Cacs should be kissing Jimmy Hendrix dead ass

The Fade

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I'm actually listening to Jimi right now. but yeah its a shame, Cacs will give him his props and say he was one of the greatest but they will also lie on the god.

They love to say:
1. Jimi didn't understand music theory.
Impossible! you can't write music and play guitar at the level Jimi did without theory knowledge.
2. Jimi was a hard core drug user, that ended up oding.
More lies, Jimi only smoked marijuana. He never did lsd or mushrooms none of that fukk shyt. I know it was his hating ass cac manager that killed him too.

Anyways breh you should learn to play some of his songs if you don't already. The man was a pure genius. I can play more than a couple.

IT's funny cuz they tout guys like Marty Friedman up but he doesnt know shyt about theory
 

Danktoker94

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He was but he was introduced to LSD by cacs
Jimi Hendrix was doing coke, acid, heroin, speed, downers, uppers, smoking dope, fukking chicks, he was doing it all man. LOL! I am flabbergasted.
 

Spiritual Stratocaster

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Jimi Hendrix gets extreme praise..


He changed the way people approached playing guitar at that time...only people who criticize Jimi are a$$holes,racists who don't want to give him just do.

To be honest he gets way more praise from whites than black people..I wish black people would pick up the guitar more. Black people tend to not be interested in Rock music on the scale that white people do.

But yea Jimi Hendrix is pretty much seen as a Rock God..Guitar God...he changed the game up

In fact if you say some shyt like

"Jimi's playing was sloppy" "hey only played blues scale", that lets me know you're a try hard,hating a$$hole:pacspit:

His guitar playing,songwriting,his showmanship,his stage presence,Humility..:wow:

Compared to the other guy who also changed the landscape of guitar playing (Eddie Van Halen), Jimi was modest, and humble...he got on stage with Cream, who were seen as the top blues act around in the UK and Clapton was seen as a guitar god, and completely blew them away and shat on them without really even trying, he humbled Eric and many other players over there.:wow:
 

Spiritual Stratocaster

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Even Ritchie Blackmore gives him praise and this dude is a major a$$hole and HARSH critic :russ:
Ritchie Blackmore Talks Yngwie Malmsteen, Jimi Hendrix and Deep Purple in 1991 Interview
I was impressed by Hendrix. Not so much by his playing, as his attitude—he wasn't a great player, but everything else about him was brilliant. Even the way he walked was amazing. His guitar playing, though, was always a little bit weird. Hendrix inspired me, but I was still more into Wes Montgomery. I was also into the Allman Brothers around the time of those albums.

And Ritchie was classically trained, and his playing is out of this world but he recognizes Jimi's brilliance.

Ritchie Blackmore's playing his :ohlawd: btw...Hendrix was an inspiration on me...but Blackmore's playing style is something i've been trying to incorporate into my own playing. :wow: His vibrato, his usage of the whammy bar, his melodies, improvisation :noah:
 

Spiritual Stratocaster

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I'm actually listening to Jimi right now. but yeah its a shame, Cacs will give him his props and say he was one of the greatest but they will also lie on the god.

They love to say:
1. Jimi didn't understand music theory.
Impossible! you can't write music and play guitar at the level Jimi did without theory knowledge.
2. Jimi was a hard core drug user, that ended up oding.
More lies, Jimi only smoked marijuana. He never did lsd or mushrooms none of that fukk shyt. I know it was his hating ass cac manager that killed him too.

Anyways breh you should learn to play some of his songs if you don't already. The man was a pure genius. I can play more than a couple.
Jimi dabbled in other drugs but he wasn't a junkie though on the scale that Joplin,Keith Richards,Clapton were though..

His drinking gets talked about more though as people say he turned into a very violent person and several people have accounts on this...

Jimi was possibly high on acid at Monterrey too because he was agitated and almost got into a fight with Pete Townsend on who went onstage first.
 

Devilinurear

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5 Artists Deeply Influenced by Jimi Hendrix | Fender Tone


The list of artists who have been affected by the great Jimi Hendrix is pretty endless. Nearly every guitarist around the world has a favorite Hendrix story or moment.

In thinking about the Strat legend, we’ve selected five comments from prominent guitarists who hold a special reverence for the legendary icon.

Jeff Beck

Imagine Hendrix and Jeff Beck on stage at the same time. That pairing actually happened several times over a six-night run at the Scene club in New York in 1968. But Beck and Hendrix had a mutual appreciation that dated several years prior to those amazing shows, as told to Guitar World in 2014.

“I wasn’t looking for compliments, but before I met Jimi someone told me that he knew all about my recordings with the Yardbirds. He had to, because for someone so utterly flamboyant and who played so inventively, I knew he was one for listening out. He wasn’t one of those staid, insular kinds of blues players; he would listen to everything. And that alone thrilled me. He’d also seen the Yardbirds live in 1965/1966 when he was playing sideman to Little Richard, I believe.

“It was amazing to see him play, and I’d met him before I saw him perform. I saw him at this tiny little club in London, with all of these ‘dolly birds,’ which is what they called girls dressed in their miniskirts. I think they all thought he was going to be a folky, Bob Dylan–type of character [laughs], and he blew the place apart with his version of [Dylan’s] ‘Like a Rolling Stone.’

“I just went, ‘Ah…this is so great!’ It overshadowed any feelings of inferiority or competitiveness. It was so amazing. To see someone doing what I wanted to do… I came out a little crestfallen, but on the positive side, here was this guy opening big doors for us. Instead of looking on the negative side and saying, ‘We’re finished,’ I was thinking, ‘No, we’ve just started!’ I was delighted to have known him for the short time that I did. It was the magical watering hole of the Speakeasy, the club where we hung out in London, that enabled that to happen. It was the one place you could go and be guaranteed to see Eric or Jimi and have fun playing. Those places don’t seem to exist anymore.”

See Beck’s cover of “Manic Depression” with vocalist Seal below.

>>>>>

John Mayer

John Mayer penned a beautiful essay about Hendrix in Rolling Stone‘s 2004 list of the 100 Greatest Artists, in which he waxed rhapsodic about the guitar legend’s profound affect on musicians around the world.

“When I listen to Hendrix, I just hear a man, and that’s when it’s most beautiful — when you remember that another human being was capable of what he achieved,” he wrote. “Who I am as a guitarist is defined by my failure to become Jimi Hendrix. However far you stop on your climb to be like him, that’s who you are.”

Watch Mayer cover “Voodoo Child (Slight Return)” below.

>>>>>

John Frusciante

It’s not difficult to hear how deeply former Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist and solo artist John Frusciante was touched by Hendrix. Like Hendrix, Frusciante comes at the guitar with an exploratory ear, willing to take things to the next level and infuse new energy into the music.

In a 2007 Q&A with Rolling Stone, Frusciante discussed his reverence for Hendrix’s pioneering spirit.

“I’m an Electric Ladyland guy. His music always sounds perfect to me, because he’s bending sound, taking care of music in every dimension. Where most people think of it in two dimensions, he’s thinking of it in four. I don’t think there’s a better guitar player in history. He’s not something that can be improved on. And there’s the spirit that goes into it. He creates a place where you can be high and hang out and lose yourself. He’s bringing out aspects of sound we didn’t know were there. I feel there are people moving ahead on that front, but they’re not so much guitar players – like [electronic artists] Aphex Twin and Squarepusher. They continue the work Jimi Hendrix started, but not on the guitar.”

Watch the Red Hot Chili Peppers with Frusciante on guitar cover “Castles Made of Sand” below.

>>>>>

Stevie Ray Vaughan

Texas bluesman Stevie Ray Vaughan was a big Hendrix fan. His live shows would regularly feature a few Hendrix covers, and he even featured “Voodoo Chile” on his second album. And while comparisons between the two men existed among music critic circles, it was all about respect for the Hendrix legacy in his mind, which he explained in a 1985 interview with Guitar World.

“I loved his music and I feel like it’s important to hear what [Hendrix] was doing, just like anybody else, like Albert [King], or B.B.[King], or any of that stuff. I wanted to do the song, but I didn’t want to mistreat it. I feel like, I try to take care of his music, and it takes care of me. Treat it with respect, not as a burden – like you have to put a guy down ’cause he plays from it. That’s crazy. I respect him for his life and his music.”

Watch Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble cover “Little Wing / Third Stone from the Sun” below.

>>>>>

Kenny Wayne Shepherd

A longtime participant in the Experience Hendrix Tour, Shepherd makes no secret about his Hendrix fanaticism. Most, if not all, of his concerts end with a cover of “Voodoo Child (Slight Return).”

“Hendrix played a lot of blues, and for me, that’s one of the reasons why I really related to him musically. His music really resonated deep within me because I come rom the school of the blues. Listening to songs like ‘Red House,’ or when Jimi covered ‘Catfish Blues’ or ‘Killing Floor,’ Jimi covered a lot of blues songs over the course of his career, especially in live performances. And I think it really showed a lot of his roots and the foundation which he built his music from. That was the blues. That’s been my similar approach with my music, too
 

The Amerikkkan Idol

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Why should white people praise someone not of their race? Blacks are the only group who put people not of their race on a pedestal.

:stopitslime:Michael Jordan, Muhammad Ali, Michael Jackson, LeBron James, Miles Davis, Beyonce, and on and on and on

Also, cacs dont downplay hendrix. No other guitarist is credited with influencing/creating as many rock legends or subgenres as Hendrix.

Exactly, I'm a rock head and I've never even heard anyone else called the GOAT guitar player but Hendrix.

It's almost not debated about anymore.

Jimi is universally praised as the GOAT guitar player. His cover of All Along The Watchtower basically made everyone forget it was a Bob Dylan song

Exactly

When do white people downplay Jimi Hendrix? All they do is praise him as a rock legend. The only people who downplay him are "black people", the same group who don't even really know who he was and can't name a single song of his. You've got this shyt backwards.

Truth, nikkaz would be calling him a c00n on the "Coli" if he was alive today for making "cac music" and fukking cave bitvhes

Some o



Some of them believe Michael Jackson, Steph Curry and lots other are white. Not even joking, they always try to claim historically great people that "could" be confused as white.

:russ:Where are you nikkaz from?

I've never met one single person who thinks MJ or Steph Curry was White.

I mean, their parents are Black and famous.

Steph's father was in the NBA ffs

MJ's sister is one of the most famous people on the planet ffs

You must be talking about like 15 year olds or something

Jimi Hendrix was a c00n by TLRs ridiculous standards

THIS
 

Kairi Irving

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:stopitslime:Michael Jordan, Muhammad Ali, Michael Jackson, LeBron James, Miles Davis, Beyonce, and on and on and on



Exactly, I'm a rock head and I've never even heard anyone else called the GOAT guitar player but Hendrix.

It's almost not debated about anymore.



Exactly



Truth, nikkaz would be calling him a c00n on the "Coli" if he was alive today for making "cac music" and fukking cave bitvhes



:russ:Where are you nikkaz from?

I've never met one single person who thinks MJ or Steph Curry was White.

I mean, their parents are Black and famous.

Steph's father was in the NBA ffs

MJ's sister is one of the most famous people on the planet ffs

You must be talking about like 15 year olds or something



THIS


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