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1965-1966
On 15 October 1965, Hendrix signed a 3-year
recording contract with entrepreneur Ed
Chalpin, receiving $1 and 1% royalty on
records with Curtis Knight. The contract
later caused litigation with Hendrix and
other record labels. By 1966 he had his
own band, Jimmy James and the Blue Flames,
and a residency at the Cafe Wha? in New
York City. During this period Hendrix
met and worked with singer-guitarist Ellen
McIlwaine and guitarist Jeff "Skunk"
Baxter. Hendrix also became close friends
with a young guitarist named Randy California,
who would later co-found the band Spirit.
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Hendrix
also met iconoclast Frank Zappa during this
time. Zappa introduced Hendrix to the newly-invented
wah-wah pedal, a tool which Hendrix soon mastered
and made an integral part of his sound.
While
performing with The Blue Flames at the Cafe
Wha?, Linda Keith, then-girlfriend of The
Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, saw
Hendrix, and couldn't believe he hadn't been
"discovered". Knowing Chas Chandler
was leaving The Animals, and looking for someone
to manage, she introduced him to Hendrix.
Chandler took Hendrix to England, signed him
to a management and production contract as
his record producer, and helped him form a
new band, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, with
bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell.
With
his first few show-stopping London club appearances,
word of the new star spread through the British
music industry. His showmanship and dazzling
virtuosity made instant fans of reigning guitar
heroes Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck, as well
as members of The Beatles and The Who, whose
managers signed Hendrix to The Who's record
label, Track Records. Jimi's first single
was a cover of "Hey Joe", a stylised
blues song written by Billy Roberts that was
virtually a standard for rock bands at the
time. Hendrix and Chandler had seen folk-singer
Tim Rose performing his slow arrangement of
Hey Joe at the Cafe Wha?, and adapted it to
Hendrix' emerging psychedelic style.
Further
Hendrix success came with the incendiary and
original "Purple Haze", with a heavily
distorted guitar sound which still influences
people now; the soulful ballad "The Wind
Cries Mary", and "Hey Joe".
The three songs were Top 10 hits.
Established
as a star in the U.K., Hendrix and his girlfriend
Kathy Etchingham moved into a flat at 23 Brook
Street in central London. The nearby 25 Brook
Street was once the home of baroque composer
George Frideric Handel. Hendrix, aware of
this musical coincidence, bought Handel recordings
including Messiah and the Water Music. The
two houses currently comprise the Handel House
Museum, where both musicians are celebrated.
1967
The 1967 release of the group's first album,
Are You Experienced, is a mix of melodic ballads
("The Wind Cries Mary"), pop-rock
("Fire"), psychedelia ("Third
Stone from the Sun"), and blues ("Red
House"), and is a template for much of
their later work.
Hendrix
went to a hospital with burns to his hands
after setting his guitar on fire for the first
time at the Astoria theatre in London on 31
March 1967. Later, after causing damage to
amplifiers and other stage equipment at his
shows, Rank Theatre management warned him
to "tone down" his stage act.
The
Monterey Pop Festival booked The Jimi Hendrix
Experience at the urging of festival board
member Paul McCartney. At the concert, filmmaker
D. A. Pennebaker immortalized Hendrix's iconic
burning and smashing of his guitar in the
film Monterey Pop.
A
short gig, opening for the pop group The Monkees
on their first American tour, followed the
festival. The Monkees asked for Hendrix because
they were fans, but their mostly teenage audience
did not warm to his outlandish stage act and
he abruptly quit the tour after a few dates,
just as "Purple Haze" gained popularity
in America. Chas Chandler later admitted that
being "thrown off" The Monkees tour
was engineered to gain maximum media impact
and outrage for Hendrix. At the time a story
circulated claiming that Hendrix was removed
from the tour because of complaints made by
the Daughters of the American Revolution that
his stage conduct was "lewd and indecent".
Australian journalist Lillian Roxon, accompanying
the tour with singer Lynne Randell (the other
support act), concocted the story. The claim
was repeated in Roxon's 1969 Rock Encyclopedia
but she later admitted it was fabricated.
Meanwhile
in England, Hendrix's wild-man image and musical
gimmickry (such as playing the guitar with
his teeth and behind his back) continued to
bring publicity, but Hendrix was already advancing
musically and becoming frustrated by media
and audience concentration on his stage act
and his hit singles.
The
Jimi Hendrix Experience's second 1967 album,
Axis: Bold as Love continued the style established
by Are You Experienced with tracks such as
"Little Wing" and "If 6 Was
9", showing his continuing mastery of
the electric guitar. A mishap almost prevented
the album's release; Hendrix lost the master
tape of side 1 of the LP after he left it
in a taxi. With the release deadline looming,
Hendrix, Chandler and engineer Eddie Kramer
in an all-night session made a remix from
the multitracks. Kramer and Hendrix later
said that they were never entirely happy with
the results.
1968
Increasing personality differences with Noel
Redding, combined with the influence of drugs,
alcohol and fatigue, led to a trouble-plagued
tour of Scandinavia. On 4 January 1968, Hendrix
was jailed by Stockholm police, after trashing
a hotel room in a drunken rage.
The
band's third recording, a double album, Electric
Ladyland (1968), is more eclectic and experimental
than previous recordings. It features a lengthy
blues jam ("Voodoo Chile"), the
jazz-inflected "Rainy Day, Dream Away/Still
Raining, Still Dreaming", and what is
probably the definitive version of Bob Dylan's
"All Along the Watchtower". Dylan
enjoyed this version of the song so much that
he went on record as saying that he preferred
Jimi's version to his own. (Hendrix credited
British band The Alan Bown Set for inspiration
on the arrangement.)
Hendrix
decided to return to the US, and frustrated
by the limitations of commercial recording
he decided to establish his own state-of-the-art
multitrack studio in New York to which he
could have unlimited access to realise his
expanding musical visions. Construction of
the studio, called Electric Lady, was not
completed until mid-1970.
Hendrix's
formerly disciplined work habits became erratic,
and the combination of interminable sessions
and studios filled with hangers-on finally
led Chas Chandler to quit in May 1968. Chandler
later complained that Hendrix's insistence
on doing multiple takes on every song ("Gypsy
Eyes" apparently took 43 takes and he
still was not satisfied), combined with what
he saw as incoherence caused by drugs, led
to him to sell his share of the management
company to his partner Mike Jeffrey.
Hendrix's
studio perfectionism is legendary he
reportedly made accomplished Traffic guitarist
Dave Mason do more than twenty takes of the
acoustic guitar backing on "All Along
The Watchtower". Deeply insecure about
his voice, Hendrix often recorded his vocals
behind studio screens.
Many
critics now believe that the ascendancy of
Mike Jeffrey was a negative influence on Hendrix's
life and career. Jeffrey (who had previously
managed The Animals and was later reviled
by them) allegedly embezzled much of the money
Hendrix earned during his lifetime and secreted
it in offshore bank accounts. Jeffrey allegedly
had links to both the MI5 and CIA intelligence
organisations (he claimed publicly to be a
secret agent) and to the Mafia. He also regularly
carried a hand gun, and could speak Russian.
Despite
the difficulties of recording Electric Ladyland,
many of the tracks show Hendrix's vision expanding
far beyond the scope of the original trio
(it is said that the sound of the record inspired
Miles Davis' sound on Bitches Brew), and saw
him collaborating with a range of musicians
including Dave Mason, Chris Wood and Steve
Winwood from Traffic, drummer Buddy Miles
and the former Dylan organist Al Kooper.
1969
His expanding musical horizons were accompanied
by a deterioration in his relationship with
bandmates (particularly Redding), and the
Experience broke up in 1969.
On
4 January 1969 he was accused by television
producers of arrogance after playing an impromptu
version of "Sunshine of Your Love"
past his allotted time slot on the BBC1 show
Happening for Lulu, apparently as a tribute
to Cream after learning the band broke-up.
On
3 May he was arrested at Toronto's Pearson
International Airport after heroin was found
in his luggage. He was later bailed on a $10,000
surety. Hendrix was acquitted after asserting
that the drugs were slipped into his bag by
a fan without his knowledge.
On
29 June, Noel Redding announced that he had
quit the Experience, although he had effectively
ceased working with Hendrix during most of
the recording of Electric Ladyland.
By
August of 1969, Hendrix formed a new band
called Gypsy Sun and Rainbows to play the
Woodstock festival. The group featured Hendrix
on guitar, Billy Cox on bass, Mitch Mitchell
on drums, Larry Lee on rhythm guitar and Jerry
Velez and Juma Sultan on drums and percussion.
The set, while notably under-rehearsed and
ragged in performance (Hendrix was reputedly
"spiked" with a powerful dose of
LSD just before going on stage) was played
to a slowly emptying field of revelers. The
immortal concluding quarter hour of this performance
began with the extraordinary instrumental
version of "The Star-Spangled Banner",
segueing into a version of "Purple Haze"
that concludes with a solo cadenza the equal
of those of Mozart and Beethoven, followed
by a fantasia that both recaps his prior work
and prefigures the new musical directions
Hendrix was to explore in the last year of
his life, followed by an elegaic blues march,
a fitting coda to the 1960s. Needless to say,
Hendrix's performance at Woodstock has become
a timeless classic event, and a true milestone
in the history of music.
1970
The Gypsy Sun and Rainbows band was short-lived,
and Hendrix formed a new trio, the Band of
Gypsys, comprising Billy Cox, an old paratrooper
buddy, on bass and Buddy Miles on drums, for
four memorable concerts on New Year's Eve
1969-70. The recorded concerts captured several
outstanding pieces, including what some feel
is one of Hendrix's greatest live performances,
an explosive 12-minute rendition of his anti-war
epic "Machine Gun".
His
association with Miles ended abruptly during
a concert at Madison Square Garden on 28 January
1970, when Hendrix walked out after playing
just three songs, telling the audience: "I'm
sorry we just can't get it together."
Miles later said in a television interview
that Hendrix felt he was losing the spotlight
to other musicians. In a Guitar World article,
engineer Eddie Kramer claimed that Hendrix
was very displeased with Miles' practice of
scat singing through the bands performances
(Hendrix reportedly edited out many of Miles'
vocal solos on the "Band of Gypsys"
live album, although the opening track "Who
Knows" features an extended Miles scat).
The
rest of 1970 was spent mainly recording during
the week, and playing live on the weekends.
The "Cry of Love" tour, begun in
April, was structured with this pattern in
mind. Performances on this tour were uneven
in quality; many are available as bootleg
recordings. A show in May in Norman, Oklahoma
was dedicated to the students killed in the
Kent State shootings.
With
the opening of Electric Lady studios, Hendrix
spent more time in the studio and started
laying down several new tracks. At a June
concert, Hendrix announced that his next LP
would come out in "July or August, in
either one or two parts." However, recording
sessions for the album, tentatively titled
"The First Rays Of The New Rising Sun"
continued until he was scheduled to depart
for his upcoming European tour. An opening
party for Electric Lady was held on 26 August,
and following this, Hendrix boarded a plane
for England.
On
30 August, he gave his last performance in
the United Kingdom, at the Isle of Wight Festival
with Mitchell and Cox. Hendrix expressed disappointment
on-stage at his fans' clamour to hear his
old hits rather than his new ideas. However,
his two hour set proved to be a strong one,
and a filmed record of his set entitled "Wild
Blue Angel" was eventually released.
On
6 September 1970, his final stage performance,
Hendrix was greeted by booing and jeering
by fans at the Isle of Fehmarn Festival in
Germany in a riot-like atmosphere; shortly
after he left the stage, it went up in flames
during the first stage appearance of Ton Steine
Scherben. Bassist Billy Cox quit the tour
and headed back to the United States after
reportedly being dosed with PCP.
Hendrix
remained in England, and on the morning of
18 September 1970, was found dead in the basement
apartment of the Samarkand Hotel, 22 Lansdowne
Crescent, London. He had spent the night with
a German girlfriend, Monika Dannemann, and
died in bed after taking a reported nine Vesperax
sleeping pills and choking on his own vomit.
For years afterwards Danneman publicly claimed
Hendrix was alive when placed in the back
of the ambulance (however her comments about
that morning were often contradictory and
confused, varying from interview to interview).
Police and ambulance reports from the time
reveal that not only was Jimi Hendrix dead
when they arrived on the scene, but he had
been for some time, the apartment's front
door was wide open, and the apartment itself
empty. His body was returned home and he was
interred in the Greenwood Memorial Park, Renton,
Washington, USA, although Jimi requested to
be buried in England. Following a Libel case
brought in 1996 by Hendrix's long-term English
girlfriend Kathy Etchingham, Monika Danneman
took her own life.
Legacy
Hendrix's style was unique. Although he synthesized
many styles in creating his musical voice,
being a visionary, there was something in
his playing truly his own. He owned and used
a variety of guitars during his career, including
a Gibson Flying V that he decorated with psychedelic
designs (notably used on "House Burning
Down"). His guitar of choice, and the
instrument that became most associated with
him, is the Fender Stratocaster, or "Strat".
He bought his first Strat about 1965 and used
them almost exclusively thereafter.
Hendrix's
emergence coincided with the lifting of postwar
import restrictions (imposed in many British
Commonwealth countries), which made the instrument
much more available, and after its initial
popularisers Buddy Holly and Hank B.
Marvin Hendrix arguably did more than
any other player to make the Stratocaster
the biggest-selling electric guitar in history.
Before his arrival in the U.K. most top players
used Gibsons and Rickenbackers, but after
Hendrix, almost all of the leading guitarists,
including Beck and Clapton, switched to the
Stratocaster. Hendrix bought dozens of Strats
and gave many away (including one given to
ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons). Many others
were stolen and he destroyed several in his
famous guitar-burning finales.
The
Strat's easy action and relatively narrow
neck were also ideally suited to Hendrix's
evolving style and enhanced his tremendous
dexterity Hendrix' hands were large
enough to fret across all six strings with
the top joint of his thumb alone, and he could
reputedly play lead and rhythm parts simultaneously.
A more amazing fact about Hendrix is that
he was left-handed, yet used a right-handed
Stratocaster, meaning he played the guitar
upside down. While Hendrix was capable of
playing with the strings upside down per se,
he restrung his guitars so that the heavier
strings were in their standard position at
the top of the neck. He preferred this layout
because the tremolo arm and volume/tone controls
were more easily accessible above the strings.
The
burnt and broken parts of the Stratocaster
he destroyed at the 1968 Miami Pop Festival
were given to Frank Zappa, who later rebuilt
it and played it extensively during the 1970s
and 1980s. In May 2002, Zappa's son Dweezil
put the guitar up for auction in the U.S.,
hoping it would fetch $1 million, but it failed
to sell. The legendary white 1968 Strat that
Hendrix played at Woodstock sold at Sotheby's
auction house in London in 1990 for £174,000
(295,800 Euros) and resold in 1993 for £750,000
(1,275,000 Euros). Both it and a shard of
the burnt and broken guitar now reside in
a permanent exhibit at the Experience Music
Project in Seattle.
Hendrix
was also a catalyst in the development of
modern guitar amplification and guitar effects.
His high-energy stage act and the blistering
volume at which he played required robust
and powerful amplifiers. For the first few
months of his touring career he used Vox and
Fender amplifiers, but he soon found that
they could not stand up to the rigours of
an Experience show. But he soon discovered
a new range of high-powered guitar amps being
made by London audio engineer Jim Marshall
and they proved perfect for his needs. Along
with the Strat, the Marshall stack and Marshall
amplifiers were crucial in shaping his heavily
overdriven sound, enabling him to master the
creative use of feedback as a musical effect,
and his exclusive use of this brand soon made
it the most popular amplifier in rock.
It
is believed that the Marshall Super 100 amp,
purchased by Hendrix on 8 October 1966, was
the first he ever bought. Rich Dickinson of
Thrupp, near Stroud, Gloucestershire, bought
the second-hand Marshall amp in 1971 for just
£65. In May, 2005, experts at Marshall
Amplifiers in Milton Keynes unearthed photos
of the rock star with the amp that proved
beyond doubt that it was the genuine article.
In a local news story[2], Dickinson said that
he had to part with the beloved amp because
insuring it would cost thousands.
"I'm
not in any rush to sell it and will wait for
the best price, not just jump at whoever offers
the first silly money."
The
amp, of which there were only four ever made,
had been fully serviced by Marshall and was
to be sold in a private sale. It was believed
that it would fetch over £1 million.
Hendrix
also constantly looked for new guitar effects.
He was one of the first guitarists to move
past simple gimmickry and to exploit the full
expressive possibilities of electronic effects
such as the wah-wah pedal. He had a fruitful
association with engineer Roger Mayer and
made extensive use of several Mayer devices
including the Axis fuzz unit, the Octavia
octave doubler and especially the UniVibe,
a vibrato unit designed to electronically
simulate the modulation effects of the Leslie
speaker.
Hendrix's
sound is a unique blend of high volume and
high power, precise control of feedback and
a range of cutting-edge guitar effects, especially
the UniVibe-Octavia combination, which can
be heard to full effect on the Band of Gypsys'
live version of Machine Gun. He was also known
for his trick playing, which included using
his teeth or playing behind his back, although
he soon tired of audience demands to perform
these tricks.
Despite
his hectic touring schedule and his notorious
perfectionism, he was a prolific recording
artist and left behind more than 300 unreleased
recordings besides his five official LPs and
various singles.
He
became legendary as one of the great 1960s
rock'n'roll musicians who, like Janis Joplin,
Jim Morrison, and Brian Jones, rose to stardom,
flourished for just a few years and died at
age 27.
Rolling
Stone magazine named Hendrix the number 1
guitarist of all time. His influence almost
cannot be overstated.
Posthumous
releases
After Hendrix's death, hundreds of unreleased
recordings emerged. Controversy arose when
producer Alan Douglas supervised the mixing,
overdubbing, and release of two albums' worth
of material that Hendrix left in various states
of completion. These include the LPs Crash
Landing and Midnight Lightning and although
they contain several important tracks, the
albums are generally considered to be of substandard
quality.
In
1972 British producer Joe Boyd put together
a film documentary on Hendrix's life, titled
simply Jimi Hendrix, which played in art-house
cinemas around the world for many years. The
double-album soundtrack to the film, including
live performances from Monterey, Berkeley
and the Isle of Wight, is considered the best
of the posthumous release.
Another
LP to emerge in the 1970s was the live compilation
Hendrix In The West, consisting of top-shelf
American live recordings from the last two
years of his life, including an outstanding
rendition of the concert favourite "Red
House."
Although
the film Rainbow Bridge is generally regarded
as being of minor interest, what was billed
as a soundtrack to the film (it is not the
soundtrack) includes several superb tracks
intended for Hendrix's fourth studio album,
First Rays Of The New Rising Sun, the never-completed
follow-up to Electric Ladyland. The studio
tracks, "Dolly Dagger", "Earth
Blues", "Room Full of Mirrors"
and the melancholy improvised instrumental
"Pali Gap", showed Hendrix advancing
his studio technique to new levels, as well
as, absorbing influences from contemporary
black soul and funk acts such as James Brown
and Sly & The Family Stone.
The
Rainbow Bridge album is highlighted by the
full-length live version of another of Hendrix's
concert performances, a tour-de-force 10-minute
electric version of the blues standard "Hear
My Train A-Comin." He originally recorded
the song in 1967 for promotional film, performing
it impromptu as a short but engaging Delta-style
acoustic blues played on a borrowed 12-string
guitar. The 1970 electric version saw the
song transformed almost beyond recognition;
like Machine Gun it showcased the classic
elements of the Hendrix electric sound and
featured some of his most inspired improvisation.
The track was taped live at a concert at the
Berkeley Community Theater in California.
An edited filmed segment of this performance
was also included in the concert film Jimi
Plays Berkeley.
Interest
in Hendrix waned during the 1980s, but with
the advent of the compact disc, Polygram and
Warner-Reprise reissued many Hendrix recordings
on CD in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The
earliest Polygram reissues are of a poor standard
and Electric Ladyland suffered particularly,
being evidently a direct transfer from the
existing LP masters, with tracks placed out
of their correct order. This reflected the
original LP running order, an artifact of
the days when double-LPs were pressed with
sides 1 and 4 on one LP and sides 2 and 3
on the other, so that the records could be
placed on an automatic changer and played
in sequence by turning them over only once.
Polygram
subsequently released a superior-quality double
boxed set of eight CDs with studio tracks
in one four-CD box and the live tracks in
the other. This was followed by an excellent
four-CD set of live concerts on Reprise. An
audio documentary, originally made for radio
and later released on four CDs, also appeared
around this time, and included previously
unreleased material.
In
the late 1990s, after Hendrix's father Al
regained control of his son's estate, he and
daughter Janie established the Experience
Hendrix company to curate and promote Jimi's
extensive recorded legacy. Working in collaboration
with Jimi's original engineer, Eddie Kramer,
the company embarked on an extensive reissue
program, including fully remastered editions
of the studio albums and compilation CDs of
remixed and remastered tracks intended for
the First Rays of the New Rising Sun album.
To date, the Experience Hendrix company has
made more than $44 million from the recordings
and associated merchandising. Since his death,
over 2 million records of his music are sold
yearly
Estate,
legal wranglings
In the absence of a will, Jimi's father Al
Hendrix inherited Jimi's recordings and royalty
rights, and entrusted this estate to an attorney,
who allegedly tricked Al into selling these
rights to shell companies owned by the attorney.
Al sued in 1993 for mismanaging these assets.
The litigation was funded by Microsoft co-founder
Paul Allen, a lifelong and devoted Hendrix
fan. In a 1995 settlement, Al Hendrix regained
control over all his son's recordings. Several
albums were then re-mastered from the original
tapes and re-released. Al Hendrix died in
2002 at age 82. Control of the estate and
the Experience Hendrix company that was set
up to administer the Hendrix legacy then passed
to Jimi's half-sister Janie.
In
2004, Janie Hendrix was sued by her step-brother,
Leon Hendrix, Jimi's younger brother, who
was written out of his father's will in 1997.
He was seeking to have his inheritance restored
and Janie removed from her position of control
over the Hendrix estate. Superior Court Judge
Jeffrey Ramsdell sided with Janie explaining,
"Janie was the family member Al trusted
the most." He added that Leon's battles
with drug addiction, his failure to complete
a treatment program, his unwillingness to
work and his continual demands for money were
the main reasons that Al Hendrix cut his younger
son from his will. However, the judge also
ruled that Janie and her cousin, Robert, would
lose control over three of the seven Hendrix
estates due to breach of their duties (i.e.,
mismanagement). During the trial, Janie and
Robert defended the trust spending (i.e.,
plush salaries and luxury cars) as "bad
advice" from accountants. [3]
Citations
"When the power of love overcomes the
love of power... the world will know peace"
(Jimi Hendrix)
Musical equipment
Guitars
Fender
Stratocaster; his main guitar
Jaguar
Fender Duo-Sonic and Musicmaster (1961)
Fender Telecaster
Fender Jazzmaster
Gibson
Gibson Les Paul
Gibson SG
Gibson Flying V (1967 and 1968 makes)
Gibson 330
Gibson Firebird
Others
Danelectro Shorthorn (1959)
Supro Ozark 1560S Electric
Three Rickenbackers - a bass, a 6-, and a
12-string guitar
Martin D-45, new when bought; and
an old Hofner electric.
A Guild 12-string acoustic; a Gibson stereo;
an Acoustic Black Widow (Mr. Hendrix salvaged
it); two Hagstrom 8-string basses (Jimi played
them on "Spanish Castle Magic" on
Axis:Bold As Love).
Eric Barrett adds that Jimi generally had
more than one of everything, except the Rickenbackers.
Amplifiers
Marshall Amplifiers
Fender Amplifiers
Vox Amplifiers
SUNN Amplifiers.
Effect Pedals
Dallas Arbiter Group Fuzz Face, a Fuzzbox
Uni-Vox Univibe
Dunlop Cry Baby, In studio Recordings
Vox Wah-wah
Jimi may have, at times, used a Thomas Organ
Crybaby Wah Wah
Roger Mayer Octavia
EchoPlex (Either the models EP-1, EP-2 or
EP-3) it is rumored he had a custom one with
a variable speed control on it
E-BOW - Jimi was the Inspiration behind this
interesting guitar effect - Rumor has it,
he used it on "May this be Love"
(from Are You Experienced?)
Discography
Studio Albums
Are You Experienced (May 1967 UK; August
1967 US) UK #2; US #5
Axis: Bold as Love (December 1967) UK #5;
US #3
Electric Ladyland (September 1968) UK #5;
US #1
First Rays of the New Rising Sun (recorded
1969-1970, released April 1997) UK #37; US
#49
Live albums
Band of Gypsys (April 1970) UK #5; US #5
Selected
Live albums released after Hendrix's death
In The West (1972)
Jimi Plays Monterey (1986)
Live at Woodstock (July 1999)
Live at Berkeley (1st and 2nd show) (September
2003)
Band of Gypsys Live at the Fillmore East (1999)
Selected Compilations
Smash Hits (April 1968 UK; July 1969
US) UK #5; US #6
Experience Hendrix: The Best of Jimi Hendrix
(September 1997 UK; November 1998
US)
Blues (April 1994)
BBC Sessions (June 1998)
The Ultimate Experience (April 1993)
The Jimi Hendrix Experience (Box Set) (September
2000)
Voodoo Child - The Jimi Hendrix Collection
(2002)