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.
Thanks for that cool interview with Herman. I enjoyed reading your book Corey, especially all the interviews you did. Jimi is a special artist who touches my heart, so I really understand your passion and appreciate all the work you've done. Keep on pushin', Straight ahead. ✌
Thanks! Glad you got your book safely. I got a lot of good info from Herman. Hopefully, I'll do a mini- documentary on him with some of the footage I have.
@Corey Washignton, OK so the question here is: Is the song VOICE IN THE WIND (produced by John Brantley) actually by Jimi Hendrix??? Is it just Herman Hitson playing?? Apparently there is a compilation of fake tracks produced by Johnny Brantley (sometimes with the help of Lee Moses) for release on various "Jimi Hendrix" -lps between the years 1972 - 1982. Do you have real sources? and when is the Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary being released?
I actually have another portion of the interview where Herman addresses those points. I have to go back over it. Just from memory, he admits that most of those Brantley/Moses produced tracks are him on lead. Jimi played rhythm on a few tracks, but not many. I have to see if Herman names which tracks Jimi played on. The Documentary will be in two parts. I'm pushing for the first part to be out by November of this year, with the second part being out by November of 2023.
Betty Davis gave props to Jimi in f.u.n.k. Eddie hazel gave props to Hendrix Everytime he played Long live mike Hampton, Ernie Isley, blackbird McKnight and. Bootsy collins
Whites never talk about Jimi's black roots and about the black artists Jimi worked with and associated with No wonder Curtis knight was pissed the music he made with Jimi was unhlknown and not recognized but then Jimi plays with these whiteboys and he gets worldwide Fame Jimi blew up in white America while the blacks he played with the songs he did with Rosa lee and the isleys and little Richard are not even discussed
True. They try to make it seem like these songs were inferior because they are a different genre. These early R&B songs were glimpses into the future of R&B, Fusion and Funk.
@@wcorowitz I visited with a man in Atlanta yesterday named Sam Spivey that played with Lee, Hermon, Hannibal, and lots of other cats in that scene and I heard amazing information and I was honored. This man went to Booker T Washington high school with those guys and still knows the families. I’m white though.
Absolutely love the content on this channel!
Mr. Hendrix was a genius! Can't say enough about him!
Herman is so kool!
Ya - another real story by someone who actually loved Jimi, and could actually can tell a Story 💜🌲 🌟
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.
Cool Interview & tune! That's one tight, funky groove with some great vocals!
Love Jimi Hendrix and his music, I play guitar myself.
Thanks for this. It’s always wonderful to hear about about Jimi’s early days. Very cool!
Well done for this video, Cheers from Greece!
Thanks for that cool interview with Herman. I enjoyed reading your book Corey, especially all the interviews you did. Jimi is a special artist who touches my heart, so I really understand your passion and appreciate all the work you've done. Keep on pushin', Straight ahead. ✌
Thanks! Glad you got your book safely. I got a lot of good info from Herman. Hopefully, I'll do a mini- documentary on him with some of the footage I have.
Super cool 😎
This is EXCELLENT!!!
Fantastic
I remember.
The case of not playing the case ....
@Corey Washignton, OK so the question here is: Is the song VOICE IN THE WIND (produced by John Brantley) actually by Jimi Hendrix??? Is it just Herman Hitson playing?? Apparently there is a compilation of fake tracks produced by Johnny Brantley (sometimes with the help of Lee Moses) for release on various "Jimi Hendrix" -lps between the years 1972 - 1982. Do you have real sources? and when is the Jimi Hendrix Black Legacy Documentary being released?
I actually have another portion of the interview where Herman addresses those points. I have to go back over it. Just from memory, he admits that most of those Brantley/Moses produced tracks are him on lead. Jimi played rhythm on a few tracks, but not many. I have to see if Herman names which tracks Jimi played on.
The Documentary will be in two parts. I'm pushing for the first part to be out by November of this year, with the second part being out by November of 2023.
Betty Davis gave props to Jimi in f.u.n.k.
Eddie hazel gave props to Hendrix Everytime he played
Long live mike Hampton, Ernie Isley, blackbird McKnight and. Bootsy collins
From one state to another, I had to change my name, cos I'm bad news.....
Corey keep digging out the truth
We hear about Jimi's influence on whites but never do whites discuss Jimi's.influence on black.artists
Sure buddy, sure🙄
Whites never talk about Jimi's black roots and about the black artists Jimi worked with and associated with
No wonder Curtis knight was pissed the music he made with Jimi was unhlknown and not recognized but then Jimi plays with these whiteboys and he gets worldwide Fame
Jimi blew up in white America while the blacks he played with the songs he did with Rosa lee and the isleys and little Richard are not even discussed
True. They try to make it seem like these songs were inferior because they are a different genre. These early R&B songs were glimpses into the future of R&B, Fusion and Funk.
@@wcorowitz I visited with a man in Atlanta yesterday named Sam Spivey that played with Lee, Hermon, Hannibal, and lots of other cats in that scene and I heard amazing information and I was honored. This man went to Booker T Washington high school with those guys and still knows the families. I’m white though.
Funny, I don’t meet any black people who know who Hendrix, miles Davis or Coltrane are. They all think Michael Jackson is God.
@nakim55 not me😅