
It was forty years ago, September 18, that arguably the greatest electric guitarist to ever live, Jimi Hendrix, passed away. His legacy as an innovative genius is not in question. But when Hendrix archivist-author Steven Roby offered me the chance to co-write a biography of Jimi's developmental years, 1962-66, I was surprised what I learned. Becoming Jimi Hendrix, published by Da Capo/Perseus this month, gave me the opportunity to discover how Jimi actually changed the perception of race in popular music, although he lived through the humiliation of institutional racism in the 1960s.
Most fans of Jimi's music are generally unfamiliar with the crushing poverty and uncertainty of Jimi's life when he grew up in Seattle. His mother Lucille was sexually promiscuous, alcoholic and died at 33. Jimi's father Al barely made a living and Jimi was responsible for taking care of his younger brother, Leon. The boys sometimes woke up alone in their home with either no food or no electricity. Jimi and Leon barely survived, relying on the generous donations of neighbors and the parents of their friends.
But one thing Jimi did not have to contend with in Seattle was racism.
The Yesler Terrace Projects were among the most ethnically mixed in the late 50s in the US and the makeup of his Garfield High School class was a balance of white, black, Latino and Asian students. The strangely quiet, painfully shy "Jimmy" who always either carried a guitar or pretended to play one was the target of occasional derision from Garfield High bullies, but not because of his skin color.The anti-black experiences awaited him when he got out of the Army's 101st Airborne at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. (Jimi joined after being caught for the second time as a passenger in a stolen car and forced by a Seattle court to choose either the Army or jail.) Jimi and his Army buddy Billy Cox, a bass player who saw Jimi's raw but profound talent, formed their band the King Kasuals. And-unknown to other Hendrix biographers-they purposely got arrested at an early civil rights demonstration in 1962 Nashville, attempting to integrate a lunch counter downtown.
My experience writing 'Becoming Jimi Hendrix' showed me that Jimi living on the razor's edge of starvation and racismtaught him focus and resilience. After he left Nashville in a last, desperate attempt to attain success, he was kept alive in New York City by two very different women, both of whom fell in love with him and his music.
Lithofayne Pridgon, the black devotee of the Apollo Theater, pushed Jimi to continue playing Harlem clubs with his scorching versions of R&B hits. White British teenage model Linda Keith left The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards for Jimi. She simultaneously urged Jimi to begin singing and merge his blues roots with the wildly theatrical guitar that became his trademark.
Jimi found his breakthrough in Greenwich Village, bridging R&B and a new form of rock, financially and emotionally aided by Keith and Pridgon. And when he took London by storm in early 1967, it was with two white band members. The Jimi Hendrix Experience included Noel Redding, a lead guitarist who took over bass and Mitch Mitchell, who was really a jazz drummer.Brad Schreiber is a Los Angeles journalist, screenwriter, producer, and author of five books. His latest, co-authored with Steve Roby, is Becoming Jimi Hendrix: From Southern Crossroads to Psychedelic London, the Untold Story of a Musical Genius. Read his blog on Red Room.


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By: @BlackWebSeries on 9/04/2010 9:42AM
Informative Article didnt realize He grew up in such a diverse environment.
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By: rasfanta on 9/05/2010 8:50PM
Further, for america to acknowledge black talent, it would have to acknowledge our humanity. It would have to refute the idea that we are inferior and not capable of anything as creative as musical ability. america is an ungrateful country who god "blessed" by allowing this country to be built by free labor. This free labor is the reason for america's prior wealth but they blew it; they abused the source of their greatness and shall be laid low.
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By: Barry Levene on 10/25/2010 12:39PM
Contact 3sixtypr@gmx.com
JIMI HENDRIX MURDERED? “NOT IMPROBABLE” SAYS NOEL REDDING....
The name Jimi Hendrix conjures up some of the most colourful and wildest moments that the sixties produced. Hendrix arrived, he conquered and took the music world by storm, got inside your head and went onto the great gig in the sky - all by the age of 27.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience , left you in no doubt that it was exactly that – an experience.
A trio of musicians who came together from both sides of the Atlantic and found common ground, fame and for one third of the group not very much fortune.
For Noel Redding the bass player in the group the experience was not to be forgotten. Since the death of Hendrix 40 years ago, much has been documented about him and the group.
Looking back to the sixties and you could be thinking you are on another planet. Any history relating to that period is taken up with music and culture. The Jimi Hendrix Experience played
it`s part.
Making a timely appearance is a DVD that is being put out by Discs International, containing a never before seen interview with Noel Redding recorded at his home in Ireland in 1988.
It makes fascinating viewing. All the years of seeing film of them in concert and photographs of Hendrix, Redding and Mitchell, you find yourself sitting in a living room not with just a legend – but an ordinary guy talking about his early days with the group. No rock star here, no pretentious name dropping, just plain talking. Listening to him you are left wondering how they made it to top.
I asked Producer Will Scally who had the foresight to record this interview how it all came about.
“ I had known and been friends with Noel for many years and always found him a very upfront, straightforward guy. We often spoke about doing an interview, he wanted to speak about the band, money, drugs and the death of Hendrix and much more – even speaking about the possibility of Hendrix being murdered. He was on good form that day and wanted to record this for posterity.
Sadly Noel Redding died back in 2003 aged 57.
For those interested in Hendrix, Redding and the history of sixties rock music this rare visual documentary should not be missed.
Release date NOVEMBER 2010.
Barry Levene.
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By: chela on 11/17/2010 2:48PM
I think Jimi's life showed first and foremost the life of a great person, a human being that was very universal in his life and spirit. If you really love his music and hear him speak to you in his music, you'll undoubtedly find that love, life, beauty, music was much more important to Jimi. You have to remember, even then as Jimi busted out on the scene, people were immensely attracted to him, and indeed many thought he was beautiful. They couldn't take their eyes of him when he was on stage (and off stage too!). I think if you understand his music and message then he definitely want you to peg him in terms of 'anti-black experiences'. Indeed, he asks you poignantly, "are you experiened?" and he was not talking about that...
So yeah, the article kind of reads like one of those half-hearted essays you hear from some students when you're taking history class. Eager to make some points but not balanced and with anything close to an integral perspective. The deficit caused by whites upon blacks is no joke and more real than most people want to acknowledge. But Jimi clearly wanted us to look at the universal picture, and he played music with everyone. And what he gave voice to was not only black voices, but the human voice, and his indeed was black. When Jimi wrote Suddenly November Morning or May This Be Love or Drifting, he wasn't thinking about being a black voice, or wanting to be a white voice, or trying to be an asian voice. He was being himself, and he never sought to polarize people along racial or cultural terms. This is why, even so long after his life and death, we can still learn so much from him. Indeed, the various political, musical, and cultural groups claiming him often don't understand who he was and what he stood for at all. He was a great man, and that is where I will leave it.
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By: Mother on 1/18/2012 4:47PM
This was a beautiful read. Cheers to the one who write this.
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