Hendrix was practicing 8-12 hours in a day, busting his ass to learn guitar but he kept at it more and more consistently than most guitarist today. As Jimi said, “You have to stick with it. Sometimes, you are going to be so frustrated you want to give up the guitar - you’ll hate the guitar. But all of this is just a part of learning because if you stick with it, you’re going to be rewarded”.
@peskyfervid6515 Жыл бұрын
One shouldn't forget Hendrix's lyrics. The lyrics for Little Wing are beautiful, as are the lyrics for many of his other songs. He was a complete musician. A composer, an instrumentalist, a lyricist, a vocalist, and a performer. One of the greatest of all time.
@seandowning5918 Жыл бұрын
Completely agree 👍
@SadisticStang Жыл бұрын
One shouldn't forget that virtually everything he put out, was written by his white band mates - who by the way were actually better musicians than he was
@r3b3lvegan89 Жыл бұрын
Please give a source for proof of that. Your comment holds no substance
@peskyfervid6515 Жыл бұрын
@@r3b3lvegan89 What would you accept as proof?
@hman2912 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful, but very of their time to do with hippies and free love
@rebeccadavis83558 ай бұрын
This touched my heart deeply. Thank you. I love the attention to details and rare footage we see here. I grew up with Hendrix's music. Love his beautiful soul and I love how you explained this!
@riffraffrichard2 жыл бұрын
Hendrix isn't only an innovator of guitar he was drawing influence from many different sources. He is a musical alchemist but also he put so much of his own heart and expression into what he had learnt and he played guitar with a freedom that abandoned technique in favour of exploring raw emotion
@mikekell9202 жыл бұрын
Musical alchemist is the perfect term.
@toneyisaiah35562 жыл бұрын
Absolutely yes.
@26Manueli2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, Hendrix didn't build songs on technique, rather expressing what he felt at the moment as he puts it. He was a gifted musician song writer and performer but he never sat down to make his music sound that way, he was just playing what was in his head as best as he could, many greats did that back then.
@werunthenight58552 жыл бұрын
Jeff Beck > Jimi Hendrix kzbin.info/aero/PLrpyDacBCh7Ds5Yp19ELV8E9VldzRx7eO
@lisarochwarg47072 жыл бұрын
So correct.
@christopherhumphrey Жыл бұрын
I think what makes Hendrix great was he wasn't looking at music in an analytical mindset. He was going on feeling and timing. It was always about experimenting. Trying new sounds all the time. So many people break music down to a science and yet the best of us rely on feeling. There's always a tone and time to do it.
@cammontreuil7509 Жыл бұрын
Acid made him great.
@RichardWilliamDamien Жыл бұрын
Thank you for saying it. I’m just a listener of music but this video made me feel like “why that man is doing maths on music for speaking of Hendrix” 111 likes on you comment now haha
@soniqbooom Жыл бұрын
Totally agree!
@SadisticStang Жыл бұрын
Well based on his lack of quality and clarity, and that he came off more like a drunk Slash than a sober Jeff Beck, then ya i'd call that "experimenting"
@r3b3lvegan89 Жыл бұрын
I think you just have very poor perception of music altogether lol. Your description of Hendrix isn’t accurate for shit. And all those who knew him would tell you the same.
@grog55642 жыл бұрын
Jimi was one of the best concerts that I ever saw. And I was close. He just wailed, screaming guitar then stops on a dime and tunes. he says "for your listening pleasure" as he is adjusting the tuning. He was unique. and he is still influencing guitar players 50 years later.
@jackmaddox49609 ай бұрын
When I was learning to play guitar as a young teen in the mid-80's, I did what seemed the sensible thing to me: I got every Hendrix album I could find, and got reeeaaally good at moving the needle back one or two grooves at a time, so as to hear a couple seconds of some brilliant passage over and over, deciphering how to play it as best I could. Using this method I learned everything on his 3 major studio releases (Are You Experienced, Axis: Bold as Love, and Electric Ladyland), then started on oddballs like 'Midnight Lightning' and 'War Heroes', then on to live albums like 'Live at The Fillmore East' and the Woodstock recording... Now to be sure, I got a LOT of it wrong, there was no tab, no youtube, no great guitarists I could go sit and watch and pester with questions; but over the years I eventually learned them a LOT better, my playing improved. So I often say "Jimi Hendrix taught me how to play guitar'....but of course this is totally wrong, because then I did the same thing with Jimmy Page & Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton & Cream, and David Gilmore & Pink Floyd, with a sprinkling of Alvin Lee, of Ten Years After, Ulrich Roth of early Scorpions (SUPER underrated guitarist, check out 'Sails of Charon' or anything off of 'Virgin Killers' and yes, controversial album name, but still a good album) along with some Rory Gallagher and Alex Lifeson of RUSH... I'm SUPER envious of guitarists starting out nowadays with the absolute deluge of available free tools to help you learn, it's almost crazy, but I feel like I was in good stead with my approach... Lately, being no longer particularly active playing in bands, I've been going through Yngwie Malmsteen's first album 'Rising Force'; this is a monstrous tutorial on neo-classical playing, and mad technique! Been a lot of fun. As for why was Hendrix the GOAT? He had it all; rhythm, technique, dexterity, showmanship, compositional skill and songwriting, he even had a great look: the crazy clothes, the 'fro, the upside down Strat, plus, and perhaps most, ORIGINALITY...Before or since, NO ONE can touch him for originality, although EVH and Yngwie come close, though only in playing, not the rest. Jimi truly WAS the GOAT....
@13elad49 Жыл бұрын
The very first Rock concert I went to was the Jimi Hendrix Experience. After that nothing came close. And Jimi Hendrix seemed like a genuine good man. I wept at his passing, and still miss him.
@FlatlandMando Жыл бұрын
I could have sought out a concert of his in the day. If I only knew how " once in a lifetime" it would have been, I would have gone.
@jazziccoolcat Жыл бұрын
Don't forget Jimi Hendrix's Band of Gypsy's. Watch the documentary.
@tsad4346 Жыл бұрын
Im 23 and this is the ONE thing I wish I could experience before I die. Jimi Changed my life.
@cozmowiz5593 Жыл бұрын
The one thing my father told me about Hendrix was that he played with folks who taught him alot about structure and melody as he often had to fill in for a missing member of the King Curtis band or who ever he was playing for. He adopted well and mastered that pentatonic scale (slave scale) as it was called back when certain people rejected our music. He also played all day long and often woke up in the middle of the night and played until the morning. Gifted and talented, yes but a true lover of music and the drive to figure it out.
@mrgolstein7 ай бұрын
Vetted by The Isley Brothers, James Brown & Little Richard
@addieandleesfunplayaddiean7325 Жыл бұрын
First concert I ever saw. Got two feet from Jimi onstage on press row when I was 15 years old. Watched his foot close up rocking the wah wah on Voodoo Child. Spanish Castle Magic and Red House too. May 9, 1969. Still the greatest I've ever witnessed and I've heard all the greats. His writing skills were unmatched. He influenced me to learn to really play and work hard at my playing and writing and ultimately spend my career as a serious musician!
@taragreenetarotastro Жыл бұрын
i too saw Jimi play live twice and was also in the press row and got to meet him in Toronto when he was busted on May 3, 1969 My girlfriend Linda and I went to see him at the Four Seasons Hotel on Jarvis Street. He was relieved to see somebody and we didnt know hed gotten busted. We talked to him all night, we wanted to leave earlier but he didnt want us to leave him alone. He was so sweet, a gentleman, soft voiced, told us about growing up in Seattle. He asked for our phone numbers and he actually called me when I was out and my mom said someone named Jimi called you. My girlfriend Linda was invited to join him backstage at Woodstock. I was devestated when he passed away. He was very spiritual. A wonderful Sagittarius too.
@goodandbadtimes Жыл бұрын
@@taragreenetarotastro Wow. ♥
@billbmsn Жыл бұрын
@@taragreenetarotastro THAT is some story! I was lucky to have seen him 3 times in the late 60s when I was in college at Berkeley, CA. You topped that by a 1000 fold.
@bfuh_055 Жыл бұрын
@@taragreenetarotastro This is great!
@leomuzzy6554 Жыл бұрын
My first as well. My recollection is spring of '68, but I'll leave that for other interested parties to Google. RPI Fieldhouse in Troy, NY. Sly Stone (I think) cancelled, so it was a short notice panic to get my mom to drive us. I would have just turned 13. Tix were $3. Opener was The Soft Machine, so I saw Andy Summers as too. Who knew . . . ?
@MikeTssr3 ай бұрын
Im related to Jimi Hendrix through Cherokee Indian mixed blood and he's the Greatest Guitar 🎸 God and he was a king 👑 of swag
@zacharydevan4107 Жыл бұрын
It's the emotion that comes through his playing that's unmistakable. Players over analyze him but can never recreate his magic.
@martinkrauser4029 Жыл бұрын
There's no "over-analyzing". He did things that we can understand and build on them. The latter can't take place without the former. Emotion doesn't just "come through", it takes work and skill to know how to do it, and he put in a lot of work doing exactly that sort of listening to both those that came before him and his contemporaries. If you think that's taking away from either listening to or playing the music, then you don't know the first thing about being a musician.
@Halliday7895 Жыл бұрын
Ya Cole over analyzes little wing here a bit haha. He's young still though so I forgive him.
@TheNobbynoonar2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic rhythm player, composer, songwriter, huge imagination, fantastic stage presence beautiful singing voice, and he ALWAYS looked and sounded cool. That’s why they’ll never be another Jimi. A true ‘one off’
@markusantonio48662 жыл бұрын
Everything you said is absolutely true.
@DBLRxyz2 жыл бұрын
Not Jimi but true rock star shit I promise. Look into Yves Tumor.
@lobserve1 Жыл бұрын
All true except he couldn't sing to save his life.
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@@markusantonio4866 👍👍👍
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@@DBLRxyz Appreciate the tip!
@dhh4882 жыл бұрын
Not only was he beyond good, he was also humble.
@randybonner98702 жыл бұрын
You're probably referencing Mike Douglas show or something like that where Jimmy Hendrix definitely showed his humbleness when said that he was the best guitarist around. His answer was telling of who he really was. He was an excellent fellow.
@numbersix89192 жыл бұрын
The truly great are so.
@bluesman8152 жыл бұрын
The Dick Cavett show. When Dick eluded to the fact people considered him to be one of the greatest guitarists ever you could tell it made Jimi uncomfortable and he replied something like, "I don't know about that maybe the greatest sitting in this chair at the moment." While many musicians seem to be driven by ego Hendrix exuded humility.
@numbersix89192 жыл бұрын
@@bluesman815 By many musicians I take it you mean Clap.
@JohnWilliams-sq7cj2 жыл бұрын
@@numbersix8919 lol
@jimwilson88793 ай бұрын
I never saw Hendrix play live, a handful of friends skipped school to go to his funeral. We ate acid, shrouds and mescaline on the boat to Seattle and got lost I did see Buddy Miles band and Ginger Baker band play a battle of the bands show at Orlando. Thanks for the memory lane
@james6039 Жыл бұрын
Hendrix had it all. The ultimate Rock Musician. If everyone listened to Hendrix the world would have an abundance of LOVE.
@albertopalma1663 Жыл бұрын
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace"~ Jimi Hendrix
@bazeye Жыл бұрын
Nonsense, the music of Hendrix is not some supernatural transformative magic, and I'm sure there are some pretty awful people that like Hendrix,
@bazeye Жыл бұрын
@@albertopalma1663 If love is so powerful why have ordinary people been shit on by powerful people for centuries. I think anger is more politically effective.
@blakeharrison3972 Жыл бұрын
The fact that Jimi was 27 when he passed is mind boggling, he was far too talented, would’ve loved to see how he would be if he was alive still
@Driessens_Peter Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/eWq9aJRsrbGbm6s
@BadAppleBlues Жыл бұрын
He would probably be as dull as Eric Clapton.
@cammontreuil7509 Жыл бұрын
Wrote music because of acid.
@mikenuzzo3323 Жыл бұрын
I thought it was a 28 club with Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison
@taragreenetarotastro Жыл бұрын
@@mikenuzzo3323 NO ITS THE 27 CLUB ALSO AMY WINEHOUSE, KURT COBAIN
@NinjaxCad2 жыл бұрын
love these H.A.T.E. videos, you're great at explaining, storytelling, demonstrating, and contextualizing these great guitarists
@marly10172 жыл бұрын
Why have I heard contextualizing as sexualizing lmao -and why did I agree-
@happypuppy-i4k2 жыл бұрын
Not really. First of all, first chord and teach how it breathes. When does this teacher breathe? Between chords. Secondly, remind the students to move their fingers according to what they hear. Thirdly,. This comment will be ignored.
@brooksfarabow29742 жыл бұрын
It’s like the most rewarding click bait lol.
@yourcommentisntfunnyv27092 жыл бұрын
Oh that’s why. Kinda cool clickbait lol
@Guitar3872 жыл бұрын
Yes your right his rhythm is often overlooked but his sense of rhythm was the key to his genius.
@stratman1021 Жыл бұрын
Mike excellent breakdown. I think a lot of people who think Jimi is overrated don't look at the "big picture" if you will. It's his rhythm playing that has moved me so much. I so much dig his version of "Like a Rolling Stone' from the Monterry Pop festival. My favorite solo from him is "Message to Love" from Band of Gypsies. He just kills it both rhythmically and the way he just blends the solo in is the stuff of legends.
@chizorama Жыл бұрын
Excuse me for a minute, just let me play my guitar. He killed it in Like A Rolling Stone at Monterey.
@svtinker Жыл бұрын
Exactly, post Hendrix rock transcended music paradigm.
@Kevinschart Жыл бұрын
it's impossible for him to be overrated when literally every guitarist is inspired by him.
@joesmith6524 Жыл бұрын
Machine gun solo!
@Alsatiagent-zu1rx2 ай бұрын
For reasons I do not understand there was a Toronto TV station that aired Monterey Pop Festival in the middle of the day. It was the mid 70s and I had hurried home to eat lunch. I turned on the TV and watched the whole thing. I was in 7th Grade and very late for school but I couldn't stop watching. I told my teacher that my brothers guppies had given birth and I had to put them in a separate aquarium because they were being eaten by other guppies. She said I was lying in front of the class. She insisted that fish lay eggs and I was to go to the principals office. Then another kid in my class, God bless her, told the teacher that guppies, like sharks, do indeed give live birth. She had some guppies of her own. The teacher was humbled and just grunted then told me to take my seat. I was off the hook.
@dalton7145 Жыл бұрын
Jimi was a freaking genius rhythm and solo player. Plus like Robert Johnson, he had huge hands so he could play rhythm and solo at the same time..
@bosmosis2 ай бұрын
Good stuff! I've been jamming that song forever and, like you said, don't ever really get tired of it. You make a good point about the fact that he gets away with basically repeating a verse ad naseum, and how that is a rare thing. The only thing I might have added are his chord phrasings, especially the way he hammers on the third as the bottom note; I've always loved that and it's probably one of the most imitated aspects of his rhythm playing (it totally blew open the way I phrased chords when I copped to that trick). I don't know if that was something he innovated, but he certainly made it cool.
@roderickberry25082 жыл бұрын
I use to have this discussion with Mike Abdullah our guitar player with the Stylistics, we both knew that Hendrix was so much more then a lead player. His chordal work on ballads like little Wing and Angel were a work of art , in many respects like Mozart passages and his chord work on basic rock/funk groves were laced with riffs and rhythm patterns that made the song special snd his studio overdubbing of lines over lines was frightening. The man was in a class of his own. Even his work with the Isley brothers and little Richard made their music move better.
@kwik2hear9152 жыл бұрын
Ed Kramer and Jimi were incredible mixers, they knew how to play with that sound board, and I love the mixing Kramer did on "Axis", just incredible!!!!!!
@roderickberry25082 жыл бұрын
@@kwik2hear915 you are so correct Axis Bold As Love is a masterpiece . And this was early in the mixing game. The concept that Jimi had in his head was Way out from the crowd. Ahead of his time
@loombaron Жыл бұрын
Theres ONE key factor that makes Hendrix amazing. He was in his early 20s during his whole career. He was a kid and changed everything. Hands down. Nothing more to say.
@michaelelliott3209 Жыл бұрын
If 27 is early 20's, then that makes me a 65 year old teenager.
@bigbellyman5442 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelelliott3209 he DIED at 27. His career was his during his late teens to 27 so that guys point still stands
@vistacyclingtuscany9 ай бұрын
Let's just say "he was young". Twenty-three when he made the trip to England, after his formative years with the Isleys, Little Richard and more. He released Are You Experienced at twenty-four, both Axis at Electric Lady Land at twenty-five and played Woodstock at twenty-six, dying just over a year later.
@SteveN-qo5uv8 ай бұрын
It’s like Randy Rhoads, dead at 25. These guys died far too young.
@michaelking2038 Жыл бұрын
Artists like Hendrix and Prince just have a 'WOW' factor. They're wired different than the average human. After all these years I listen to their records and watch their concert footage and it never ceased to amaze me.
@massimilianoprotti9928 Жыл бұрын
I❤Prince❤(+>88
@trumanhw2 ай бұрын
Mike ... you are a special human being. You play beautifully. Even when you're just strumming a chord. But are also so intelligent and articulate. Obviously people find you charming and feel instant reverence for you. While it feels absolutely crazy to call "music" niche ... deep music analysis is to this culture, today. Yet even still ... without spamming with a great song's title, you got 1.3M views discussing music analysis. You're just gifted with charisma. It'll probably feel impossible to imagine, but don't resist other opportunities that stray from your core interest and obvious talents. You can hold an audience's attention. And speak in a way that's convincing. So whatever it is ... so long as you don't resist it, you'll be offered many paths to whatever you define success as. I'm sure you know that joke where a flood comes and while many are being evacuated, a guy is waiting on his roof for god to save him. At first, a row boat comes by and says, 'dude, this floods bad! get in so we can get out of here together." Yet he rebuffs and says _god will save me._ Then another guy in a fan-boat speeds by and offers him a ride. And still he says, _god will save me._ Finally, a helicopter comes and offers him a ride, and still, he says _god will save me._ So after he dies, he finally gets to heaven and asks why god betrayed his faith..? To which god says _I didn't; I sent you a rowboat, a fan-boat and a helicopter._ Don't be to committed to the mechanism. I believe there will be many, many vehicles that offer you an incredible ride. In fact, congratulations; bc it's just a matter of time.
@joshedenfield3761 Жыл бұрын
Hendrix played even when the notes didn't align perfectly, he was sporadic, and played what he felt, that's why he is so hard to replicate and still a pioneer today, he was a master at improvising
@agdgdgwngo Жыл бұрын
Little Wing is one of my favourite songs ever, a true masterpiece. Can reduce me to tears when the solo hits. Hendrix, as lauded as he is, is still underrated in terms of vocals, songwriting and production.
@tkay221 Жыл бұрын
even the srv version makes me emotional when it plays at the right/wrong time. such an amazing song but so sad that both artists never got to make more music
@joefriedman9843 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. It's unbelievable and way too short.
@jadelyel Жыл бұрын
I agree Hendrix is very underrated as a vocalist / lyricist
@bobjary9382 Жыл бұрын
Its beautiful, but for me crosstown traffic exemplifies the loose chaotic syncopated lyrical perfection that perhaps we might have heard more of.
@agdgdgwngo Жыл бұрын
@@bobjary9382 I love crosstown traffic. Pure ear candy, I used to listen to it like 10 times in a row lol
@BobK5 Жыл бұрын
Hendrix was a total genius, no one else comes close, rhythm, lead, song writing, making music, originality, no one.
@Kingston-exp Жыл бұрын
I’ll do it
@BobK5 Жыл бұрын
@@Kingston-exp what are you going to do Kingston?
@Dj_baby_benz Жыл бұрын
I’ll do it too and work with kingston
@harryheath7728 Жыл бұрын
Because he raised the bar over and over his solos screamed hard!
@Kingston-exp Жыл бұрын
@@BobK5 come close to jimi hendrix skill bob
@thomasnguyen39254 ай бұрын
My first ever "What the hell was that" moment was Prince where he threw his guitar in the air at the end of "My Guitar Gently Weeps" I never really gave it much thought before and then I suddenly got really into appreciation of guitarists. It didn't take me long to realize what makes a great guitarist is one who sings with his instrument. I've seen guitarists try to impress BB King with skill and speed, then someone else came in and just sang with their guitar. He shook his head at the speed demon, while his eyes lit up with the other guitarist who played from his soul.
@MikeSaturN500OMG Жыл бұрын
In the early 60's I was privileged to see bands like John Mayall,Clapton, The Who,Faces, but when I saw Jimi play it was something completely different and since that time not heard anything that comes close. If only he had lived longer we would have seen so much more.😢
@MLBlue30 Жыл бұрын
Its true, he had a lot planned for the future and we never got to hear it. We were cheated.
@professorskye Жыл бұрын
As a guy in his 40s, I really appreciated the opening story. It is great that people are allowed to discover Hendrix and that he is no longer just accepted dogma for anyone with a guitar. Discovering Hendrix is one of the great joys.
@chizorama Жыл бұрын
Discovering Jimi changed how I listened to music & how I played; even as a bass player.
@AthrazhuR2 жыл бұрын
I was a Jamaican at the university of Texas, in 1988, having been introduced to Hendrix by my tennis teamate in high school at Gonzales, Texas. I LOVED Hendrix. He was my salvation, from him I branched off into a lot of others, like Ronnie Montrose, and the guys in King Crimson, and Santana, Robert Johnson....the list goes on and on. But when I hear Little Wing, I still cry, or Castles made of Sand. Give thanks and praises for the OG.
@dothejordman4 ай бұрын
YES!! Mate, this is changing how I listen to Hendrix. You basically put words to how I've always felt. And when you starting talking about his sense of rhythm, I could hear the back of my head cheering in agreement. I play drums so that's the stuff I love, most guitar solos have me quickly wondering when they're gonna end! Great vid
@countrysidegaming1100 Жыл бұрын
Hendrix is a huge inspiration for me, he didn’t follow the rules, and he did it his own way, and played better than just about anyone I’ve ever heard. Something about the way he plays with so much emotion get to me.
@BonesyTucson Жыл бұрын
For me it's about the guitar in Voodoo Child. It's insane. It's out of this world. And somehow, unlike any musician I've heard before or since, he actually, somehow succeeded in encoding his existence into that song and he truly lives again every time it is played out loud. I haven't been able to get over it since the first time I heard it, can you tell lol
@devilsforkdigital1490 Жыл бұрын
With a tone the size of a planet...
@AdamMcGrath Жыл бұрын
On THAT song in particular, the guitar could not be any more perfect...He says EVERYTHING that needs to be said with his axe...Genius is a fair estimation of the monstrous talent on display in Voodoo Child...It's a type of music that reaches deeper than anybody else will ever be able to...I really love that song too, is it slightly obvious? lol
@jimbailey1122 Жыл бұрын
Had a student complain to me that he could not follow along with JH when trying to play along with Voodoo Chile because he was "out of tune." we hadn't reached the level of alternate tunings yet so I had to point out a majority of his songs, like the blue legends that influenced him, were not in E standard tuning, but in E flat standard. And VC slight return was in D standard. I could see the light bulb come on.
@BonesyTucson Жыл бұрын
@@AdamMcGrath let's talk about that wild string bend around 2:25, it is just.. so massive and extreme, just gorgeous
@AdamMcGrath Жыл бұрын
@@BonesyTucson It is THAT very bend which is my favourite in the entire track because that is the note he bends to bring the whole solo back to reality when it was lost in outer space forever lol Only Jimi can play that bend in that exact place at that exact time and bring everything back together again. Can we acknowledge that the track would not be the same without Mitch Mitchell also???
@MDLOP82 жыл бұрын
Hendrix sounds 50 years ahead of everyone no matter what year you pick. He transcends time and competition.
@throckmortensnivel28504 ай бұрын
Leave us not forget Hendrix was also a great songwriter. It wasn't just that he played LIttle Wing so well, it was that he wrote the song in the first place. In a very short career he wrote and played many amazing songs. Wind Cries Mary, Little Wing, Spanish Castle Magic, Up From The Skies, Voodoo Chile, Crosstown Traffic, Castles Made Of Sand, Foxy Lady, Manic Depression, Purple Haze, and finally "All Along The Watchtower", which I know he didn't write, but he did such a innovative cover that even Dylan ended up playing it that way. His influence carries on, and will carry on for a long time.
@edjohnson2828 Жыл бұрын
My first concert was seeing Hendrix in 1968. That's when I decided to play guitar and of course back in those days Hey Joe was the first song we all "learned". We got the basic chord structure down and could somewhat fake the lead but could never correctly figure out his rhythm playing on that song. The thing though is very few could really learn to play it properly. His rhythm playing on that song and many others including Little Wing was from another planet. Really listen to it and see if you can emulate it. In my book, that is what makes him the GOAT of blues based rock. He is definitely the most sophisticated rhythm guitarists ever. I must say, SRVs version of Little Wing still gives me goose bumps. He was able to capture the essence of the song like no other. Great review!
@johnfrank3177 Жыл бұрын
Hey Mike. I just subscribed to your channel. I am 72 now and I've been a singer/songwriter most of my life. There are some things you should know about Hendrix. Even though he was left-handed, he always played a righty guitar. The reason for this is not as important as the fact that he somehow turned that into an advantage. One of my favorite things about Hendrix and what makes me a life-long fan is Jimi's creativity. I think this is what makes him great. Many of the live recordings out there don't do him justice since they were usually not recorded well. Jimi always struggled with the problems of the Fender synchronized tremolo bar on his Stratocaster, a problem that has since been cleared up on modern day guitars.. Using this vibrato bar extensively as Jimi did often put the guitar out of tune. I always prefer to listen to his studio recordings since they really showcase his creative talents in the studio. The best way to discover Jimi is to listen to his first album "Are You Experienced" in full. At the time it came out it was so different from everything else and had an almost other-worldly vibe. So many guitarists owe a great debt to Jimi and at least some of them acknowledge this. He gave us all so much in his relatively short career. I'm glad there are young people like yourself who still acknowledge him and continue to enjoy his music. Peace.
@ScottSMITH-lf2in Жыл бұрын
I always thought a left handed guitar player. Turning a right handed guitar upside down was crazy. I heard this at some point. Don't know if it's true. His first electric guitar was right handed and had no money to buy a left handed guitar. So he turned it upside down. Apparently when he went to London many people said why don't you try a left handed guitar. Jimi said he would have to learn all over again. You are a musician I work think flipping a guitar upside down would create a little difference in tone. I'm a a musician just wondering.
@davidhirsch2912 Жыл бұрын
I myself always wondered this same question too. Until recently, I read the answer. Jimi continued to use a Right handed guitar flipped upside down for several reasons. He could have ordered a Left handed model from Fender anytime he wanted, they more than likely would have given him one free of charge. One reason he continued to use a right handed model was the distance from the Picks up to the Strings. Jimi restrung his guitar using a mismatch of different string Thicknesses / Gauges. Combined, the two, gave him a Unique Sound & Tone. On a different subject, I also listened to Ronnie Wood of the Stones talking in an interview, about when Jimi was his room mate for a short while in London, Ronnie was quite impressed / Dismayed to watch Jimi grab a Right Handed Guitar & play Right Handed with no issue. Another of Jimi's Amazing Talents..!!
@Shredberry Жыл бұрын
@@ScottSMITH-lf2in he’s left handed and plays a right handed guitar but his guitar is still stringed the same way. As the low e string is on top. Unlike someone like Eric Gale who legit plays the guitar upside down so the high e string is on the top. Now that’s what actually trips me.
@ScottSMITH-lf2in Жыл бұрын
@@Shredberry ok so his guitar was upside down. But he strung it in reverse did I get that right? If so would that not get a different tone? Again I'm not a musician I'm just interested in how he got that sound out of that guitar.
@Shredberry Жыл бұрын
@@ScottSMITH-lf2in Yes that is correct! It's mentioned in his wiki article under Equipment > Guitars. By restringing his guitar he was able to keep all of the conventional guitar knowledge. In a player like Eric Gale where he legitimately plays the guitar upside down, every conventional guitar knowledge is thrown out the window because everything is reversed. When you hold a guitar in the conventional way, the thickest string, the low E string is on top and the tuning from top to bottom is EADGBE (with the thinest, higher pitch E string on the bottom). However, if you turn it to the other orientation, the lowest string goes to the bottom and your tuning from top to bottom will be EBGDAE, with the thinest higher pitch E string sitting on top. It's a very small technical detail but some people carry this misconception thinking that's why you can't learn Jimi's style but you totally can! :) And of course it does not in any shape of form lessen Jimi's play style and unique sound etc.
@ethanallain29132 жыл бұрын
Perfect mix of storytelling, theory, playing, and pure entertainment. Love it
@333maxwell10 ай бұрын
First. Cool video mon. I think you have an appeal that is informative and undeniable.. May even encourage and help some folks.. Almost everything you said on a technical level, Hendrix would have cocked his head and wished he could have comprehended, just because he was the curious sort. Even on the most simple terminology 'pentatonic' he would have likely enjoyed hearing about it, heard it before, BUT .. If you hum a few bars I can play it .. Anyway. I thought this was a great video.
@Worldnewstime.2 жыл бұрын
Jimmy Hendrix was from a another dimension. we have never experienced anything like this in music history and our live. His virtuosoity and guitar playing is unparalleled.🎹🇱🇷🔥🔥🔥
@ghengiscant5382 жыл бұрын
You are so right S . The first time i heard "The wind cries Mary " it shocked me to the core , so beautifully haunting . I thought this guy`s so special , from a forever grateful Brit .
@Thetrueking-gr2ss2 жыл бұрын
That's JIMI
@nfdhje38743m2 жыл бұрын
Chopin and Kanye though
@TTM9691 Жыл бұрын
....and yet you don't know how to spell his name! Go figure!
@sirspongadoodle Жыл бұрын
another dimension of overrated... what does he have that other people dont?? jack and shit..
@PaulRoseGuitar Жыл бұрын
Rhythm playing is spectacular throughout the entire Axis album. Completely soulful, funky, musical and unique.
@shakybeevessouls2 жыл бұрын
Perfect, PERFECT explanation of why Hendrix is a landmark moment in guitar history. I was raised on him, grew up learning to play his chops ☺
@kevinthomas7285 ай бұрын
Man, I wish I could express how much your videos make me love music on a deeper level. Your passion is inspiring.
@M5guitar12 жыл бұрын
He's difficult to replicate with timing that flows in and out. Very unique.
@lostinthesupermarket2 жыл бұрын
The man had everything when it came to music: style, swag, rythm, melody, he just knew how to conjure a musical landscape of his own, if you listen to any hendrix album there is something uniquely hendrix to all of them.
@BeeMo742 жыл бұрын
I can tell these breaking down and analyzing videos you do come from pure love & passion and that's why they're so great 🖤... Please keep doing them
@lowgpu16872 жыл бұрын
Are you emo or something?, just asking because many emo people use the black heart instead of red
@BeeMo742 жыл бұрын
@@lowgpu1687 hahaha no I wouldn't say I'm emo I just like black hearts...
@lowgpu16872 жыл бұрын
@@BeeMo74 Oh lol
@saltyseadog47192 жыл бұрын
@@BeeMo74 lol yeh
@richyrich54892 жыл бұрын
In short, Hendrix was more than a musician. Back in the day people called him a magic man. That sums it up. I've just felt the greatest since of loss since I heard of his passing back in high school.
@martinphilip89982 жыл бұрын
I was walking with friends in Bristol, England when Pete Brandt told us. It equaled the shock of hearing JFK was killed. Pete is a guitarist and professional musician now.
@jimmyjohnson4723 Жыл бұрын
: a sound engineer, that happened to play guitar: as a minister of music perhaps..., projecting electric sermons of thought & vibration in the virtuousity of his playing...," Blues baby born to rock & roll! "
@davidramos-beban4906 Жыл бұрын
Not to diminish the genius of Jimi as all the greats have mentors and idols, but whispers of Curtis Mayfield & T-Bone Walker resonate in his style. Both of these geniuses would also be worthy of a deep dive - especially the criminally underrated Mayfield.
@johndillian1018 Жыл бұрын
Soooooooooooo many forgotten greats!
@jessicahay9305 Жыл бұрын
If you're not familiar, check out Dark was the Night, Cold was the Ground by Blind Willie Johnson
@billyboy1093 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget Albert King!
@richardmindemann693511 ай бұрын
Great point. T bone Walker is still deservedly in heavy rotation on the Sirius XM blues Channel, but Curtis Mayfield is criminally under rated today. Give a close listen to Superfly to see the full range of his skills, not the least of which is his songwriting. People get Ready is another of his inspirational compositions which reveals his ground breaking work with the Impressions. His beautiful guitar work is so subtle that it is often overlooked.
@SidAlienTV6 ай бұрын
In fact, Jimi played several years as guitarist for Curtis Mayfield.
@douglaswilliams1680 Жыл бұрын
I'm not a guitar player. I never really played an instrument, but as a choral singer, I spent a lot of time around the music of MANY genres, making music indispensable in my life. I say all that to say - I watch your videos not to "learn" so much as to watch a person who truly loves music and your process of learning. I appreciate you man. Thanks for this, because it warms my old heart.
@richardbelttan3 ай бұрын
Even at 63 a lifelong Hendrix Fan I still do not get bored Studying his Music Playing Strats since the 70,s
@inspectorclouseau80562 жыл бұрын
According to Eddie Kramer, he said that Jimi would overlap and keep laying down different guitar tracks on different songs. Not only that, but Jimi wrote, produced, and played many different instruments on the Electric Ladyland album. It's sad that Jimi was here for such a short time.
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@Inspector Clousseau: 🌹❤
@robertdiehl12812 жыл бұрын
After watching so many documentaries about Jimi Hendrix over the years, playing his music(trying to)on guitar i got the impression he was looking to continue to be creative in his efforts to find whatever kind of meaning out of life he could find. Which i also got the impression that this would eventually lead him away from the guitar. Into different kinds or modes or forms of art and or literature. He seemed to be on a mission of finding a way to express himself.
@JazzgutsVGvanKampen2 жыл бұрын
Ofcourse, little wing such a memorable tune covered by many. The intro is gold. You can jam to this tune in an easy pentatonic way but much complexer if you want using arpeggio's. Tip: when you go to the Bb try Bb lydian dominant ( tri-tone substitute for E7) and resolve to A dorian, actually that's a jazz influenced change. Hendrix was a maestro👍
@stwright197727 күн бұрын
0:21 we got Rick Rolled...😂😂😂
@dannygjk2 жыл бұрын
You emphasized one thing that most people don't bring up - Hendrix's creativity. 👍🏼
@david_a_uno Жыл бұрын
During a workshop with Eddy Kramer, the engineer for all the Jimi Hendrix studio recordings, I had the privilege of listening to soloed guitar on a couple of his songs. What came through was so much deeper than sound. It wasn't "guitar licks". It was energy. It was power and emotion. It was astonishingly deep and after playback, the room was in silence for a good long moment. RIP Jimi.
@kevinjoseph517 Жыл бұрын
wow
@cry2love2 жыл бұрын
Hendrix was my moment of making peace with the dates, with the time. When I was a kid, I thought that old music is old, something outdated, but then it all made sense when I started listening to him and other bands too from old eras. I realized that music is just "a feelings & world perception of people written in sound". In 2010 was the 1st time I asked my dad (electric guitar player) to give me some DVD'S to watch & he gave me Hendrix DVD, I asked, who dat? He replied - just watch & listen. I did, I hated it, it was a 90% live performances and guitar smashing, it was my first time seeing anyone smashing a guitar, before that I only heard about Cobain smashing a guitar, but never seen it. Some things are pretty good, like his 12 string acoustic performance of Hear my train & some studio songs, and I hated his live performances with guitar smashings, but I still watched it again anyway. Then I looked more into his music (without googling about him at all or hearing about who he is, was, or is he alive) and I realized that he has so much absolutely different and full of energy songs, I started liking him. Then after a year or so after army, I googled him and found an articles and stories and all that stuff of who he was and what he've done. I was even amazed that somebody put him on the greatest musicians of all time, I was like - wow, my Jimi? Then I found out about stories with Beatles liking him and Eric Clapton stories, damn. I was not ready to find out he died, but still, to this day, I don't feel like that. I remember in 2013 the new album of his just came out and it felt like it's a recent thing, that it's a 1969 or something, lol.
@davidstevenson55225 ай бұрын
Bro, much love from London. I love watching your enthusiasm and great descriptions of some of the stuff that I take for granted and couldn't possibly put into words. Keep it up
@ianhepplewhite83342 жыл бұрын
As a 13 year old when Jimi first appeared in the U.K. with ‘Hey Joe’ I liked his sound, and then when ‘Purple Haze’ was released, that just made me really sit up and take notice. There was a new programme starting called ‘Dee Time’, a play on ‘Tea Time’, where former pirate DJ Simon Dee interviewed a whole variety of famous people and there were musical acts on as well. I think the very first programme had Jimi on when Purple Haze had been released and I was at family friends home for a visit and asked if I could watch the programme as there was a musician on I wanted to see. When he appeared playing his guitar behind his head and with his teeth, someone asked me in a bit of a horrified way, “This isn’t who you wanted to see is it”? 😂 They weren’t expecting Jimi or my reaction to him. He was so exhilarating and exciting to watch and listen to. I actually also saw his last performance on the BBC, when he stopped playing his own music and became playing ‘Sunshine of Your Love’ as a tribute to Cream, who had recently disbanded, against the wishes of the TV show’s (Lulu at the BBC, or some other title with the Scottish singer’s name in the title) producer, and as a result the BBC banned Jimi from appearing again. I also recall being very sad when my mother gave me the news of his death.
@fatamsimth2 жыл бұрын
The thing i find so amazing about music is that it can create an existential anchor for countless people. When i was 15, probably before you were born, my only goal as a new guitar player was learning Purple Haze note for note. It took me at least a year. After that, virtually every mainstream rock song was easy to figure out. Now over 30 yeats later you taught me something new about why Hendrix was so good, and he died before either of us were born. I don't know many other art forms that operate that way.
@davissinclair49452 жыл бұрын
Hendrix's influence across the whole spectrum of music is what makes him great. SRV said it was his touch, his feel, his approach to the fretboard is what set him apart from everyone. Some guitarists hate Jimi because he made it look so effortless, just like Wes Montgomery.
@robertginsburg81139 ай бұрын
Thank you for your breakdown on this iconic song. I'm 70 years old and Hendrix is timeless. His is the only music other than a few Beatle songs I will revisit after all these years. It's obvious he put in the time to master his instrument so he could fluidly express his inner soul.
@mrd123ist2 жыл бұрын
Jimi is one of a kind, there is no one to compare with him period, his dress style , his innovative guitar playing doing so many things on the the guitar that were unthinkable like feed back, using distortion and the list goes on, his guitar playing goes deep in my soul
@trevorgwelch74122 жыл бұрын
In my book Jimi is beyond all other guitarists , song writers . He was a great entertainer . Cool guy .
@Xipify Жыл бұрын
Hendrix was playing with Little Richard on tour in Europe in the late 50's I believe. He wasn't someone that was an 'overnight' success. He'd put in his time. Absolutely brilliant.
@zach5751 Жыл бұрын
He spent a lot of his early career doin the chitlin circuit
@ironeddie9917 Жыл бұрын
Hey my friend I got a 1996 Fender Stratocaster USA Jimi Hendrix tribute guitar it’s upside down right handed to where you can look in the mirror and pretend you’re Jimmy being left-handed.. it’s also got Al Hendrix‘s autograph on the front of it..from my understanding There’s three in existence and I have one of them. I love your show brother.🎸
@bobburrow9524 Жыл бұрын
I don’t know who this guy is given the guitar lesson but he astonished me with one sentence. He said 15 hour a day practice. It is no wonder he is brilliant. I’m impressed.
@ElCalvo45 Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis, Mike. I've been listening to Hendrix for 50 years now (yeah, I'm almost 60) and still get floored every time by his soul, musicality, and flawless rhythmic precision. And yes, my little Jazz trio also does our own version of Little Wing!
@BrettMorin Жыл бұрын
The thing about Hendrix I HATE personally was his best music was turning into a Rock Jazz fusion near his death. You listen to Band of Gypsies and the way he did rolls and calls of Message of Love, Changes, Who Knows. And the actual melodies were getting more jazzy. More evoking of a construct versus a walking blues or part. Now saying that still some of my favorite songs are still his earlier stuff like Castles Made of Sand, Little Wing, and Wing Cries Marry. But he was always evolving and My God if he was alive even a few more years the stuff he could do. If you ever doubt Hendrix get some good live recordings of him. He was kind of hit or miss due to drugs and drinking. But when he was on, OMG, no one better in the world. He was the like the equivalent to Guitar that Bruce Lee was to Kung Fu. He was out of this world. Even people in the 1960's that thought they were near the top heard him and bowed down to him.
@Marcus_C51 Жыл бұрын
Late to the party but I liked the direction he was going in right before he passed away too. Band of Gypsys was an epic performance from Jimi, what a groove Miles and Cox laid down at that show. We know the otherworldly guitar that is all over that. I like that jazz/rock jam he did with Larry Young/Khalid Yasin on organ-it showed some nice possibilities. I love his studio work too, can't go wrong with the songs you mentioned. My favorite version of "LIttle Wing", however, is off of the old "Hendrix in the West" album, just gorgeous! And it doesn't have the annoying glockenspiel that almost ruins the studio version. Too many overdubs can spoil the stew sometimes. It's still good but those bells aren't my cup of tea.
@toddnilsson5664 Жыл бұрын
Jimi had incredible hands, his thumb was extra long and he used it like a 5th digit, that was his secret sauce, he had incredible hands.He would occasionally hit notes on the G string with his thumb and he always used his thumb for F shaped chords, this allowed him to use five and 6 note chords aka Purple Haze. He had huge hands just like the jazz players of his time. He also used octaves ala Wes Montgomery, Jimi was an innovator and possibly the most important electric guitarist of all time right next to Les Paul and Edward Van Halen.
@Elmerhartman Жыл бұрын
The hear my train a comin from Jimi play’s Berkeley…watching the film is good too…he’s possessed! And just a kid really
@rebeccabailey52710 ай бұрын
The stuff he was working on when he died was closer to rock/funk than jazz. Funnily enough, the songs that you listed that you like, the guitar playing on those is firmly rooted in R&B. Have you ever been to electric Ladyland could have been written by curtis mayfield. Hendrix was even trying to sing like Curtis mayfield on that. Anyway, that's what jimi was, an R&B player with a jazz drummer, and presented in a rock context.
@feynmanschwingere_mc22702 ай бұрын
@@toddnilsson5664 Paul and Van Halen were greats, but Jimi was preternatural, a wunderkind, sui generis...THE GOAT. There's Hendrix and everybody else...and I'm not even sure we saw his very best! Died FAR too young. Some artists don't produce their best work until their 30s. He was dead by 27 just as the revolution he had started was "modernizing" music.
@whowell117 Жыл бұрын
Great breakdown thank you ! I try to explain the complexity of Jimi but none musical people dont understand. Thank you again.
@chrisbenavente5447 Жыл бұрын
Jimi wasn’t from this world he just went back home cause when this men plays you hear at least four guitar players at once he is the goat of all guitar players
@chilledhorizon76252 жыл бұрын
Jimi Hendrix was a musical innovator who used sustain and an overdriven tone to reshape and redefine the sound of rock guitar which is probably his greatest contribution and covers a scope so wide across the spectrum that his influence is present in genres outside of rock guitar, which really sets him apart from the rest of his 60's era contemporaries, just my opinion!
@tonyqunta322 жыл бұрын
He certainly did, although often overlooked is the very creative way he used a tasteful, beautiful and complex accompaniment style. When I saw Jimi live at The Albert Hall in 1969 it was that that blew me away even more than his incredible lead playing.
@maureen27772 жыл бұрын
I honestly think Prince is one of the most underrated guitarists. He was phenomenal on his guitar.
@persephone1062 Жыл бұрын
@Maureen: Oh Prince is def up there too for sure
@HypnoticHollywood Жыл бұрын
Everyone acknowledges Prince was a phenomenal guitarist, what does that have to do with this video about Hendrix?
@because8788 Жыл бұрын
Underrated.. lol admit it you just wanted to post a comment
@vencenzodemarco4393 Жыл бұрын
@@HypnoticHollywood A top notch innovator on the guitar, Not. An ego saturated copy-cat, Yes. Part James Brown, part Tiny Tim, and a whole Lotta I Wish I Was Hendrix. Clown comes to mind. He treated people Badly , and is not missed.
@keelandcaldwell Жыл бұрын
@@vencenzodemarco4393 who are you referring to when you say that?
@PeteJones8110 ай бұрын
Dude, this is masterful analysis. Keep up the great work, anyone who knows as much as you do about music (and is this good at explaining it) should make as many videos as possible imo.
@henkknollendam32512 жыл бұрын
First and foremost to me, Hendrix was a grounbreaking original in EVERYTHING he did. He may be (questionably) surpassed by now (which I seriously doubt), but remember there's a world before and a world after Hendrix. Not many people can make a similar claim (Hendrix never did, though... he was extremely modest off stage)
@nomanslilwhaler1768 Жыл бұрын
Jimi Hendrix is first and foremost a gifted artist - beautiful voice, extremely innovative guitar work, dramatic stage presence, and fine song writing skills. Psychedelics will reveal new dimensions to his work that he intended, if you wish to explore.