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Wizard/TRueStar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Jimi Hendrix
    Posted: November 09 2004 at 17:54

Is in your opinion Jimi Hendrix worthy/not worthy of the title "prog"

I must say he has some atributes that put him in the catagory, probably because of the directions his music often can take you and after all he wrote "1983 a merman i shall turn to be" which is somewhat progish in it's own way

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 17:58

i agree with the statement that that song from "electric ladyland" is prog, however, like many people here have stated before me, just because you have one prog song doesnt make you prog. Now dont get me wrong i think he has other songs that could seem proggy like maybe voodoo chile, but still not enough to dub him a "prog rocker"

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 18:03
would you like me to explain every one of his songs why i think there prog. no, you don't want that. i was just giving an example of some song you might consider prog. i mean alot of guys consider Pink Floyd to be prog for a certain reason or another but it is totally insane to consider them prog for technical reasons and there my favorite band. i mean come on
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 18:33
everyone considers pink floyd prog...well i hate to use the term everyone cause its so broad, but most people consider them a prog band so ....i dont know why i would come on if they are prog and your saying they arent....why would you say jimmi hendrix is prog if you dont think pink floyd is prog?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 18:43

This is like sooooooo weird.

You two girls should try Oil Of Primrose.

Wink




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 18:46
i have it,it actually works really well, and makes my skin feel so soft
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 18:51
Take a read of (one of the best rock writers), Charles Shaar Murray's Crosstown Traffic (Faber & Faber pub 1989). This is well written book, which is a  brief biography and more importantly, a fascinating study and hypothesis of where Hendrix might be musically if he stayed alive. It is clearly written with a great love and thorough knowledge of Hendrix's music. Little if anything is said about the prog aspect of Hendrix music - strictly the tunes you cite are psychedelia (Hendrix liked his chemicals), and I increasingly think it is wrong to place 2004 values on music created in the late 60's- why not give it the name it was known by  originally?

Shaar Murray argues (and I admit further his extrapolations go, then more debatable the ideas become - but shouldn't a book make you think), that because Hendrix was steeped in the blues, and developed this fluid free playing, his music was very attractive to jazz players. Coryell, Mclaughlin attempted their variants of it  and jammed with Hendrix. In comparison, rock guitarists copied it but took a long time to evolve it into something other than a copy, e.g. Robin Trower, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Walter Trout. Shaar Murray suggests that by 1989 Hendrix might have sounded like the (former Miles Davis) guitarist Sonny Sharrock and more recently  people are drawing certain parallels with Jean Paul Bourelly.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 09 2004 at 18:51

LOL




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 03:03

I think it's perfectly valid to discuss Hendrix - his music was rock and it was progressive.

The progression through his 3 albums is quite extraordinary (I'm deliberately discounting "Cry of Love" and "War Heroes" even though the material on both was originally slated for the follow-up to "Electric Ladyland") - but Hendrix really concentrated on songs with conventional structures and a solid blues/psychedelia base.

Who knows where his music might have gone - I'm tempted to imagine him going down a kind of Miles Davis jazz-fusion path (given his liking for chemicals ), and producing concept albums with each track consuming an entire album side. I don't think he would have gone into prog territory, however; it's difficult to imagine Hendrix sitting back and letting the Hammond get a work out...



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 05:02
Yes i agree, he has revolutionized guitar playnig,
he has included much tapes effects, especially in "electric ladyland"

he's MUCH more prog than many current bands often quote here.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 05:28
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 I don't think he would have gone into prog territory, however; it's difficult to imagine Hendrix sitting back and letting the Hammond get a work out...

 

Is that true - Voodoo Chile has an extended Hammond work out by Steve Winwood - there are several Hendrix bootlegs with Traffic (and so Winwood), where they were working on project that was not to materialise. And there are those outings with Larry Young, perhaps the most innovative and psychedelic influenced jazz Hammond organist (listen to his work with Tony illiams Lifetime).

 

Your'e right to call Hendrix progressive - indeed one of the most progressive musicians of the 20th Century, but with hindsight label him and his work progressive rock by hindsight is wrong. On similar grounds, Bix Beiderbeck was progessive too with his innovative cornet and paino playing of jazz and blues, and he died at the height the Prohibition period in the USA.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 13:51
no he doesn't really write prog songs does he. he sorta uses their elements but i wudnt say he is prog
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 15:55
No he is not Prog, I know that for certain.  Prog Man thinks Jimi is Prog but he conciders anything weird sounding Prog, so no I don't.  Psychedelic and Prog are like sisters in my view not the same thing.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 19:45

Id have to go with consensus. Jimi is not prog, but (IMHO) he does some of the best early psychedelic stuff there is.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 10 2004 at 20:20

Prog to me is music that goes places (hence "progressive").  Music can goe somewhere in less than second. "Prog" doesn't mean takeing up the side of a lp or busting out the hammoned or moog or what not. its about making musical experiences and i think Hendrix clearly fits in that catagory. as for what i said about Floyd, i do think they're prog really, but for what most of you guys on the forums (not all of you guys)  consider to be prog for those reasons i don't beleive they are prog.

On another note i also think i might enjoy some of that "Oil Of Primrose"

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 11 2004 at 12:55

I thinking hard but hard pressed to identify Hendrix playing anything prog-like on live recordings - especially post-ELL. Instead albums consisted of  a mix of short and extended blues-rock jams, typical of that period. (BTW anybody heard and so comment on the Alan Douglas recording of Hendrix with John Mclaughlin?). I would suggest anything you care here to label hindsightedly as 'prog', was a result of his desire to experiment and being allowed the studio time to do so, cf the earlier Hendrix albums recorded within a day or two. A lot of the more successful musicians were doing this at that time, e.g. check out the opening track of Steve Miller Band's Sailor, which is atypical of the rest of the music on the album. Sure we may have called the occasional tune on an album 'progressive music' - but more likely called then 'underground' - because of the  experimental nature of the piece which moved rock into new areas. But the odd track amongst a predominance of other rock tune shouldn't qualify somebody a prog musician and so justify the musicians or bands' inclusion here?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 11 2004 at 21:03
Psychedelic and Prog shouldn't, but often are confused with one another. I think it depends on the song you are talking about, instead of 'Hendrix in general. To me, prog is taking you somewhere every few minutes, a new beat, etc. Psychedelic tends to stay on the same "subject". So yes, in general, I think Jimi Hendrix isn't mainly prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2004 at 05:15

The guy was a BLUES player, how come tag him as Prog...because of 1-2 songs ? No way....

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2004 at 06:33

Hendrix was a fab rock guitarist. He may have been progressive, but his music was not Progressive Rock.

The Wikipedia entry says it all:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimi_Hendrix

 

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