As a young guitar player, perhaps no one inspired me as much as Jimi Hendrix, though I never dreamed Iâd attain even a fraction of his skill. But what attracted me to him was his near-total lack of formalityâhe didnât read music, wasnât trained in any classical sense, played an upside-down right-handed guitar as a lefty, and fully engaged his head and heart in every note, never pausing for an instant (so it seemed) to second-guess whether it was the right one. I knew his raw emotive playing was firmly rooted in the Delta blues, but it wasnât until later in my musical journey that I discovered his return to more traditional form after he disbanded The Experience and formed Band of Gypsys with Billy Cox and Buddy Miles. While most of the recordings he made with them didnât see official release, theyâve appeared since his death in compilation after boxset after compilation, including one of the most beloved of Hendrixâs blues songs, âHear My Train A Cominâ.â
Originally titled âGet My Heart Back Togetherâ when he played it at Woodstock in 1969, the song is pure roots, with lyrics that bespeak of both Hendrixâs loneliness and his playful dreams of greatness. (âIâm gonna buy this town / And put it all in my shoe.â) Several versions of the song float around on various posthumous releasesâboth live and as studio outtakes (including two different takes on the excellent 1994 Blues). But we have the rare treat, above, of seeing Hendrix play the song on a twelve-string acoustic guitar, Lead Bellyâs instrument of choice. The footage comes from the 1973 documentary film Jimi Hendrix (which you can watch on Youtube for $ 1.99). Hendrix first plays the intro, seated alone in an all-white studio, playing folk-style with the fingers of his left hand. It is, of course, flawless, yet still he stops and asks the filmmakers for a redo. âI was scared to death,â he says, betraying the shyness and self-doubt that lurked beneath his mind-blowing ability and flamboyant persona. His playing is no less perfect when he picks up the tune again and plays it through.
Solo acoustic recordings of Hendrixâfilm and audioâare incredibly rare. In fact, the only other footage may be the short clip above of Hendrix at a party playing a partial blues rendition of âHound Dog.â If like me youâre a fan of Hendrix, acoustic blues, or both, these videos will make you hunger for more Jimi unplugged. While Hendrix did more than anyone before him to turn guitar amps into instruments with his squalls of electric feedback and distorted wah-wah squeals, when you strip his playing down to basics, heâs still pretty much as good as it gets.
Related Content:
Jimi Hendrixâs Final Interview Animated (1970)
âElectric Churchâ: The Jimi Hendrix Experience Live in Stockholm, 1969
Jimi Hendrix Plays âSgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Bandâ Days After the Song Was Released (1967)
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
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Jimi Hendrix Unplugged: Two Rare Recordings of Hendrix Playing Acoustic Guitar
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