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| Jimi Hendrix, his first album
Jimi Hendrix, his first album
Jimi Hendrix, his first album
Are You
Experienced
As the greatest, most influential debut album ever released, Are You
Experienced is that sort of music
equivalent to the BigBang that scientists believed originated the universe.
In both cases, many generations
later, the world is still trying to absorb, organize and make sense of what
that initiating event spewed forth.
No other rock artist has, from the outset, violated so many rules with
completely fulfilling so many espectations.
The proof is that thirty years after it first hit the turntables, Are you
Experienced still sounds not only fresh but
startling.
Are You Experienced was important as album, however, for more reasons than
just Jimi Hendrix´s guitar
playing. Like any great work, it succeded on several levels, most notably,
by featuring great compositions,
played by a great band, and by using the past as a palette from which to
create its seeming future. The
album´s moods are multiple: brooding, joyful, humorous and serious.
Its musical modes include flat-out
rock´n´roll, pure blues, psychodelic extravaganzas, and within
its own rules, elements of jazz and modernist
music too. It is a marvel of recording, with layers of sound nevertheless
resolving into songs that could, for the
most part, be played live on stage. The singing ist great
rock´n´roll, not a sweet voice, but one that learned the
lessons that Bob Dylan and the blues have to teach. And it is driven by a
vision of freedom and danger, the
equal of any rock´n´roll.
R U Experienced also exploded the idea of the concept album as expounded on
Pet Sounds´, "Freak Out!!!",
and e.g. Sgt. Peppers Band. None of these record had been able to resolve
their highest ambitions within the
fundamentally context of rock´n´roll; they had sacrified speed,
power and grit for brainpower. Jimi Hendrix and
company brought them back together again, and they did it from the very
first note of the very first song: The
stop-time-blues-pulse of "Purple Haze". Furthermore the band sustained the
frenzy through the entire album,
even on the slower placed numbers as like "Hey Joe" or "The wind cries
Mary". That is one reason why it´s
fundamentally important that Eddie Kramer and John McDermott have restored
the original running orders. You
have to start with the BigBang to get where Jimi wanted to take you, on a
part of his own "universe", an
experience that would not just entertain but change your life at its very
core.......For me, that moment when Jimi
screams, "Lately things don´t seem the same" puts the whole album into
perspective, because these things
would never again!!
The other noticable thing about R U Experienced is that Jimi is surrounded
by great support. Mitch Mitchell is
the only drummer of the psychodelic periode whose playing compares in power
to Keith Moon´s, so much that
he is the only force on the record that in any way challenges Jimi´s
dominance.
Noel Redding´s role is to keep the beat, the "basic bedrock time" that
the band returns to periodically,
throughout its excursions. In this way, the "experience" functioned more as
a jazz trio, although the
comparisons to "The Who" or "Cream" are obvious. Redding´s bass
occasionally too, but its most important
role is to keep the entire Experience "together". ---otherwise, it would
slip past my ability to comprehend it at all.
The roles of Eddie Kramer and Chas Chandler as engineer and producer were
vital but too complex to
summarize. But it must be said that some of the conceptual ideas emanated
from Chas Chandler and that
without the know-how and imagination of Eddie Kramer "behind the board" the
Jimi Hendrix sound wouldn´t be
that kinda Jimi Hendrix sound.
Some people say Jimi Hendrix brought light to our darkness, his
accomplishments really blinded us like a
lightning. He ignited a revolution in music that is still heard in the
music of today.
There may be music better than this is, but we will have to journey where
Mr. James Marshall Hendrix went
before us to hear it.
Jimi Hendrix died because of suffocation in his own
vomit(, cheers???)!!
by daniel hösl, hoesldan@gmx.at oder
hoesldan@funtastic.net
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