Jimi Hendrix (Official):
Zakk Wylde pays tribute to Jimi Hendrix during Sunday’s Experience Hendrix 80th Birthday Celebration event in Austin, Texas. 😍🔥💜🎸
📸 Suzie Privette
Jimi Hendrix (Official):
Zakk Wylde pays tribute to Jimi Hendrix during Sunday’s Experience Hendrix 80th Birthday Celebration event in Austin, Texas. 😍🔥💜🎸
📸 Suzie Privette
Seymour Duncan:
Happy birthday to the one and only, Jimi Hendrix!
These photos were taken by Seymour himself and perfectly captures the feeling of being backstage with the legend.
Get your Jimi Hendrix signature Strat pickups today @ this location.

Happy 80th Birthday @JimiHendrix! Where would be if you hadn't come along? Here's a bit of improv on his classic "Little Wing" on my 1965 Strat…tuning optional! "The story of life is quicker than the wink of an eye/he story of love is hello and goodbye, until we meet again.” ❤️ pic.twitter.com/fJmKCOSDbT
— Andy Timmons (@AndyTimmonsBand) November 27, 2022
Jimi Hendrix:
Join us on December 4 ACL Live in Austin, Texas when we bring together an all-star roster for an exclusive one-night-only special event to celebrate Jimi Hendrix’s 80th #Birthday.

On Saturday, November 26 at 2pm, @MOHAI is excited to welcome Janie Hendrix, President/CEO of Experience Hendrix for Q&A with LaNesha DeBardelaben, President/CEO of @naamnw
Part of the #JimiHendrix 80th Birthday Experience.https://t.co/Q3cTDtcfRj for details#Jimi80 #Seattle pic.twitter.com/AMHnq2XhfB
— Jimi Hendrix (@JimiHendrix) November 25, 2022
@ZakkWyldeBLS pays tribute to #JimiHendrix during Sunday's Experience Hendrix 80th Birthday Celebration event in Austin, Texas. 😍🔥💜🎸#Jimi80 #HendrixTour #Hendrix
📸 Suzie Privette pic.twitter.com/85WPLr2PTV— Jimi Hendrix (@JimiHendrix) December 7, 2022
Jimi Hendrix (Official):
On November 17, 2022 Billy F. Gibbons appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live to pay tribute to #JimiHendrix while he played Jimi‘s own Gibson Flying ‘V’ electric guitar that was used throughout Jimi’s 1970 tour schedule.
Footage: ABC / Jimmy Kimmel Live
#Kimmel #FoxeyLady #Jimi80

On January 13, 1966, a disillusioned Jimi Hendrix sent an Empire State Building postcard to his dad at home in Seattle, reporting sadly that “every thing’s so-so in this big, raggedy city of New York. Everything’s happening bad here.”
He was entering his fourth year as a permanently broke jobbing road musician on the grueling ‘chitlin circuit’ of black juke joints and clubs. This was where he developed the vital crowd-pleasing antics that he’d copped from T-Bone Walker and Buddy Guy, such as playing guitar behind his head and with his teeth.
He’d already made one failed attempt to settle in New York in 1963, but it wasn’t until he jumped ship from Little Richard’s band while playing in Harlem in 1965 that he finally made the decision to stay in the Big Apple. “I wanted my own scene, making my own music, not playing the same riffs,” he said later. “I was seeing the number 1966 in my sleep, so I was just passing time till then.”
His prophecy would prove to be self-fulfilling. After stints with Joey Dee And The Starliters, venerable sax titan King Curtis and a sporadic gig with second-string hustler Curtis Knight, Jimi’s big break came in May 1966 when he met Linda Keith, a 21-year-old model and the girlfriend of Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards.
Linda shared her boyfriend’s passion for the blues and had come to New York to check out the scene in advance of the Stones’ fifth US tour. One night, her clubbing sorties took her to the Cheetah club on Broadway and 53rd Street, where Curtis Knight and the Squires were playing. Their guitarist, then calling himself Jimmy James, blew Linda’s mind with his raw charisma and repertoire of moves. Sitting in the sparse audience, Linda was mesmerised by Jimi, whose career she adopted as a kind of crusade.
“He was clearly a star, though he was such an odd-looking star,” she later recalled. “The way he was playing guitar, just the way that he was. It made me feel so incredible.”
After the set, Linda and her friends Roberta Goldstein and Mark Kauffman showered Hendrix with compliments and invited him back to an apartment on 63rd Street. One of them had some LSD, which was still legal. Hendrix’s drug experiences stretched no further than marijuana and cheap speed, so when Linda asked if he’d like some acid, he replied: “No, but I’d love to try some of that LSD stuff.”
It was life-changing for Hendrix, who said he looked in the mirror and saw Marilyn Monroe smiling back. Inspired by the apartment’s red velvet décor, he played a song he’d been writing, now called Red House.
Linda responded by playing him Bob Dylan’s new Blonde On Blonde, which would subsequently always remind him of his first trip. The following month he started playing his seismic version of Like A Rolling Stone, frizzing up his hair with curlers and, inspired by Dylan’s vocal delivery, started singing.
This feature originally appeared in Classic Rock 217, in December 2015. The new issue of Classic Rock is a celebration of Jimi’s songs and influences, and it’s on sale now @ this location.
full in bloom: In April, guitarist Ritchie Blackmore was a guest DJ on SiriusXM’s Guitar Greats.
Ritchie Blackmore on Jimi Hendrix via SiriuxXM’s Guitar Greats:
Ritchie Blackmore:
When Jimi Hendrix came to England, Jeff Beck came up to me and said, ‘Ritchie, we’ve got to do something about this guy,’ and I said, ‘Who are you talking about?’ He said: ‘Jimi Hendrix. He’s killing everybody over here. He’s upsetting everybody.’ I’m like, ‘Well Jeff, if you can’t do it, nobody else is going to do it’ because I always thought of Jeff as being the best rock player.
I followed Hendrix because I thought the way he used riffs in a riff, it had magical moments. Brilliant guitar player and he also looked like he was from the moon. Really, in a way, he didn’t have to play the guitar because he looked so strange and different to the typical English musician, and it worked. Unfortunately, it only worked for three years, but he certainly set the world alight.
I only met him once. It was in the Whisky A Go Go in Hollywood, and I was going into the toilet and he was playing with his hair or something. I always thought of Jimi Hendrix as ‘the wild man of Borneo,’ and there he is, fixing his hair in the mirror. That was the only time I met him and we kind of nodded to each other and that was it. So I never really got to know him, yet he certainly set the world on fire.
Jeff Beck on Jimi Hendrix via Classic Rock:
Jeff Beck:
When I saw Jimi we knew he was going to be trouble. And by ‘we’ I mean me and Eric [Clapton], because Jimmy [Page] wasn’t in the frame at that point. I saw him at one of his earliest performances in Britain, and it was quite devastating. He did all the dirty tricks – setting fire to his guitar, doing swoops up and down his neck, all the great showmanship to put the final nail in our coffin. I had the same temperament as Hendrix in terms of ‘I’ll kill you’, but he did in such a good package with beautiful songs.
Reporters got the number of my flat the day he died. I was suicidal at the time, because my girlfriend had dumped me. And to have to the deal with a call saying “Jimi Hendrix is dead. How do you feel about that?” At first I thought it was a bloody hoax, but as the day wore on I realized it was tragically true.
Jimi Hendrix (Official): The pinnacle of high-quality vinyl releases. The Jimi Hendrix Experience’s ARE YOU EXPERIENCED is available now on UHQR Clarity Vinyl from Acoustic Sounds (Vinyl Lives).
Shop @ Acoustic Sounds
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5-STAR REVIEWS
Jimi Hendrix taking an LSD sugar cube at Monterey Pop Festival, 1967. pic.twitter.com/OxOAqBOvvv
— Classic Rock In Pics (@crockpics) May 16, 2022
Jimi Hendrix (Official): MUSIC. MONEY. MADNESS… JIMI HENDRIX LIVE IN MAUI will screen at Belcourt Theatre in Nashville, TN on April 11. Billy Cox to give post-show Q&A session with fans. Tickets available @ this location.
Chronicles Jimi Hendrix’s storied 1970 visit to Maui, his performance on the dormant lower crater of the Haleakala volcano on the island, and how the band became ensnared with the ill-fated film RAINBOW BRIDGE produced by their controversial manager Michael Jeffery. Directed by John McDermott and produced by Janie Hendrix, George Scott, and McDermott, this critically acclaimed documentary incorporates never before released original performance footage, plus new interviews with firsthand participants and key players such as Billy Cox, Eddie Kramer, Warner Bros. executives, and several Rainbow Bridge cast members, as well as its director Chuck Wein. The film presents Hendrix — joined by bassist Billy Cox and drummer Mitch Mitchell — at the height of his powers, playing flawlessly against a stunning natural backdrop. Included are breathtaking renditions of “Foxey Lady,” “Purple Haze” and Voodoo Child (Slight Return),” as well as then-unreleased songs like “Dolly Dagger” and “Freedom” that showcased the new direction Hendrix was moving toward.

Jimi Hendrix (Official): Exciting news. Passengers aboard United Airlines will now be able to stream Jimi Hendrix’s ‘Music, Money, Madness…’ in-flight! For those on the ground, watch this film and hundreds more on Coda Collection right now.


Jimi Hendrix (Official): Eddie Kramer recently sat down with the crew at Mix with the Masters to tell the story behind the recording of “All Along The Watchtower.”
Jimi Hendrix: This Saturday, don’t miss the new release of the BAND OF GYPSYS 7″ orange-swirl colored vinyl single for “Message To Love” and “Changes” as part of the “second drop” of new vinyl for Record Store Day.

To commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the original BAND OF GYPSYS album release, independent records stores throughout the US will offer a limited edition, 7″ orange-swirl colored single featuring “Message To Love” and “Changes” as part of the “second drop” of new Record Store Day releases on September 26, 2020.

Jimi Hendrix (Official): New documentary MUSIC, MONEY, MADNESS … JIMI HENDRIX IN MAUI and LIVE IN MAUI album set for Nov 20 release.
Blu-ray w/2CDs or 3LPs depicts 1970 show in Maui. Includes all 16mm footage and new stereo & 5.1 surround sound mix.

This brand new collection couples the new feature-length documentary Music, Money, Madness . . . Jimi Hendrix In Maui with the accompanying live performances on both audio and video. The film chronicles the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s storied visit to Maui, and how the band became ensnared with the ill-fated Rainbow Bridge movie and incorporates never-before-released original footage and new interviews. The Blu-ray includes the full documentary film plus all the footage from the two afternoon performances captured on July 30, 1970 mixed in both stereo and 5.1 surround sound. Also included in the package is Live In Maui – a 2 CD set or 3 LP set featuring Hendrix, Billy Cox, and Mitch Mitchell at the height of their playing powers, newly restored and mixed by longtime Hendrix engineer Eddie Kramer.
TRACKLISTING:
DISC 1 – FIRST SHOW
1. Chuck Wein Introduction
2. Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)
3. In From The Storm
4. Foxey Lady
5. Hear My Train A-Comin’
6. Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
7. Fire
8. Purple Haze
9. Spanish Castle Magic
10. Lover Man
11. Message to Love
DISC 2 – SECOND SHOW
1. Dolly Dagger
2. Villanova Junction
3. Ezy Ryder
4. Red House
5. Freedom
6. Jam Back at the House
7. Straight Ahead
8. Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)/Midnight Lightning
9. Stone Free
In 1970, Jimi Hendrix was joined by Billy Cox and Buddy Miles for a marathon recording session at the Record Plant. Several of these recordings, including “Ezy Ryder/MLK Jam” are available on Dagger Records CD BURNING DESIRE

Album Insight:
Jimi Hendrix: Burning Desire is the ninth release in the Dagger Records authorized ‘bootleg’ recording series. Burning Desire presents compelling new examples of Jimi’s remarkable creative explorations through 1969 and early 1970.Like its predecessors Hear My Music and Morning Symphony Ideas, Burning Desire provides a window into Jimi’s growth as a musician and composer. In the shadow of Electric Ladyland, the original Jimi Hendrix Experience struggled to remain a cohesive unit. As 1969 progressed, Jimi’s ceaseless creative pursuit would lead to experimental sessions and ambitious attempts to integrate new elements such as horns, percussion, rhythm guitar, and keyboards into fertile rhythm patterns and songs. Burning Desire showcases additional examples of Jimi’s extended explorations with bassist Billy Cox and drummer Buddy Miles at the Record Plant throughout 1969 and early 1970. Jimi can be heard developing exciting new material such as “Ezy Ryder,” “Cherokee Mist,” “Villanova Junction Blues,” “Izabella,” and “Burning Desire.” These previously unreleased studio recordings yet again establish Hendrix’s passion for creativity and developing new music.
1. Izabella
2. Ezy Ryder/MLK [aka Captain Coconut]
3. Cherokee Mist/Astro Man
4. Record Plant 2X
5. Villanova Junction Blues
6. Burning Desire
7. Stepping Stone/ Villanova Junction Blues
8. Slow Time Blues
Jimi Hendrix (Official): Legendary bassist Billy Cox invites you to join him and his fellow all-star musicians for the 2019 Experience Hendrix Tour.
Legendary bassist Billy Cox (@bassistbillycox) invites you to join him and his fellow all-star musicians for the 2019 Experience Hendrix Tour. https://t.co/3EvXDSMBGu#JimiHendrix #HendrixTour #BillyCox @Fender pic.twitter.com/PZ0UlpJ8oX
— Jimi Hendrix (@JimiHendrix) September 16, 2019
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Don't miss Joe Satriani (@chickenfootjoe) and our all-star line-up this October during the 2019 Experience Hendrix Tour. https://t.co/3EvXDSMBGu #HendrixTour @JimiHendrix #JimiHendrix pic.twitter.com/s4ZXTqCkIR
— Jimi Hendrix (@JimiHendrix) September 13, 2019
The #HendrixTour brings legendary artists together to pay homage to @JimiHendrix in 18 cities in 2019. Fender brings you an exclusive chance to get some of the best seats in the house on select dates. Use the Code "STRAT" to order yours! ? https://t.co/dM5rsO0YXQ pic.twitter.com/o2phkAldGK
— Fender (@Fender) September 16, 2019
Seymour Duncan: How would you have reacted if Jimi Hendrix asked you to carry his guitar on stage…in front of all your buddies! Hear how Seymour handled it. (Watch the clip below)
Enter to win the limited-edition Hendrix pickups Seymour himself hand-wound at this location. #SeymourDuncan #GuitarPickups
How would you have reacted if Jimi Hendrix asked you to carry his guitar on stage…in front of all your buddies! Hear how Seymour handled it.
Enter to win the limited-edition Hendrix pups Seymour himself hand-wound: https://t.co/FVPl1JAwue #SeymourDuncan #GuitarPickups pic.twitter.com/leoSboFMCG
— Seymour Duncan (@SeymourDuncan) August 26, 2019