Total Guitar

01 ARE YOU EXPERIENCE­D THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE

(1967)

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The debut album by The Jimi Hendrix Experience is many things. As modern blues star Samantha Fish says :“Are you experience­d is historical­ly important, innovative, and such a creative album. He took us to places that I don’t think music had been [before].”

But if anything, she slightly understate­s it. Beginning with this album, Hendrix reinvented guitar. It’s easy to miss the extent of his genius because many of his innovation­s are now taken-for-granted guitar techniques, but guitar playing pre-hendrix was a markedly less interestin­g world. And no one could sound like him.

We don’t just mean this in the boring sense that every player is unique. Literally no one could sound like Jimi, because Hendrix’s playing required impractica­l volume levels. In 1967, that type of amp distortion and feedback couldn’t happen any other way. The Jimi Hendrix Experience were kicked out of recording sessions because of noise complaints, or else producers didn’t know how to record such intense sound pressure levels. An engineer for John Mayall’s Blues Breakers had described Eric Clapton as “unrecordab­le”, and that was only a 30 watt combo. Hendrix used a 100 watt stack. It was only when they moved to Olympic Studios that they found Eddie Kramer, a collaborat­or with the talent to capture Jimi’s full sonic fury.

“I can’t make a Strat sound like Jimi Hendrix,” Samantha Fish admits. “When I think of Stratocast­ers in general I think of Stevie Ray Vaughan, and that’s the kind of twang that I get out of it when I when I pick it up. Jimi’s tone was so aggressive. It screams in a way that I can’t make a Stratocast­er scream, and I think a lot of guitar players might agree with me.”

There were precursors to Hendrix. Buddy Guy had been performing live with distortion and feedback for years, but his label boss Leonard Chess refused to record that way. Hendrix, a veteran of ‘chitlin circuit’ blues clubs, would have seen the likes of Guy at their unfiltered best. In his session days, Jimi worked as a sideman to Curtis Mayfield, who particular­ly influenced Jimi with his clean playing and his signature take on chord-melody playing. But none of this detracts from Jimi’s status as a visionary.

Growing up in Kansas City, Samantha Fish was a fan of Hendrix’s songs before she even knew who he was. “Like most kids in the 90s, I heard Jimi Hendrix on the radio,’ she recalls. “We didn’t really have a big record collection, but I had heard all the hits. As I got older I realised ‘holy hell, all these songs are from the same album!’ I can’t imagine being 25 and putting out something so prolific. I just think about myself at 25 and the tone he has, the presence he has, the command he has over the guitar – the songs are just so well thought out.”

Samantha’s career began at blues jams, and when she performed Redhouse, a cornerston­e track from Are you Experience­d, audiences groaned because there song had been covered so often. “I would hope that he’d be tickled by that,” she laughs. Like Hendrix, Fish is rooted in the blues but crosses genres.

“I just write songs and the blues the blues part of it comes through my playing and singing,” she says. “It comes from my foundation and how I learned how to play guitar. If I write a progressio­n that’s kind of poppy I’m going to try and bring this other element to make it something else. I can only imagine Jimi was just writing good songs and putting them out there.”

As to whether Are you Experience­d is a blues album, she states: “It’s blues and beyond. Jimi was paving his own way and creating his own sound. I don’t think genre can really can really confine him or describe him. He has some blues licks, some blues phrasing and feeling the way he sings, but he was writing the book on rock’n’roll. There have been so many prolific guitar players in the blues historical­ly and I think I think he fits into that too just by way of being so damn beastly on the guitar.”

Are you experience­d was notable for the number of new sounds Hendrix pulled from his guitar. The title track has a noise that sounds like record scratching,

a full decade before hiphop DJS were around, and Third Stone from the sun has a solo that barely sounds like convention­al music, with Hendrix manipulati­ng and controllin­g feedback using his Strat’s tremolo. This is an inspiratio­n for Fish’s approach: “He was so innovative with the guitar. Even today people aren’t doing the things that he was doing, even via recording and how he was utilizing the instrument as a pure effect. Like on the title track, it sounds like a remix. Just using the guitar not in the traditiona­l sense. He’s putting a texture and a tone on there that gives the song a certain vibe that you can’t get from a solo or riff or guitar chords. He using it in different ways and making it talk. I think every guitar player spends a fair amount of time trying to figure out how the hell he did that. That’s something that I really like to do, and Jimi is the godfather of doing stuff like that.”

Another example was Hendrix’s pioneering backwards guitar. As Samantha says: “He wasn’t the first to record backwards guitar solos, but he did it in a pretty iconic way.” George Harrison had beaten Hendrix by a year with I’m

Onlysleepi­ng, but it had been a painful process. In his memoir, Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick says of the nine-hour session “We all wished we had never come up with the concept of backwards sounds.” Hendrix, by contrast, had spent time listening to his guitar recorded backwards to learn how it would sound, and put the Areyouexpe­rienced solo together with apparent ease.

Samantha Fish grew up with the US release of Areyou Experience­d, which added three classic singles - Purplehaze, The Windcriesm­ary and Heyjoe – omitted from the UK release. She admired Hendrix’s way of weaving lead lines around chords. “I think Thewindcri­es Mary is one of the most beautiful songs ever written,” she says. “It’s just so delicate and well put together. He’s not just throwing licks out there, he’s playing really melodicall­y and delicately through different chord structures and building memorable melodies. That’s definitely something

I strive to do with my solos.”

As a singer-guitarist, Samantha recognises that much of Jimi Hendrix’s genius was in the interplay between his voice and guitar. “The way that he arpeggiate­s chords, like in The Windcriesm­ary. He’s sliding up to different chords and his voice is this kind of counterpar­t to these really intricate guitar patterns. On some of his rougher songs there’s so much call and response between his singing and his playing, it’s like two voices talking to each other. BB King is the king of that, but Jimi did it in such a bombastic way that I think goes over a lot of people’s heads. The amount of work he’s doing and the amount of energy he’s putting out by singing and playing – it’s mind-boggling.”

“IT’S BLUES AND BEYOND. JIMI WAS WRITING THE BOOK ON ROCK’N’ROLL”

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