Slipped Discs Hendrix at the Crossroads 
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/09/16/hendrix-at-the-crossroads/ 


by JEFFREY ST. CLAIR 
September 17-18, 2011 




“If I don’t meet you no more in this world then 
I’ll meet you on the next one 
And don’t be late, don’t be late…” 

–Jimi Hendrix, “Voodoo Child (Slight Return)” 

On a spring night in 1967, the manager of the Savoy Theatre told the young 
guitar phenom Jimi Hendrix that Paul McCartney and George Harrison would be in 
the audience for the band’s final show in London. About an hour before going on 
stage Hendrix, Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell hastily rehearsed “Sgt. Pepper’s 
Lonely Heart’s Club Band.” They opened their set with a blistering version of 
the song, which had only been released by The Beatles three days earlier. By 
his own account, McCartney was so blown away by the performance that he began 
incessantly talking up Hendrix to other musicians and producers, including the 
organizers of the Monterey Pop Festival, who soon invited the new band to 
perform at the big concert on the California coast three weeks later. Hendrix 
closed the Monterey performance, vividly recorded by DA Pennebecker’s cameras, 
with a vicious cover of Chip Taylor’s rave-up “Wild Thing,” where 90,000 heads 
were blown, when he lit his crackling Stratocaster on fire and tossed the 
shrieking guitar into the crowd. Music was never the same. Three completed 
studio albums: Are You Experienced? (1967), Axis: Bold as Love (1968) , 
Electric Ladyland (1969). That’s all we have from Jimi Hendrix. Each 
distinctive. Each meticulously crafted. Each musically innovative and 
thematically coherent. There’s nothing else like them in the canon of rock 
music. And then he was gone. Dead in a London flat at the age of 27 and, as a 
consequence, forever linked to the ghosts of two infinitely lesser talents: the 
Texas screecher Janis Joplin and the messianic drug-fiend Jim Morrison. 

The studio sessions are one thing; Jimi Hendrix playing live was something else 
altogether. On stage Hendrix was an untethered anarchic force. Here was Hendrix 
the explorer, the innovator, the unrivaled improviser, assaulting the 
boundaries of popular music and challenging the audience (and his bandmates) to 
keep up. Not many could—not even the great Little Richard, who kicked an 
18-year-old Hendrix out his band for upstaging him in concert. 

One of the most tantalizing documents we have of Hendrix performing live is the 
posthumous 1972 release on the Reprise label titled Hendrix in the West , a 
collection of stunning performances in San Francisco, Berkeley and San Diego . 
Unfortunately, this record was soon deleted from the Reprise catalogue by the 
meddlesome producer Alan Douglas, who mangled many of the releases that surged 
into stores in the 1970s under Hendrix’s name. Fortunat ely, Hendrix in the 
West has just been reissued from remastered tapes engineered by Eddie Kramer 
and released by the Hendrix estate on the Legacy label. 

The disc opens with a distortion-fueled interpretation of “God Save the Queen” 
leading into brief almost punkish thrashing of “Sgt. Pepper’s,” both recorded 
at the miserable Isle of Wight Festival gig a few weeks before Hendrix’s death. 
After this oddity, we are transported back to San Francisco’s Winterland 
Ballroom in 1968 for a mesmerizing, oceanic version of “Little Wing,” which, 
enriched by Mitch Mitchell’s dramatic drumming, builds in concussive waves 
toward the swelling, trippy solo that climaxes the song and undermines every 
previous convention of popular music. (Eric Clapton’s “Layla” is merely a 
quaint and mannered imitation of the wrenching improvisational coda that 
Hendrix seemed to invent on the fly.) 

This was back when psychedelia seemed to offer the promise of cultural 
metamorphosis. Or perhaps it was just Hendrix’s magical gifts that made it seem 
so. In any event, the playing on “Fire,” “I Don’t Live Today,” “Voodoo Child 
(Slight Return)” and “Lover Man” is cosmic rock at its most transcendental, the 
speedy passages roaring by, the riffs throwing off sparks, the notes bending 
and mutating in a kind of aural alchemy. 

But for all his improvisational-jam mojo, Hendrix was at heart a blues-driven 
rocker, as he demonstrates with devastating force in his shattering cover of 
“Johnny B. Goode” and, more slyly, in a funked-out version of “Blue Suede 
Shoes,” recorded during a sound check at the Berkeley Community Center in 1970. 
“Spanish Castle Magic,” Hendrix’s scorching tribute the great Seattle R&B venue 
that hosted the Northwest’s signature bands, including the Wailers, the 
Kingsmen, the Raiders and, yes, the teenage Hendrix, is rendered as a 
proto-type of hippy-heavy metal, with knee-buckling power chords and growling 
feedback, which, in an acid-like transition, suddenly slips into a long passage 
from “Sunshine of Your Love” and then flashes back again. 

In a live setting you get brief glimpses into Hendrix’s restless consciousness, 
his darker, more mercurial moods. There are moments in these songs, especially 
during the prolonged jams, when it almost seems as though Hendrix is 
momentarily frustrated, not with his own playing, but with the limitations of 
his Stratocaster or perhaps the confines of rock music, as if he was in pursuit 
of an ever-elusive montage of sounds. 

It’s not surprising that the most energetic and experimental playing on Hendrix 
in the West occurs during the band’s 12 minute reworking of “Red House”, that 
scorching blues from the early days of the Experience, revivified here into a 
menacing epic of longing, loss and jealousy, as if Othello had erupted into an 
electric rage. Or, as John Lee Hooker said, “That ‘Red House’ that’ll make you 
grab your mother and choke her! Man, that’s really hard, that tears you apart.” 

This is the tectonic sound of Hendrix in transition, of sonic plates shifting. 
But transition to what? Toward the long-anticipated fusion collaboration with 
Miles Davis? Toward throbbing funk in the manner of Sly Stone? Toward something 
beyond description, like John Coltrane’s Ascension ? I don’t even think he 
knew. When he died in that Notting Hill hotel room, Hendrix left us at the 
crossroads, on the verge of a revolution we can imagine but never hear. 




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