Elvis and Michael better watch out. Jimi is making a move.
Forty years after his death,
There's a concert tour called "Experience Hendrix" — an all-star revue of guitar heroes, including
Isley said the mission of "Experience Hendrix" is to prove that the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer was well rounded — a first-rate songwriter, imaginative interpreter and, as any rock fan knows, a pioneering guitar virtuoso.
"He brought to the electric guitar what
Isley knew
Isley, who was 11 at the time, remembers watching the Beatles' debut on "The Ed Sullivan Show" with Hendrix sitting on the couch between him and his younger brother Marvin.
Recalled Isley: "After that, there was a meeting with the band and my brother Kelly said, 'They've got two guitar players but we've got Jimmy.' When he said that, Jimmy started grinning."
Hendrix, who was 10 years older than Ernie, used to
stay in a back room at the Isley house. Self-taught, he'd practice his
electric guitar without an amplifier and listen to a 5-foot-high stack
of blues 45s by
Ernie, who didn't take up guitar until he was 15, remembers Hendrix practicing how to play guitar behind his back and between his legs — moves that'd later break out with the Isleys onstage.
Hendrix liked to watch TV, too — "Bonanza," "Wild Kingdom" and cartoons.
"He got along well with kids," Isley said. "He was polite. Great sense of humor. I can talk about
One of the boys might ask "Can you play the 'Beanie and Cecil' song?" and Hendrix would take out his guitar and play it. "Didn't hit a wrong note. That was fascinating as a kid."
After leaving for
"He looked different in terms of his clothes," Isley
recalled. "He had a hat, scarf, rings on every finger, stuff around his
neck. He walked down the hallway sounding like (cowboy character)
Shane. 'Man, is that Jimmy?' 'Yeah, he's killin' 'em in
Isley opens the "Experience Hendrix" show, backed by
"Some of the stuff I love so much and I just have to
hear it played as close to the way Jimi had played it," Satriani said.
"Having said that, Jimi played it a million different ways. I imagine
if (tour producer)
Music historian McDermott is catalog director for
Satriani, 53, who started as a drummer, was profoundly affected by Hendrix' death from a drug overdose at age 27 in 1970.
"The day he died was so devasting to me," he said, "that I remember quitting the (high school) football team — I was a tight end — and marching home and announcing to my family that I was going to become a guitar player."
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(c) 2010, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
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