Hendrix was creating the sounds of bombs and war mixed with the Anthem because of America's involvement in the Vietnam War. He said he was playing it the way the air was in America at the time ," the air is slightly static today" he said.
Hendrix was unbelievable, especially considering the time / technology of the day. Now you need to listen to "Machine Gun" live at Fillmore on his Band Of Gypsies album. Many (myself included) consider it to be the song with the best guitar playing of all time.
Totally agree , I have tried to get other reactors to do it but with no luck... Also I have listened to "Electric Ladyland" since the day it came out and to this day I still find something new in it every time I listen to it. He was a genius and such a humble, gentle soul.
SILAS, YOU HAVE NOW EXPERIENCED ALMOST FIRSTHAND ONE OF THE MOST INCREDIBLE IF NOT "THE" MOST INCREDIBLE VERSION OF THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER EVER PERFORMED!!! OUT OF THE APPROXIMATE 500,000 PEOPLE MAXIMUM THAT WERE ATTENDING WOODSTOCK BY THE TIME HENDRIX DID THIS SONG, THERE WERE ONLY ABOUT 30,000 PEOPLE LEFT CUZ IT WAS MONDAY MORNING AFTER THE ENTIRE WEEKEND!! I CAN ONLY IMAGINE HOW INCREDIBLE THIS MUST HAVE BEEN FOR THE 30,000 DEDICATED FANS THAT STAYED TO SEE THIS AND HOW UPSET THE OTHER 470,000 THAT LEFT MUST HAVE FELT ONCE THEY DID HEAR THIS!! RIP JIMI HENDRIX THERE WILL NEVER BE ANOTHER LIKE YOU!!
Jimi Hendrix’s was the most anticipated Woodstock performance, but by the time he and his newly formed band, Gypsy Sun & Rainbows, started their two-hour set at 9:00 a.m. Monday morning, the half-million-person audience was down to roughly 40,000. Those who stayed for the festival finale witnessed one of the most memorable and legendary performances of the entire decade.
Forget the entire decade! What about the century?.. You'll never get to hear, and certainly we haven't even in the current century, a performance like this...🤷🏻♂️
His interpretation here was intended to actually represent the Vietnam war which was happening at the time, so there are sections representing gunfire, bombs exploding and people screaming, and then finally a section from Taps a salute to the dead then peace, personally I've always thought it, and him, genius. If you can find it, in the full recording he runs this song straight into Purple Haze which fits perfectly. There's a great recording of him live playing Johnny B Goode on YT which is brilliant.
Silas, hey, hi. What was fairly obvious to many in 1969, and the early 70's when this appeared in the Woodstock Movie... was that Jimi inserted into the Anthem the sounds of bombs dropping, and the screams of people in pain... this was a statement about the Viet Nam war, war in general. It's an invitation to contemplate patriotism in the context of what many people at the time considered to be an unjust war. Pure genius in concept, and unbelievably skillful in execution.
The whole end of the woodstock concert is incredible. After this National Anthem, the sound of the guitar melts into the next song, purple haze, one of his classic. Then it goes in an unbeliveable improvisation, which feels kind of like staring at Picasso painting a masterpieces in front of you. And then, it ends up with Villanova Junction, my favorite instrumental ballad. Mindblowing. If you have a chance to look or listen to this hole stuff, I am sure you will love it.
No problem not standing up....if you had been at Woodstock '69, you would have passed the doobie to guy next to you and said "Hey! Jimi is one righteous dude, dig that sounds man".
I am personally acquainted with one of the percussionists who played with him at that gig. He said that nobody in the band knew he was gonna play that! It wasn''t rehearsed. They were like "What's Jimi doing?" I also knew a few people who were in the audience. They said the audience was completely in shock.Nothing like this had ever existed before in all the music in human history. When I was 11 years old, I saw this in the theater. The years was 1972, and it was the first time I'd ever seen a video of Hendrix. Half a century later, I STILL get chills listening to this! You should understand that this was during the Vietnam War, and a month after the Apollo 11 mission where men first walked on the moon. The USA was really divided, almost close to a civil war. Then, at the very end of a three day festival of peace and flower power hippie celebration, Jimi Hendrix played the most violent rendition of the national anthem possible. He was telling the hippies that this is what the world is really like, and at the same time staring the most powerful nation on earth in the face and saying "You broke your covenant with God and your people." Nobody but Jimi Hendrix could have done this.
If you ever see the entire Woodstock concert on dvd, get it, it’s three days of the best bands and artists including Jimi , playing and singing for free, for about half a million people
It is said it was like a space alien had landed on Earth and was making sounds with the guitar no one even knew was possible. The man who inspired thousands of guitarist the world over to pick up the instrument. You might want to check out the entire movie Woodstock that came out in 1970. It was probably the main event that would help define the music of rock and roll through the seventies, and arguably the culture of the baby boom generation.
It was a political statement against the Vietnam war. "The bombs bursting in air" and then he dive bombs on his neck and makes explosions! The chaos of battle is dramatized. A little help from the drummer, I think, added some machine gun fire. Then you here an ambulance siren like they have in Europe. He then throws in a little of the military's "Taps" that they play for fallen soldiers near the end. It's beautiful and ugly at the same time. Wow! What a statement. Historic.
He plays this song and it sounds like if there were bombs falling . Right after this song , he goes straight into Purple Haze . You should also check out " Voodoo Child " from the Woodstock show .
How do ya like that, young man? A peek back into the 60's at the man who changed music forever, a vision in red white and blue, with the most beautiful hands and fingers I've ever seen playing guitar. Showed this performance to my 12yr.old Granddaughter and she flipped. Sadly, not one child in her grade level ever heard of Jimi Hendrix. Let's go, people. Better late than never. ☮️to all.
Billy cox on bass was with jimi in basic training with the 101st airborne the guy with the black scarf over his eyes you can when he does purple haze at Woodstock is Larry Lee two weeks prior to Woodstock was still fighting in Vietnam,
At the time it was very controversial as many thought to change up the US National Anthem like he did was disrespectful, but it had stood the test of time and most people now view it as the masterpiece of improvisation it really was.
Sound effects NOT supplied by the recording board operator or in post-production -- ALL DONE BY JIMI ON HIS AXE!!! What a way to wake up on that Monday a.m. Thank you, Mr. Hendrix, for your artistry and innovative nature!
All right, buckle up! this is an amazing performance. I haven't seen it in the comments yet but another wild thing about Hendrix is that he played a right handed guitar upside down.
Hendrix rendition of the National Anthem will never be surpass Hendrix was bringing out the signs of the times the turbulent 1960s and the future to come.
Strongly reccommend Hendrix' 'Machine Gun' on the legendary Album 'Live at Filmore East'. It's one of his greatest live performances and solos. Again another anti-war song where he masters the experimental other-wordly sounds you hear here and converts them into a 10 minutes groove-insanity. The original version is not on YT, only on Spotify btw.
You're listening to the greatest guitarist of all time, ending the greatest Rock Festival of all time. Woodstock was originally supposed to be Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, in August of '69. Because of the rain delays, and the NY State Thruway being CLOSED for the first time in it's history, Governor Rockefeller called in all available State Police and National Guard to help fly musicians in in Choppers. Jimmy closed the Show on Monday, with a crowd size that dropped from about 500,000 to about 50,000. Those who stayed until Monday got to see one of the most incredible performances of all time. ✌️
Jimi’s rendition of the National anthem was to use his guitar to express the sounds of the American war in Vietnam. The sounds of bombs dropping and exploding, innocent civilians screaming and crying. The purpose of this performance WAS NOT to feel patriotic. It expressed his feelings against the war, and the feeling of the majority of people in America who turned against it. Jimi was a Marine Paratrooper veteran. He vehemently hated war.
The majority of that crowd was probably tripping, drunk, or stoned off their asses. And this is the perfect piece for that. Feeling Patriotic? Take a knee.
Hendrix is owned by his family and they are extremely tight with their copyright. They are determined to squeeze every dime out of their rights, even to the detriment of Hendrix's legacy, by restricting videos like this which broaden his exposure. Sad.
Next "Machine Gun" Band of Gypsies from the album. I have to listen every often, just for a "Fix". Note: the audio here doesn't match the version from the released album.
I was 10 when I started taking Jimi. Yeah Jimi was like a habit for me. A year later Jimi left this world. All 12 of our children grew up on Jimi. Driving home from Church listening to Voodoo Chile. Jimi rendered Modernity dead. He challenge the fabric that binds Postmodernity together. Like no other. 'What do you mean?" "Are you Experienced," is my favourite hymn. My wife with Bipolar loves"Manic Depression," and"I don't live today."
Jimi’s Star Spangled Banner was really about what was happening at the time,, the Vietnam War (screaming, bombs, etc). It was a very unpopular war as far as what the hell was the US doing there and the young guys being drafted to fight.
Check out "Hey Joe" live at the Monterey Pop Festival. That performance shows guitar playing like I've never seen before...more since. You'll be blown away!
Jimmy was a huge influence on Stevie Ray Vaughn. You should watch Stevie’s live version of Voodoo Child since you watched Jimmy do it yesterday. Little known fact about Jimmy Hendrix; he’s a Viet Nam vet. He served as a paratrooper and would volunteer for the most dangerous missions so he could earn his discharge sooner. He would play guitar to his platoon mates every chance he could. They loved him.
He already reacted to SRV's Voodoo Child before Jimi's. Jimi never went to Vietnam. He was in the 101st Airborne at Fort Cambell Kentucky and honorably discharged after about a year of service in 1962.✌
Hendrix was never in Vietnam. Jimi was in the the service in the early sixties, and got an honorable discharge due to an ankle injury, as he was a paratrooper.
I'll just echo other folks here: listen to Machine Gun from the live Band of Gypsies album. It's got the best or some of the best electric guitar playing ever. Hendrix blew open all the boundaries for rock guitarists from his first album onward. Everyone built on his work.
Apparently he didn't though. Theres no medical evidence, although what there was plenty said about was his unruly behavior, lack of discipline, all that kind of stuff in abundance. Theres a video showing his papers with a lot of less than savoury remarks, some quite funny; but definitely no mention of any injury
Hendrix was heavy metal before there was a heavy metal as a matter of fact the term heavy metal was coined by a writer saying that Hendrix's music sounds like heavy metal falling from the sky so there you go !
David Gilmour, Pink Floyd on Hendrix- "Gilmour has also long declared his advocacy for Hendrix. Speaking during his visit to BBC Radio 2’s ‘Tracks Of My Years’ in 2006, he picked out ‘The Wind Cries Mary’ as one of his all-time favourites and recalled when he first heard the late icon: “Jimi Hendrix, fantastic. I went to a club in South Kensington in 1966, and this kid got on stage with Brian Auger and the Trinity and [held] the guitar the other way around and started playing. Myself and the whole place were with their jaws hanging open. “I went the next day to the record shops, and I said, ‘You’ve got anything by this guy Jimi Hendrix?’ and they said, ‘Well, we’ve got a James Hendrix’. He hadn’t yet done anything. So I became rather an avid fan waiting for his first release. Also, this is one of his beautiful ballads that I really love.”" Far Out magazine faroutmagazine.co.uk/pink-floyd-david-gilmour-pick-guitar/#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16669584031502&csi=0&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&share=https%3A%2F%2Ffaroutmagazine.co.uk%2Fpink-floyd-david-gilmour-pick-guitar%2F
Yes it was patriotic, but Hendrix played the song in a way that was also protesting the Vietnam war, with the war and bombing sound effects. So it wasn't in a way that republicans would classify as patriotic.
People don't realize how shocking this was at the time. Jimi was on the Dick Cavett show, and Cavett thought the show was going to receive hate mail for having Jimi on, because of the way Hendrix interpreted the song. Jimi was shocked, saying that he played it for his love of the country, and thought it was beautiful, which got a huge round of applause from the audience!
Jimi served...he can play SSB any way he wants. Glad you were born after and no b4 VIETNAM. We hated that war. It took 58,290 plus and 3M Vietnamese of our generation.🥺. I stand for Jimi🎇
Have met people not into Jimi,which is cool,but they understood clearly what he was saying with his guitar,and nobody else sounded like that before him,or has overshadowed it still
Very chaotic version. COMPLETELY APPROPRIATE for the times. America in chaos. Vietnam, racial segregation, abortion rights, equal right movement, political assassinations, etc...similar to what is going on today, (in some ways) Rock in Peace Jimmy.
So, you have done SRV and Hendrix. Now you must react to Eddie Van Halen's 14 minute solo ERUPTION from "Live Without a Net" (1986). You will not believe what you see and hear from EVH. 🔥🔥🎸🎸
Stand or not stand for the anthem. Jimi would've likely said its your choice man. This performance (imo) wouldve been jimi sticking it to the man for 'forcing' us to go fight in 'their' war. This was the hippie era, which was far left, believing in freedom, peace, love, creativity, individual expression. Quite the opposite of right wing patriotism, order, control, do what we say, no freedom, no peace, war. It was around the vietnam war, where boys of age where 'drafted' against their will to go and fight in some idiots war. So many beautiful people died. On both sides! These people at woodstock and around sanfransisco, etc at that time, were those who 'refused' to be told what to do. And voiced thru example their freedom of choice. We are all 'one world'. No soul is more important than another. So should you stand? Should you go to war? ...Thats your freedom of choice. No one elses. Yep Jimi was sayin FU to the powers that ordered so many young boys your age to war. To die. And so many did. Never forget! Theres an Australian song about the draft called "I was only 19" by Redgum. Highly recommend listening.
Keep in mind that Woodstock was a gathering of the counter-culture, the flower children……anti-war. This was not a patriotic playing of the anthem at all. But rather the opposite. It was loudly condemned by those who supported the war and the government. I thought it was perfect. It brought screaming and the sound of violence to the anthem. Which we thought appropriate at the time. The last thing to feel after hearing this was patriotic.
@@jerrypaul9712 Hendrix joined the Screaming Eagles army outfit before our involvement in Vietnam...it was either that, or prison time for being in a stolen car as a passenger no less. Hendrix chose enlistment. That's where he met Billy Cox, his bass player.
IMHO, Jimi's interpretation of the actual anthem is one of disgust, and not just a fight back against 'WAR! cluck cluck cluck' (see Isle of Wight) but a bigger reminder of the racism he encountered during his chitlin circuit days where he, like all blacks were forced to comply with the segregated demands of white america in a land supposedly for 'the free'. Jimi showed courage with his interpretations. At another concert some 'brave' outlaw bikers confronted Jimi before his appearance threatening to start a riot if he played the anthem in that inimical style of his, which he did anyway; there was no riot. The joke to Jimi was by often introducing Voo Doo Child or Purple Haze as the 'new american anthem', 'until we get another one together'. Can you dig that? 🥴 Almost all of Gypsy Sun and Rainbow's Woodstock perfomance is available on VHS and DVD, and on high rotation with me.
Hendrix was creating the sounds of bombs and war mixed with the Anthem because of America's involvement in the Vietnam War. He said he was playing it the way the air was in America at the time ," the air is slightly static today" he said.
And he starts making those bomb sounds right when the lyrics of the star spangled banner would say "bombs bursting in air"
That's what blues is, imitation of life.
Hendrix was unbelievable, especially considering the time / technology of the day. Now you need to listen to "Machine Gun" live at Fillmore on his Band Of Gypsies album. Many (myself included) consider it to be the song with the best guitar playing of all time.
Machine Gun at FE is the best recorded song of Hendrix we have. If it doesn't send shivers down your spine check your pulse.
Totally agree , I have tried to get other reactors to do it but with no luck... Also I have listened to "Electric Ladyland" since the day it came out and to this day I still find something new in it every time I listen to it. He was a genius and such a humble, gentle soul.
I'm so glad someone mentioned this! "Machine Gun" from the Band of Gypsies album is an absolute MUST. Greatest guitar solo ever put to tape imo
And features Billy Cox and Buddy Miles and their funk influences.
@@dougieyou Hi, I'm pretty sure this is due to copyright infringement. The Hendrix clan is well known for being copyright Nazis.
Hendrix was from Seattle, my hometown!
SILAS, YOU HAVE NOW EXPERIENCED ALMOST FIRSTHAND ONE OF THE MOST INCREDIBLE IF NOT "THE" MOST INCREDIBLE VERSION OF THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER EVER PERFORMED!!! OUT OF THE APPROXIMATE 500,000 PEOPLE MAXIMUM THAT WERE ATTENDING WOODSTOCK BY THE TIME HENDRIX DID THIS SONG, THERE WERE ONLY ABOUT 30,000 PEOPLE LEFT CUZ IT WAS MONDAY MORNING AFTER THE ENTIRE WEEKEND!!
I CAN ONLY IMAGINE HOW INCREDIBLE THIS MUST HAVE BEEN FOR THE 30,000 DEDICATED FANS THAT STAYED TO SEE THIS AND HOW UPSET THE OTHER 470,000 THAT LEFT MUST HAVE FELT ONCE THEY DID HEAR THIS!!
RIP JIMI HENDRIX
THERE WILL NEVER BE ANOTHER LIKE YOU!!
It was Monday morning because he was the last act. Hendrix for breakfast!
I saw Hendrix live twice. His recordings are great but he was absolutely UN-BE-LIEV-ABLE live! What a showman, what talent. RIP, my dude.
My favorite version of the song. This was in 1969. Jimi passed in 1970.
Jimi Hendrix’s was the most anticipated Woodstock performance, but by the time he and his newly formed band, Gypsy Sun & Rainbows, started their two-hour set at 9:00 a.m. Monday morning, the half-million-person audience was down to roughly 40,000. Those who stayed for the festival finale witnessed one of the most memorable and legendary performances of the entire decade.
Forget the entire decade! What about the century?.. You'll never get to hear, and certainly we haven't even in the current century, a performance like this...🤷🏻♂️
This proves that JIMI is a DEMI-GOD
Jimi Hendrix is what you call 1 of a kind. Once in a life time. A Demigod.
His interpretation here was intended to actually represent the Vietnam war which was happening at the time, so there are sections representing gunfire, bombs exploding and people screaming, and then finally a section from Taps a salute to the dead then peace, personally I've always thought it, and him, genius. If you can find it, in the full recording he runs this song straight into Purple Haze which fits perfectly. There's a great recording of him live playing Johnny B Goode on YT which is brilliant.
Even better is the run from Voodoo Chile, This, and then Purple Haze. Gotta do all 3!
Silas, hey, hi. What was fairly obvious to many in 1969, and the early 70's when this appeared in the Woodstock Movie... was that Jimi inserted into the Anthem the sounds of bombs dropping, and the screams of people in pain... this was a statement about the Viet Nam war, war in general. It's an invitation to contemplate patriotism in the context of what many people at the time considered to be an unjust war. Pure genius in concept, and unbelievably skillful in execution.
Absolutely.
Abso-frickin-lutely.
Your comment nails it perfect 👍
I can see choppers falling out of the sky when he makes that certain sound.
I love how he let us hear "...the bombs bursting in air..." in the middle.
The whole end of the woodstock concert is incredible. After this National Anthem, the sound of the guitar melts into the next song, purple haze, one of his classic. Then it goes in an unbeliveable improvisation, which feels kind of like staring at Picasso painting a masterpieces in front of you. And then, it ends up with Villanova Junction, my favorite instrumental ballad. Mindblowing. If you have a chance to look or listen to this hole stuff, I am sure you will love it.
I love every single note of 'Villanova Junction', and will never tire of it! Prince actually does a live cover of it here on YT.
Many of us veterans understood this version all too well…. And yeah Jimi was right this is beautiful….
No problem not standing up....if you had been at Woodstock '69, you would have passed the doobie to guy next to you and said "Hey! Jimi is one righteous dude, dig that sounds man".
I am personally acquainted with one of the percussionists who played with him at that gig. He said that nobody in the band knew he was gonna play that! It wasn''t rehearsed. They were like "What's Jimi doing?"
I also knew a few people who were in the audience. They said the audience was completely in shock.Nothing like this had ever existed before in all the music in human history.
When I was 11 years old, I saw this in the theater. The years was 1972, and it was the first time I'd ever seen a video of Hendrix. Half a century later, I STILL get chills listening to this!
You should understand that this was during the Vietnam War, and a month after the Apollo 11 mission where men first walked on the moon. The USA was really divided, almost close to a civil war. Then, at the very end of a three day festival of peace and flower power hippie celebration, Jimi Hendrix played the most violent rendition of the national anthem possible. He was telling the hippies that this is what the world is really like, and at the same time staring the most powerful nation on earth in the face and saying "You broke your covenant with God and your people."
Nobody but Jimi Hendrix could have done this.
If you ever see the entire Woodstock concert on dvd, get it, it’s three days of the best bands and artists including Jimi , playing and singing for free, for about half a million people
Hendrix was the highest paid performer there.
Salis, you are proving to be the best music review guy I have listened to yet.. lovelovelove ❤️✌🏻🌸
There were many EPIC performances at Woodstock worth checking out.
THE WHO - SEE ME FEEL ME
SANTANA - SOUL SACRIFICE
CSN - SUITE JUDY BLUE EYES
The greatest electric guitarist in history. I was at Woostock. This must be listened to in the context of the Vietnam War.
So far beyond his time! The crowd had been there for 3 days and this was early morn as the sun was coming up. Epic.
It is said it was like a space alien had landed on Earth and was making sounds with the guitar no one even knew was possible.
The man who inspired thousands of guitarist the world over to pick up the instrument.
You might want to check out the entire movie Woodstock that came out in 1970. It was probably the main event that would help define the music of rock and roll through the seventies, and arguably the culture of the baby boom generation.
It was a political statement against the Vietnam war. "The bombs bursting in air" and then he dive bombs on his neck and makes explosions! The chaos of battle is dramatized. A little help from the drummer, I think, added some machine gun fire. Then you here an ambulance siren like they have in Europe. He then throws in a little of the military's "Taps" that they play for fallen soldiers near the end. It's beautiful and ugly at the same time. Wow! What a statement. Historic.
God Bless America - RIP Jimi. Two favorite Hendrix tunes for me are "If six were 9" and "Spanish Castle Magic"
He plays this song and it sounds like if there were bombs falling . Right after this song , he goes straight into Purple Haze . You should also check out " Voodoo Child " from the Woodstock show .
Remember, Jimi was in the army as a paratrooper. Here he expresses his conflicting emotions of patriotism vs. the idestruction it caused.
Hendrix was an army veteran, Screaming Eagles.
I like that you love guitars as much as i do!! You apreciate everything whatever the style is. You deserve more subscribers.
And " 1983 merman i should turn to be " Is an amazing track !
“jimi Hendrix’ performance of the ,Star Spangled Banner, at Woodstock was a work of Genius.” Ornette Coleman
,
How do ya like that, young man? A peek back into the 60's at the man who changed music forever, a vision in red white and blue, with the most beautiful hands and fingers I've ever seen playing guitar. Showed this performance to my 12yr.old Granddaughter and she flipped. Sadly, not one child in her grade level ever heard of Jimi Hendrix. Let's go, people. Better late than never. ☮️to all.
Walking into Woodstock '94 we heard John Popper of Blues Traveler doing this on the harmonica! Epic!!
Billy cox on bass was with jimi in basic training with the 101st airborne the guy with the black scarf over his eyes you can when he does purple haze at Woodstock is Larry Lee two weeks prior to Woodstock was still fighting in Vietnam,
At the time it was very controversial as many thought to change up the US National Anthem like he did was disrespectful, but it had stood the test of time and most people now view it as the masterpiece of improvisation it really was.
one of the greatest guitar solos ever !
Sound effects NOT supplied by the recording board operator or in post-production -- ALL DONE BY JIMI ON HIS AXE!!! What a way to wake up on that Monday a.m. Thank you, Mr. Hendrix, for your artistry and innovative nature!
All right, buckle up! this is an amazing performance. I haven't seen it in the comments yet but another wild thing about Hendrix is that he played a right handed guitar upside down.
His live performance of Voodoo Child at Woodstock is definitely worth checking out.
Followed by this and the epic-purple haze-and then ending of villanova junction...have you got words for it? Because I don't
Hendrix rendition of the National Anthem will never be surpass Hendrix was bringing out the signs of the times the turbulent 1960s and the future to come.
Strongly reccommend Hendrix' 'Machine Gun' on the legendary Album 'Live at Filmore East'. It's one of his greatest live performances and solos. Again another anti-war song where he masters the experimental other-wordly sounds you hear here and converts them into a 10 minutes groove-insanity. The original version is not on YT, only on Spotify btw.
And check out machine gun live at Berkeley that is also an amazing performance homage to his friends dying in Vietnam
You're listening to the greatest guitarist of all time, ending the greatest Rock Festival of all time. Woodstock was originally supposed to be Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, in August of '69. Because of the rain delays, and the NY State Thruway being CLOSED for the first time in it's history, Governor Rockefeller called in all available State Police and National Guard to help fly musicians in in Choppers. Jimmy closed the Show on Monday, with a crowd size that dropped from about 500,000 to about 50,000. Those who stayed until Monday got to see one of the most incredible performances of all time. ✌️
The worst thing about the old footage of Jimi and the bands back then is they really didn't know how to film them yet.
The movie has a wide screen scope, so everything is visible.
He played the last morning. Many had already left. They missed one of the high points.
Jimi’s rendition of the National anthem was to use his guitar to express the sounds of the American war in Vietnam. The sounds of bombs dropping and exploding, innocent civilians screaming and crying. The purpose of this performance WAS NOT to feel patriotic. It expressed his feelings against the war, and the feeling of the majority of people in America who turned against it. Jimi was a Marine Paratrooper veteran. He vehemently hated war.
I love Santana’s Woodstock performance, too!
The majority of that crowd was probably tripping, drunk, or stoned off their asses. And this is the perfect piece for that. Feeling Patriotic? Take a knee.
Hendrix is owned by his family and they are extremely tight with their copyright. They are determined to squeeze every dime out of their rights, even to the detriment of Hendrix's legacy, by restricting videos like this which broaden his exposure. Sad.
Totally a guitar innovator. Ask any guitar player.
Next "Machine Gun" Band of Gypsies from the album. I have to listen every often, just for a "Fix". Note: the audio here doesn't match the version from the released album.
He crushed it
I was 10 when I started taking Jimi. Yeah Jimi was like a habit for me. A year later Jimi left this world. All 12 of our children grew up on Jimi. Driving home from Church listening to Voodoo Chile. Jimi rendered Modernity dead. He challenge the fabric that binds Postmodernity together. Like no other. 'What do you mean?" "Are you Experienced," is my favourite hymn. My wife with Bipolar loves"Manic Depression," and"I don't live today."
Jimi’s Star Spangled Banner was really about what was happening at the time,, the Vietnam War (screaming, bombs, etc). It was a very unpopular war as far as what the hell was the US doing there and the young guys being drafted to fight.
Same as Russia, now.
Also any song off " Are You Experienced "
Check out "Hey Joe" live at the Monterey Pop Festival. That performance shows guitar playing like I've never seen before...more since. You'll be blown away!
Jimmy was a huge influence on Stevie Ray Vaughn. You should watch Stevie’s live version of Voodoo Child since you watched Jimmy do it yesterday. Little known fact about Jimmy Hendrix; he’s a Viet Nam vet. He served as a paratrooper and would volunteer for the most dangerous missions so he could earn his discharge sooner. He would play guitar to his platoon mates every chance he could. They loved him.
He already reacted to SRV's Voodoo Child before Jimi's.
Jimi never went to Vietnam. He was in the 101st Airborne at Fort Cambell Kentucky and honorably discharged after about a year of service in 1962.✌
Hendrix was never in Vietnam. Jimi was in the the service in the early sixties, and got an honorable discharge due to an ankle injury, as he was a paratrooper.
He was left handed so he took a right handed guitar and strung it upside down and he plays it upside down. He was a great artist
Jaw dropping. I saw it then and this is still from somewhere else entirely today. The sounds of the Vietnam War. Bombs, gun fire, and screaming.
So fabulous,, get it dude.. lovelovelove ❤️🌸✌🏻
Hendrix was and still is The G.O.A.T. !
I'll just echo other folks here: listen to Machine Gun from the live Band of Gypsies album. It's got the best or some of the best electric guitar playing ever. Hendrix blew open all the boundaries for rock guitarists from his first album onward. Everyone built on his work.
If you really want to hear some of his best work, check out Machine Gun from the live Band Of Gypsies album. You'll be amazed.
No auto tuner manually tuning. Ten amps up to ten. He has ten inch hands and plays left handed with right handed guitar.
This was Jimmi throwing shade at the US Gov because of the Vietnam War. It was a definite middle finger.
Jimi was quite a tough guy , he was exUS Airborne troops , he got discharged early because of an injury he picked up on a jump
Apparently he didn't though. Theres no medical evidence, although what there was plenty said about was his unruly behavior, lack of discipline, all that kind of stuff in abundance.
Theres a video showing his papers with a lot of less than savoury remarks, some quite funny; but definitely no mention of any injury
Hendrix was heavy metal before there was a heavy metal as a matter of fact the term heavy metal was coined by a writer saying that Hendrix's music sounds like heavy metal falling from the sky so there you go !
Hendrix defied his peers by supporting the soldiers in Vietnam (though he opposed the war).
They weren't against the soldiers- many of them had friends who were drafted, in fact. They were against US policy.
Yes. Good patriot !!
Yea, you're getting the sounds of bombs and war.
Shame you could'nt see the blu ray release, its much clearer with better camera angles, where you can watch him play this and see whats going on
David Gilmour, Pink Floyd on Hendrix-
"Gilmour has also long declared his advocacy for Hendrix. Speaking during his visit to BBC Radio 2’s ‘Tracks Of My Years’ in 2006, he picked out ‘The Wind Cries Mary’ as one of his all-time favourites and recalled when he first heard the late icon:
“Jimi Hendrix, fantastic. I went to a club in South Kensington in 1966, and this kid got on stage with Brian Auger and the Trinity and [held] the guitar the other way around and started playing. Myself and the whole place were with their jaws hanging open.
“I went the next day to the record shops, and I said, ‘You’ve got anything by this guy Jimi Hendrix?’ and they said, ‘Well, we’ve got a James Hendrix’. He hadn’t yet done anything. So I became rather an avid fan waiting for his first release. Also, this is one of his beautiful ballads that I really love.”"
Far Out magazine
faroutmagazine.co.uk/pink-floyd-david-gilmour-pick-guitar/#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16669584031502&csi=0&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&share=https%3A%2F%2Ffaroutmagazine.co.uk%2Fpink-floyd-david-gilmour-pick-guitar%2F
Yes it was patriotic, but Hendrix played the song in a way that was also protesting the Vietnam war, with the war and bombing sound effects. So it wasn't in a way that republicans would classify as patriotic.
People don't realize how shocking this was at the time. Jimi was on the Dick Cavett show, and Cavett thought the show was going to receive hate mail for having Jimi on, because of the way Hendrix interpreted the song.
Jimi was shocked, saying that he played it for his love of the country, and thought it was beautiful, which got a huge round of applause from the audience!
You have to do , Hey Joe live at monterey !!
You need to deep dive the Experience bruv!
He was a meteor...
Sounds of war😢😢😢
I have wanted that fringed jacket all my life!!! 👵🏼💜☮️
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What a rush
He did serve after all.
Jimi served...he can play SSB any way he wants. Glad you were born after and no b4 VIETNAM. We hated that war. It took 58,290 plus and 3M Vietnamese of our generation.🥺. I stand for Jimi🎇
Have met people not into Jimi,which is cool,but they understood clearly what he was saying with his guitar,and nobody else sounded like that before him,or has overshadowed it still
Next on the list needs to be the band Tool! you won't be disappointed I guarantee!
You should also see Janis Joplin live, going completely mad.
Actually by the time Jimi came on stage. Most people had already gone gone home.
He would die exactly 13 months from that performance.
Very chaotic version. COMPLETELY APPROPRIATE for the times. America in chaos. Vietnam, racial segregation, abortion rights, equal right movement, political assassinations, etc...similar to what is going on today, (in some ways) Rock in Peace Jimmy.
So, you have done SRV and Hendrix. Now you must react to Eddie Van Halen's 14 minute solo ERUPTION from "Live Without a Net" (1986). You will not believe what you see and hear from EVH. 🔥🔥🎸🎸
Machine Gun 🔥🔥🙏
Man, I have to suggest the same tune done by Boston. Both Jimi's and Boston's versions are incredible!
Those were the “rockets red glare.”
Then he played "Purple Haze"
you can hear the people screaming and dying
And did you notice the length of his thumb and fingers lol
Socks all that left not knowing if he was gonna play and he did early morning
Stand or not stand for the anthem. Jimi would've likely said its your choice man. This performance (imo) wouldve been jimi sticking it to the man for 'forcing' us to go fight in 'their' war. This was the hippie era, which was far left, believing in freedom, peace, love, creativity, individual expression. Quite the opposite of right wing patriotism, order, control, do what we say, no freedom, no peace, war. It was around the vietnam war, where boys of age where 'drafted' against their will to go and fight in some idiots war. So many beautiful people died. On both sides! These people at woodstock and around sanfransisco, etc at that time, were those who 'refused' to be told what to do. And voiced thru example their freedom of choice. We are all 'one world'. No soul is more important than another. So should you stand? Should you go to war? ...Thats your freedom of choice. No one elses. Yep Jimi was sayin FU to the powers that ordered so many young boys your age to war. To die. And so many did. Never forget! Theres an Australian song about the draft called "I was only 19" by Redgum. Highly recommend listening.
My birth year
You are rockin in the free World....Grasshopper🤨..
Keep in mind that Woodstock was a gathering of the counter-culture, the flower children……anti-war. This was not a patriotic playing of the anthem at all. But rather the opposite. It was loudly condemned by those who supported the war and the government. I thought it was perfect. It brought screaming and the sound of violence to the anthem. Which we thought appropriate at the time. The last thing to feel after hearing this was patriotic.
Hendrix never said that he was a paratrooper in the 101 airborn…on the Dick Cavit show he said it was nothing like that,he said it was beautiful 👍🏻
@@jerrypaul9712 Hendrix joined the Screaming Eagles army outfit before our involvement in Vietnam...it was either that, or prison time for being in a stolen car as a passenger no less. Hendrix chose enlistment. That's where he met Billy Cox, his bass player.
React to Hendrix’s Machine Gun from Band Of Gypsies. It’s the best guitar track….by anyone.
IMHO, Jimi's interpretation of the actual anthem is one of disgust, and not just a fight back against 'WAR! cluck cluck cluck' (see Isle of Wight) but a bigger reminder of the racism he encountered during his chitlin circuit days where he, like all blacks were forced to comply with the segregated demands of white america in a land supposedly for 'the free'. Jimi showed courage with his interpretations. At another concert some 'brave' outlaw bikers confronted Jimi before his appearance threatening to start a riot if he played the anthem in that inimical style of his, which he did anyway; there was no riot. The joke to Jimi was by often introducing Voo Doo Child or Purple Haze as the 'new american anthem', 'until we get another one together'. Can you dig that? 🥴
Almost all of Gypsy Sun and Rainbow's Woodstock perfomance is available on VHS and DVD, and on high rotation with me.
4:27 It sounds like f2000d dropping napalm. Jimi Hendrix is the most important person in music.
My generation Z missed out😢