March 9 – Turntable Talk 12 : People Experienced A Whole New Type Of Guitarist

Welcome back to Turntable Talk! Thanks to all the regular readers and welcome to any new ones. If you’re keeping count, this is our 12th instalment, meaning we’ve been doing this periodically for a year now! But for new readers, briefly, on Turntable Talk we have a number of guest columns from other music fans and writers, sounding off on one particular topic. This month, our topic is First Time’s The Charm. We’ve asked our guests to pick a debut record by an artist that really impressed them…and maybe let us know if they feel the artist kept up the quality and momentum with subsequent works.

Today we have Max, from Power Pop Blog. There he regularly looks at great records, largely from the ’60s and ’70s and largely those fitting the “power pop” genre. But he also writes of pop culture like Star Trek, so his pick is anyone’s guess. But, it is…:

I went through some debut albums before I came to this. I already wrote up Big Star’s debut for another blogger but the other that came to mind was The Cars. For me, that was their best album although they had some great albums later. I then thought of Jimi’s debut…and that was that. There is more than one version of Jimi Hendrix‘s debut album, Are You Experienced, released. I will go by the one I first owned when I was around 11…the U.S. version.

I think about 1967 and what people must have thought when they heard this strange new artist. It must have sounded like an alien coming down from another planet. Being at the ripe old age of 4 months old…I don’t quite remember it. His guitar playing was first felt by other guitarists. Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend, and the other huge guitarists back at that time. They were shocked when they saw him perform on stage. He was “found” by Animals bassist turned manager Chas Chandler in New York. He took Jimi to England and formed a band around him…it didn’t take long after that.

Jimi’s debut album was released on May 12, 1967. The tracklist is incredible. A lineup of songs that still get played over 50 years later on the radio. To make it even stronger…Hendrix wrote all of the songs but one…”Hey Joe”, his breakout hit in the UK.

Purple Haze
Manic Depression
Hey Joe
Love or Confusion
May This Be Love
I Don’t Live Today
The Wind Cries Mary
Fire
Third Stone from the Sun
Foxy Lady
Are You Experienced?

The album had many now-rock classics. They were not rock songs easily accessible to the audience as other performers. He mixed experimental techniques along with well-written and performed songs. Before Zeppelin came along, Hendrix gave rock its sonic boom. The album peaked at #5 on The Billboard Album Charts, #15 in Canada, and #2 on the UK Charts in 1967. 

I’ve never heard a guitar player take the guitar to a far-off place like Hendrix. It wasn’t just his playing which was some of the best…it was his vision and the sounds he got out of the guitar that was so amazing. Every guitar player that came after him would get unfairly compared. He wasn’t just a guitar player though…he was a singer/songwriter who created three classic rock albums that still are revered. He was the complete package…not a traditional voice, but he got his point across and wrote his songs to fit him…and it worked.

He also evidently had a huge backlog of recordings and live concerts that keep being released. The man must have recorded in his sleep.

The “new” Jimi Hendrix tag has been unfairly placed on many guitar players. From Stevie Ray Vaughn to Eddie Van Halen, many more faded out. Hendrix would mess with this guitar…changing pickups and recording techniques. He had a sound all his own…when you hear a Hendrix record you know it’s him by just his guitar playing. Now when I listen to him, I hear the guitar players that followed, from the finger tap from Eddie to the straight-in-your-face riffs of Stevie Ray Vaughn…Jimi had done it all before.

Like Janis Joplin and Bruce Springsteen…they would let themselves go on stage. They would take it as far as they could and if they messed up, they messed up but the fans got to see an electrifying performance. When Joplin and Hendrix left us they left a huge hole in rock performers and when both were peaking in making albums. Both Hendrix and Joplin left and their last studio albums peaked at #1. Jimi’s came two years before his death and Janis just a few days after she passed.

46 thoughts on “March 9 – Turntable Talk 12 : People Experienced A Whole New Type Of Guitarist

  1. Thanks Max! A fine pick, not only contained some great tunes but as you suggest, really must have taken everyone by surprise to say the least, he was so different than his contemporaries. ‘Wind cries Mary’ is among my favorites of his. Best opening act ever for the Monkees, LOL?

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Badfinger (Max)

      lol…yea he would win the prize of best opening act for the Monkees and maybe for anyone! Who in the heck would want to follow Hendrix? The Who, probably one of the best live bands at the time… flipped a coin so they didn’t have to follow him at Monterey.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Badfinger (Max)

        Yes…they were trying to help him get noticed…it didn’t last long…imagine if you will..you are a 10 year old female Monkees fan and Hendrix appears on the stage mowing down everything with his guitar…LOL…he finally got tired of the “we want Davy we want Davy” and I think walked off.

        Liked by 3 people

      2. imagine too that 10year old’s parents who thought ‘well it’s those lads on TV. Probably going to be pretty tame even for someone the kid’s age…’

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Badfinger (Max)

      I never realized how great this album was until I did this…many of the songs are classic radio staples. I love Electric Ladyland! You can tell it’s him by just the guitar playing…not to mention the voice.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Badfinger (Max)

        He did things…I’ve never heard since….it’s hard to copy him. With his voice…and that was distinctive as well… he wrote for his limited voice and that made it all work.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. no question about that, he really got effects from the guitar that are pretty much unique. One has to wonder what he would have done if he’d lived on even a decade longer.

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Badfinger (Max)

        I would vote for Jazz fusion at some point…he was getting together with Miles Davis and was trying to recruit Paul McCartney to play bass…I wouldn’t discount an acoustic album also.

        I think he might have gone heavy metal in the 80s when it kicked off possibly…since he played a big role in that.

        Liked by 1 person

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  3. I was a late-comer to the Hendrix party, I have to admit
    The thing I love about him / his music is that even 50 years later, there is still nobody like him. You’ll always hear this band has shades of Zeppelin; that band sounds like so and so etc.
    Apart from briefly hear some misguided souls say Lenny Kravitz sounded like Jimi, I don’t think there is yet anyone who could (or indeed be even brave to) come close. 🙂

    COLIN

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Badfinger (Max)

      I totally agree with you. I’ve heard other guitar players copy Van Halen, SRV, Clapton, but I never heard anyone get Hendrix down…he was so unorthodox. He was always on that razor’s edge…but would come through.

      Liked by 2 people

    2. nice to hear from you, hope your adventure in India’s going great! Yeah, the Kravitz comparison is an apt one even beyond the obvious that there aren’t a ton of Black rock guitarists.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Sadly, I’ve been back a week or so now. But, yeah – it’s a fantastic country, though we have sampled only one tiny wee corner. We plan to go up to Rajastan and down to Mumbai next year before hitting the beach again in Goa. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Great pick, Dave and Max. I believe I have that original album, maybe even two. Although the rock band I played with did two of his tunes, “Fire” and “Foxy Lady,” I could never get his tone out of my Gibson 335 and Fender dual showman amp. I firmly believe Hendrix was haunted, no one human should be able to play like that and get the sounds he did. I didn’t own a Fender guitar, so I was stuck with what I had. I took my sister to see The Monkees in Dallas, and I believe it was right after Hendrix was removed from the tour because a local band opened for them. I can’t imagine the mothers’ thoughts of Hendrix when they brought the wee-ones to see Davey play his tambourine, he was so cute. Oh yeah, my sister gave me her collection of all the Monkee’s albums. I have yet to play them after 50-plus years. I did pick up Janis Joplin’s greatest hits today at Half Price Books in Fort Worth. Just saying. Keep them coming fellas.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Badfinger (Max)

      I just finished a book about Janis. It’s great seeing those clips of her and not seeing a Las Vegas type show along with dancers…just pure music and that golden voice of hers.
      Hendrix…I’ve heard people try to copy his sound…they never get it exactly ever. His playing was odd also…alot of sliding up doing fills in some things. He left a lot of mysteries that cannot be figured out.
      I look at that tracklist and it’s the foundation of classic radio.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Back in the 80s, I purchased a Big Muff distortion pedal, supposedly the same one Hendrix used. I got close, but not quite there. That was using a Les Paul Studio guitar and a Music Man amp.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Badfinger (Max)

        My buddy got a 1978 peavy bass a while back that belonged to a guy on Hee Haw back then… still had the tags. I know people look down on Peavy but this bass… is one of the best I’ve seen. I can’t think of the model.

        Liked by 2 people

      3. A friend had a Peavy guitar and it was as good as any Fender made. Back in the 80s I played in a country band and we all used Peavy amps and PA system. A Peavy 2×12 is about 20 lbs heavier than a Fender 2×12. My back hurts thinking about that heavy gear, but it had a great tube sound.

        Liked by 2 people

      4. Badfinger (Max)

        They ARE heavy! I used them in the 80s but I wanted a change just because everyone used them. You could throw them off of a truck and they would work…yep I’ve seen it done.

        Liked by 2 people

    2. what a drag that he wasn’t on the bill for you to enjoy. Half Price Books, like I said to you not long ago, I should put aside an afternoon soon to go through the local one… it has a lot of CDs and I believe a decent quantity of LPs plus books. Seems like I don’t think of it that often (don’t live in the same part of the city) and when I do stop in I’m usually on limited time.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I drive 42 miles from Granbury to Fort Worth, and there are 2 of them within 5 miles of each other, so there is plenty to choose from. Most of the vinyl is in good shape or new issues of the old albums.

        Liked by 1 person

  5. Great read Max and awesome pick Sir. When I turned 50 five years ago one of the blog fella’s gifted me this on vinyl as he said he wanted to get me an rock album from the year I was born! Hendrix and this record it was!!
    What a awesome gift and great idea!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Badfinger (Max)

      You should really thank that friend! It is a great album and he is probably the Godfather of Heavy Metal and Hard Rock I would say. An awesome guitar player and his version of the Star Spangled Banner…is my go-to version….being American and all lol.

      Liked by 2 people

  6. Really can’t argue with that pick, Max. The track list of that album is just incredible, especially the US version: “Purple Haze” – I mean, damn, what an opener! “Hey Joe” (the only Hendrix song I knew for a long time), “The Wind Cries Mary” and, of course, that cute little heartbreaker, “Foxy Lady”! These four killer tunes alone are worth the price of admission.

    Liked by 1 person

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