Smithsonian Magazine

National Treasure: Jimi Hendrix’s velvet vest

-

An exotic vest conjures the dazzling performanc­e that introduced America to

Jimi Hendrix

ACROWD ESTIMATED in the tens of thousands gathered at the Monterey County Fairground­s in Northern California in June 1967 for the Monterey Internatio­nal Pop Festival, a three-day extravagan­za. Today the festival is considered a kind of informal opening ceremony for the Summer of Love: A new, liberated ideology was taking hold in the culture, and here was its soundtrack. “The Monterey Pop Fest introduced the mushroomin­g countercul­ture to the world,” Holly George-Warren, the author of Janis: Her Life and Music and co-author of The Road to Woodstock, told me. “It sowed the seeds for Woodstock, and so many festivals to follow.”

The lineup included the Grateful Dead, the Who, Otis Redding, Ravi Shankar and Jefferson Airplane, but the breakout performanc­e came from a young American guitarist named Jimi Hendrix, who was making his first major appearance in the United States. Hendrix had recently released his debut LP,

HENDRIX CAME ACROSS LIKE A PSYCHEDELI­C SEXY SHAMAN.

Are You Experience­d, but the album wouldn’t crack Billboard’s Top 10 until the following year. The Monterey organizers had booked him on the recommenda­tion of Paul McCartney, but few people in the crowd knew who Hendrix was or what he could do.

A few days before his performanc­e, Hendrix visited Nepenthe, a bohemian restaurant 800 feet above the Pacific Ocean, overlookin­g the Santa Lucia Mountains in Big Sur, California. While at Nepenthe, Hendrix did some shopping at an adjacent store, the Phoenix, which sold all sorts of exotic clothes, including velvet vests from Central Asian countries like Afghanista­n. It’s not certain, but Hendrix may have purchased the black vest he wore that weekend during his performanc­e at Monterey, and this burgundy velvet version in a similar style, now in a Smithsonia­n collection. Even today, more than half a century later, it’s still recognizab­le as pure Hendrix—colorful, extravagan­t, audacious.

His aesthetic ran to rich, unexpected embellishm­ents drawn from startlingl­y disparate sources: ruffled blouses, patterned bell-bottoms, jeweled medallions, brooches, silk scarves, rings, headbands and sometimes even a cowboy hat. For his Monterey performanc­e, Hendrix wore a black vest over a ruffled, canary-yellow blouse, with red bell-bottoms and black boots. In a 1967 interview with the German radio D.J. Hans Carl Schmidt, Hendrix suggested that his style was mostly directed by an internal sense of cool: “[I’ll wear] anything I see that I like, regardless of what it looks like, and regardless of what it costs.”

He applied a similar sensibilit­y to his sound, which drew from electric blues, hard rock and R&B. I often wonder what it must have been like to see Hendrix play that Sunday—whether it felt like watching something being invented right in front of you. He was already developing his own musical grammar, reliant on tone-altering pedals and the then-radical idea that feedback and distortion could be as useful and evocative as a cleanly played

note. His Monterey performanc­e was career-making, revolution­ary. He opened with a cover of Howlin’ Wolf ’s “Killing Floor,” a raucous, vaguely remorseful song about staying in a volatile relationsh­ip, and closed with a cover of the Troggs’ “Wild Thing,” a pure celebratio­n of youthful debauchery. “Hendrix came across like a psychedeli­c sexy shaman, blowing the audience’s mind,” George-Warren said.

In September 1970, in the last interview he gave before his death later that month at age 27 following a barbiturat­e overdose, Hendrix was dismissive of the elaborate outfits he’d become known for. In retrospect, the disavowal feels like a portent: “I look around at new groups like Cactus and Mountain and they’re into those same things with the hair and the clothes— wearing all the jewelry and strangling themselves with beads,” he told a British journalist, Keith Altman. “I got out of that because I felt I was being too loud visually. I got the feeling maybe too many people were coming to look and not enough to listen.” There were extraordin­ary and unexpected pressures in being so thoroughly and relentless­ly scrutinize­d—and Hendrix felt them.

Yet in the Monterey footage three years earlier, Hendrix revels in being seen. Toward the end of “Wild Thing,” he empties a bottle of lighter fluid onto his guitar, kisses it goodbye and sets it ablaze while gyrating his hips. The light from the flames bounces off the metallic threads of his vest, and Hendrix appears, briefly, as if he is wearing not clothing but a constellat­ion, and for a moment is not bound by our world.

 ?? By
Amanda Petrusich
Photograph by
Wendel A. White ??
By Amanda Petrusich Photograph by Wendel A. White
 ??  ?? Hendrix, 24, in his breakout set at Monterey in 1967.
Hendrix, 24, in his breakout set at Monterey in 1967.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States