Tuesday, April 21, 2020
jimi hendrix Essays (231 words) - Counterculture Of The 1960s
  Jimi Hendrix    Jimi Hendrix perhaps no other rock-and-roll trailblazer was  as original or as influential in such a short span of time as  Jimi Hendrix. Widely acknowledged as one of the most daring and  inventive virtuosos in rock history, Hendrix pioneered the  electric guitar (he played a right-handed Fender Stratocaster--  his "Electric Lady"--upside-down and left-handed) as an  electronic sound source capable of feedback, distortion, and a  host of other effects that could be crafted into an articulate  and fluid emotional vocabulary. And though he was on the scene as  a solo artist for less than five years, Hendrix is credited for  having a profound effect on everyone from George Clinton and  Miles Davis to guitarists Stevie Ray Vaughan and Vernon Reid.  Born Johnny Allen Hendrix on November 27, 1942, Hendrix's father,  James "Al" Hendrix, later changed his son's name to James  Marshall. Young Jimi taught himself to play the guitar during his  schoolboy days in Seattle, drawing influence from blues legends  like B.B. King and Robert Johnson. He slung his guitar over his  back and left home to enlist in the 101st Division of the Air  Force (the "Screaming Eagles"), where he served as a parachute  jumper until an injury led to his discharge. Hendrix then began  working as a session guitarist under the name Jimmy James,  playing behind such marquee acts as Sam Cooke, Ike and Tina  Turner, and the Isley Brothers. After gigging extensively with  Little Richard in 1964, Hendrix became entangle...    
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