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Corey Washington
United States
Приєднався 23 лис 2006
Gangster of Love - Sean "Mack" McDonald and band (Arts in the Heart)
Sean Mack McDonald gives a rousing rendition of Johnny GUITAR Watson's Gangster of Love. This was on the Jazz Stage at the Arts in the Heart Festival in Augusta GA.
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Відео
Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Panel Discussion Featuring ERNIE ISLEY Sat Sept 18th 7 PM Eastern Time
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Register at www.soul-patrol.com
Rickey Vincent interviews Corey Washington about Jimi Hendrix's BLACK LEGACY (Part 2)
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Rickey Vincent from KPFA out of the BAY AREA CALIF. and Stevie G interview Corey Wasington, author of Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy. www.jimibl.com
Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy - Rickey Vincent/Stevie G interview Corey Washington - Nov 2022 (PART 1)
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KPFA's hosts of History of the FUNK interview author Corey Washington about Jimi Hendrix's Legacy in the BLACK COMMUNITY.
A Tribe Called Quest Push It Along (Dr. Samp re-mix)
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Dr. Samp remixes his favorite Hip-Hop album, People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm. This is the first song, Push It Along. A big thanks goes to EV9 of Jupiter Cannons for some of the custom graphics. www.jimibl.com
Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary (Part 2) HERMON HITSON
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This is the SECOND installment of the Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary. It features R&B/Soul/Blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter Hermon Hitson, who was Jimi's friend before and after Jimi's fame. Hermon has been a fixture in the Atlanta music scene for SIX DECADES and is still an active musician. Listen, as he takes us on a journey with his engaging, insightful, and often hilarious nar...
Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary (Part 1)
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First installment of the Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary. Thank you to all my supporters from my GoFundMe and Indigogo campaigns. You made it HAPPEN!!! Additional graphics by EV9
National R&B HOF Groundbreaking (HISTORY in the MAKING) Marks, MS (Delta)
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On Sept. 30th, 20222, the site of R&B Hall of Fame BLVD became HALLOWED GROUNDS as it was broken in as the future site of the R&B Hall of FAME!!! www.jimibl.com
R&B Hall OF Fame Groundbreaking Ceremony (intro) short clip
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Sept. 30th, Friday, 2022 - Marks, Mississippi. A ceremony was held to break ground on the new site of the R&B Hall of Fame. This is right before the program started. www.jimibl.com
Marcus Machado Endorses Jimi Hendrix and the Band of Gypsys for the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame!!!
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Marcus Machado was kind enough to not only endorse the Band of Gypsys for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but he also blessed us with an EXCELLENT IMPROV performance based on WHO KNOWS!!! Thanks Marcus!!! Click here to sign the petition: www.gopetition.com/petitions/induct-jimi-hendrix-and-the-band-of-gypsys-into-the-rb-hall-of-fame.html
5 year Anniversary of Jimi Hendrix's Induction into R&B Hall of Fame (8/21/16)
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On Aug. 21st, 2016, Jimi Hendrix was inducted as a solo artist into the National R&B HOF. The location was the Ford Theatre in Dearborn, MI. Author/Educator/Hendrix Historian Corey washington accepted the award on behalf of the Hendrix Estate. Legendary guitarist Billy Davis, of Hank Ballard and the Midnighters fame, paid tribute to his friend Jimi, by telling stories and playing some blues rif...
Jimi Hendrix - UNSUNG? (Maybe in the BLACK COMMUNITY) That NEEDS to CHANGE!!!
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www.jimibl.com Author, educator, and Hendrix historian, Corey Washington, discusses Jimi Hendrix's LEGACY and his status as the GOAT in the guitar world and overall musical genius. Seattle King Co. Equity Now's, Isaac Joy, also asks if more could be done in Seattle to honor Jimi Hendrix. (Part 4 of 4)
Jimmi Mayes talks about Jimi Hendrix - Teaser for Jimi Hendrix Documentary
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www.jimmimayes.com/ The Amazing Jimmi Mayes (James Mayes) speaks on his good friend Jimi, as he reminisces about recruiting Jimi for a gig with Joey Dee and the Starlighters. Jimmi also recorded with Jimi for several songs like MY FRIEND and the recently released LET ME MOVE YOU with Lonnie Youngblood. Look for Jimmi's CD titled My Whole Life's a Shuffle and his book: The Amazing Jimmi Mayes - ...
Support for the R&B HOF in Augusta
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This is a small sampling of the support that the R&B Hall of Fame has in the world of music, as well as locally in the Augusta area.
Jimi Hendrix's Black Legacy (Seattle King County Equity Now interview Pt. 2)
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Jimi Hendrix's Black Legacy (Seattle King County Equity Now interview Pt. 2)
Herman Hitson Speaks on his friend Jimi Hendrix- Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary (Coming Soon)
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Herman Hitson Speaks on his friend Jimi Hendrix- Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary (Coming Soon)
Jimi Hendrix REDFINES what it means to be a PATRIOTIC AMERICAN. (Corey Rogers)
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Jimi Hendrix REDFINES what it means to be a PATRIOTIC AMERICAN. (Corey Rogers)
Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary (Sean "MACK" McDonald)
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Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary (Sean "MACK" McDonald)
Discovering Jimi Hendrix through Prince
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Discovering Jimi Hendrix through Prince
(Test Footage) From upcoming Jimi Hendrix Documentary
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(Test Footage) From upcoming Jimi Hendrix Documentary
Crowdfunding for Unique Jimi Hendrix Documentary
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Crowdfunding for Unique Jimi Hendrix Documentary
R.I.P. Jimi Hendrix 50th Memorial Seattle WA
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R.I.P. Jimi Hendrix 50th Memorial Seattle WA
Rhythm & Blues Music Matters (National R&B HOF)
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Rhythm & Blues Music Matters (National R&B HOF)
Augusta Music HOF Weekend (August 12th - 15th)
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Augusta Music HOF Weekend (August 12th - 15th)
National R&B HOF Coming to Augusta, GA - Enlightening the Public (Pt. 1)
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National R&B HOF Coming to Augusta, GA - Enlightening the Public (Pt. 1)
Jimi Hendrix BL Vlog (Bonus Episode) Blogtalk Radio Series
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Jimi Hendrix BL Vlog (Bonus Episode) Blogtalk Radio Series
50 Year Anniversary of the Augusta Riot (May 11th, 1970) Part 1
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50 Year Anniversary of the Augusta Riot (May 11th, 1970) Part 1
The irony of having to come to a predominantly white country - England - to become famous.
Spectacular video
A yo Cory are they using your voice for the Al narrator one hears online?
@@kennyblackbird5674 not that I know of. LoL 😂😆
Personal as a white English Kid living the UK around 1973 I never understood why Americans of Africans decent never revived the genius of Jimi Hendrix I understand better now! Nice work Corey!
You gotta check out the Isley Brothers featuring one of their younger brothers on guitar Ernie Isley!
Great commentary! Thank you for your work❤
I think the black community just wasn't into the hard rock style of music Jimmy was not only drawn to, chose and became iconic in that realm. Look at the crowds, they were white. Black people wasn't paying money to his concerts. He made is mark amongst those who supported him. The other cultures. He was/is the greatest of the great guitarist and musician. Music isn't a cultural thing as much as it is a vibrational and spiritual thing. One was either in alignment with his musical expression or they weren't. 'The Jimmy Hendrix Experience' wasn't a secret. His music was available world wide. I loved his guitar skills and music growing up. I had his poster on my wall as a young girl fascinated by bands and live music while growing up in New York in the 80s. My family and young friends were very familiar with him.
@@11REIGN11 Jimi knew his core audience was White, but he wasn’t satisfied with that. He made several attempts to widen his base, especially with the Band of Gypsys. He was making inroads, but his life was cut short. My extensive research has shown the complex nuances of JIMI’s music as it relates to the Black community and Black culture. I wish I had known about Jimi like you did in the 80’s. I lived in Marlboro projects near Bensonhurst/GRAVESEND BROOKLYN. NOBODY in my neighborhood or family spoke about Jimi. It was all about MJ, Prince, hip-hop, and other 80’s pop music of the day. I write about it in detail in my book, Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy- www.jimibl.com
Thetes before hendrix and after hendrix
What I find interesting is that it took more than half a century for our people to finally catch up to Jimi. Back in the day, alot of black folks wanted nothing to do with him. His music was seen as too abstract and wild. My how times have changed!
That's a bad man! Excellent
Jimis the whole package ❤
My best group of all time is the band of gypsies ❤
Yes, sir.He was my first idol and my greatest idol.It's because of him.I played the tough for 54 years.God bless Jimmy.And thank you again man I subscribed❤
Chloe, you are so right.Jimmy should have his own day in Black History Month.Actually, he should have his own holiday.Anyone call bless you and I'm glad you put this on UA-cam.I'm with you brother❤
I bought a few of these CDs. Knew it wasn't Jimi. Funk'dUp nonetheless and I kept tellin tha cashier that THIS WASNT Jimi and she got mad at me. Run me my cash back lady! Bought em from somebody else
This is good but the automatic subtitling is really bad and wrong.
They couldn't understand that SOUTHERN DRAWL. Very DISTINCT dialect.
Prince would smoke Hendrix. Hendrix was white boy good , Prince's guitar had mass appeal.
Hendrix is the GOLD STANDARD for white and black boys. Before Purple Rain, Prince was sounding kinda ELECTRO/NEW WAVE (white boy)
@@wcorowitz Sorry , but Prince NEVER sounded white. Prince ALWAYS had a strong funk element to his music. You think Controversy or Just As Long As We're Together sounds white ?
@@ScottLaVine-br8wt we created ALL this stuff. THEY sound like US, WE don't sound like THEM!!!
@@wcorowitz While that is 💯 percent true , Prince's guitar is singular. His guitar alone sounds like a band. Prince's guitar makes ya head bob and body move. He is a master shredder AND master rhythm guitarist. Don't get me wrong , Jimi Hendrix was/is very good and no one should try to be like him. If you need a reference point for Prince's guitar , Santana be that one. Peace Bruh !
As a guitarist myself I can't say enough about Jimi Hendrix but I must say the way he used to dress probably influenced the pimps here in the states!
Im sure that girlfriend was also involved. She took so many pictures of him that morning in that garden with tea. She didnt have other pics. Bet she put something in his tea and thats why he was full of barbituates.
Traducir al español
Traducir al español
Jeffries allegedly admitted to having jimi killed after his death
This is a pean to sheerest paranoia with Jimi Hendrix USED merely as the occasion for the exhaustive contortions necessary to your ''narrative''. Turning the speed up to 1.25 didn't help. Never have I seen anyone so UTTERLY miss the point. I KNOW (by sheer instinct) that you are not any kind of a musician. THAT is part of the problem, professor self absorption! Fortunately, LONG after the fad for such ''academic'' BS has passed, Jimi Hendrix will still bring joy to all those not chocked with the currently profitable exploitation of bile and spleen. OTH, that interview and tour with Leon Hendrix was PRICELESS.
Met Herman's cousin on the road, Daryl. Birds in feather flock together, wise ole man. Spoke very highly of his cousin Herman and told me stories of traveling with him. Being in a hotel with the likes of James Brown. Was choked out by a certain smell and told the group "can we crack a window it's way to funky in here." Leading to the creation of Make it Funky. Neat little story, from a neat guy. Wherever your at Daryl, I'd love to talk at you again brother.
Jimi with the last poets that i need to hear if there is any copies honout jim.post them also he loved buddy miles & miles davis he was heavy into jazz funk not just blues rocknroll electric voodou or black spirtuals he knew his way round mysic always everything that became Prince bless him.2 came frm hendrix jimi was murdered America needs to face up to this ...R I P jimi. Yr music cannot be buried or your generousity of Spirt .he was totally humble eat humble pie every1 we owe him thku Jimi thku lucille
Now through blurring tears, nothing else appears save ashes, scattered handfuls, petalled with bone Jime NYC winteer/60 ias last train to Crossroads
Well done Corey!!!!!!!!
Jimi hendrix was a master he said the guitar play him. What a goat ✌ Nala.
True
Thank you for your contributions. Its taken a decade to fully understand Jimi's guitar proficiency--it is quite remarkable and as a guitarist for over 15 years, I'm just fully starting to understand where his technique and sound is influenced from. Soul, funk, R&B, blues, rock and jazz too. I even hear some country influence sometimes in the technique he uses.
the first rap song is "trouble every day" by frank zappa released in 1966...zappa basically rapped the whole song
Nah, Black gospel groups were rapping in the 1930’s and 40’s. Jubilares.
Just saying.
Hey my man thanks for this video I'm a huge Jimi Hendrix fan I never knew he had a younger brother but I've been into Jimi Hendrix all my life. I'm black but I grew up in a multi-racialy Family. I had 3 White Godsister who listen to rock n roll amd one was a Hippie that went to Woodstock and loved Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix so i was exposed to him at an early age! My father was mixed so he also listen to all kind of music including the pop am stations back in the day and all along the watchtower was one of my favorite Jimi Hendrix songs .My aunt who by the way is from New York took me to see the Beatles when they were at Shea Stadium so yeah and i like them too and of course i like Soul music being black. But i am well rounded when it comes to music especially being a musician. Now im going to explain to you about Jimi and black people. Jimmy was black but he was a rock and roll guitarist through and through. I have black friends and I have white friends growing up. When I was with my black friends all they want to listen to was soul and r&b. I can remember being in a car with them and changing the radio dial and will hear like Jimi Hendrix playing and would stop to listen and one of my black friends would say man turn that shit off lol. The point that I am trying to make is that back in the day black people thought that Jimi Hendrix loud guitar playing was noise. He played with The Isley Brothers and Little Richard and he was too much for little Richard and he had to kick Jimmi out the band. So yeah Jimmy had to go to where he was accepted which was England and get with a couple of white guys because they were digging and playing his kind of music which was Rock and Roll he basically followed in the steps of chuck berry the father of rock and roll and Jimmy use to play Johnny B Goode one of Chuck Berry songs.
I was so glad to come across this video as I have explained for decades how the black community saw Jimi as an outsider. Growing up in the late 60's/early 70's it always made me laugh that kids had no time for Hendrix, but loved Parliament/Funkadelic a band that would still be doing Temptation ripoffs if it hadn't been for Hendrix and Sly Stone. Sly had credibility in the black community because they had pop hits you could dance to. I remember Hendrix being referred to as "Acid Rock" which was not meant in a good way. It gets touched upon in "White Men Can't Jump, but this video explains it much better. Thanks.
#Bootsy
Now in my mid-60s, I began my Jimi Hendrix journey at the age of 12, months after his passing. Not a day goes by that I fail not to listen to at least one song by him. What people fail to realize that at the time of Jimi leaving us, he wanted to make music like a powerful exlir to heal the world. That was his direction. Most of us in the African-American community didn't understand Jimi back then. He was, and still is so far ahead of us. Listen to his music and message. They're need now, more than ever.
THIS IS AWESOME, KEEP-UP THE GOOD WORK MR.WASHINGTON, I BEEN INTO JIMI HENDRIX FOR OVER 50 YEARS - RIPOWER.
Too bad that we cannot hear much of what Leon was talking about. He was close to Jimi, but after Jimi went into the Army, they lost track, and Leon did some jail time, not having Jimi's good influence around any longer.
This is really cool I don't have time to watch the whole thing but I will... I grew up in the early nineties as a working class white boy but my father was really in the r&b and blues so I grew up listening to Jimi... That was not typical of someone from my area and or social class though.. it's because my father was right out of the 60s I got exposed to all that good music and I'm really thankful for it now...**last night at work I was listening to a documentary about BB King and he said :"in about 1968 following the explosion of all the British blues-based groups such as the Cream and the Stones, my audience flipped from being 95% black to 95% white" now mind you he was not upset about this because this is when he started making a little bit of money too... Just thinking about that will blow your mind
Thank you loving jimmy so much wouldn't be complet with iut knowing this thanks again i was born in 71 and i love him so much long live jimmy and thanks to his little bro also
This brother is so right
Promo`SM 😄
I bought those albums when they came out . I knew that wasn't Jimi 🤠
It is sad that so many are victims of MIND CONTROL , that so many havent the intuition , spirituality , & CARE to see through the RACE GAME !...That we the common people are ALL slaves to this very day , we are all in the same struggle , victims of the SCOURGE ( money /one-eyed-man ), its time to open thine eyes before its too late...hell, its already too late ...Row -row-row your boat gently down the stream ,merrily-merrily-life-is but-a-nightmare -at-this-point...<0> * <0>