Friday, September 18, 2020

September 18, 1970. The death of Jimi Hendrix

The greatest guitarist of all time, James Marshall Hendricks, was a Seattle born bluesman, for all practical purposes, who crossed over into rock music just as rock guitarist were struggling with how to deal with amplification and the full range of the instrument.  Unable to read music, Hendrix (he'd changed the spelling of his last name) embraced the problems that other guitarist had been unable to deal with, principally distortion, and took the instrument far beyond the frontiers it had been in.

A fantastic natural musician, Hendrix has never been surpassed.  Unfortunately, he fell prey to the evils that so often afflict the life of musicians on the road, and which were very much in vogue in the 1970s, drugs being paramount among them.  On this day he was taken to a hospital in London suffering from the effects of a drug overdose and drowned in his own vomit, a fact that was contributed to by the fact that English ambulances typically took patients to the hospital sitting up if they could, which is what they did with Hendrix.

Hendrix had spent his early years in the Pacific Northwest of the United States and Canada and grew up in a musical household.  His father played the saxophone, which he sold when he noticed his boy playing the air guitar with a broom.  Learning how to play the instrument without the benefit of formal musical education, Hendrix learned the blues the way thousands of African Americans had, at home and by ear.  Left handed, however, he learned how to play a right handed guitar upside down, something he did for the rest of his life.  He could, however, play right handed and left handed, and in concert sometimes did.  

After a stint in the Army, in which he was a paratrooper, Hendrix played with a lot of rock bands of the 1960s as a backup guitarist before successfully breaking out on his own.  Teamed by English producers with a backup band that was not up to his talent, dubbed the Jim Hendrix Experience, he came to fame with a series of radically advanced rock music releases, most of which were actually blues based pieces.  Purple Haze remains an emblematic piece of music, but nearly every major song released by Hendrix stands alone.  

Dissatisfied with his English back up band, Hendrix later was backed by fellow black musicians that he'd met while in the Army, and who were schooled, like he was, in the blues.  In that makeup Hendrix toured with the "Band of Gypsies".  A power house of a musician, Hendrix's psyche was increasingly impacted by drugs in later years, in which he freely indulged.  On this date, they took him and the world lost the greatest guitar player of all time.

No comments: