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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums50 yrs ago today; "Are You Experienced" is released
Are You Experienced is the debut studio album by English-American rock band the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Released in 1967, the LP was an immediate critical and commercial success, and it is widely regarded as one of the greatest debuts in the history of rock music. The album features Jimi Hendrix's innovative approach to songwriting and electric guitar playing which soon established a new direction in psychedelic and hard rock music.
By mid-1966, Hendrix was struggling to earn a living playing the R&B circuit as a backing guitarist. After being referred to Chas Chandler, who was leaving the Animals and interested in managing and producing artists, Hendrix was signed to a management and production contract with Chandler and ex-Animals manager Michael Jeffery. Chandler brought Hendrix to London and began recruiting members for a band designed to showcase the guitarist's talents, the Jimi Hendrix Experience. In late October, after having been rejected by Decca Records, the Experience signed with Track, a new label formed by the Who's managers Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp.
Are You Experienced and its preceding singles were recorded over a five-month period from late October 1966 through early April 1967. The album was completed in sixteen recording sessions at three London locations, including De Lane Lea Studios, CBS, and Olympic. Released in the UK on May 12, 1967, Are You Experienced spent 33 weeks on the charts, peaking at number two. The album was issued in the US on August 23 by Reprise Records, where it reached number five on the Billboard 200, remaining on the chart for 106 weeks, 27 of those in the Top 40. The album also spent 70 weeks on the US Billboard R&B chart, where it peaked at #10. The US version contained some of Hendrix's best known songs, including the Experience's first three singles, which, though omitted from the British edition of the LP, were top ten hits in the UK: "Purple Haze", "Hey Joe", and "The Wind Cries Mary".
In 2005, Rolling Stone ranked Are You Experienced fifteenth on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. They placed four songs from the album on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time: "Purple Haze" (17), "Foxy Lady" (153), "Hey Joe" (201), and "The Wind Cries Mary" (379). That same year, the record was one of 50 recordings chosen by the Library of Congress in recognition of its cultural significance to be added to the National Recording Registry. Writer and archivist Reuben Jackson of the Smithsonian Institution wrote: "it's still a landmark recording because it is of the rock, R&B, blues ... musical tradition. It altered the syntax of the music ... in a way I compare to James Joyce's Ulysses."
50 fucking years, and it still rocks!
Botany
(71,705 posts)Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)...but Jimi was not only a great guitarist; he was a true musician in the classical sense.
ornotna
(11,002 posts)Absolutely.
randr
(12,452 posts)with the album. We all got up took some LSD and played it over and over til dawn.
Were we ever experienced!
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)I danced around, arm-chops and all.
randr
(12,452 posts)with the Talking Heads playing.
Itchinjim
(3,116 posts)dchill
(39,615 posts)Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)...but at least our soundtrack is cooler!
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)dchill
(39,615 posts)Look at me, I'm on Medicare!
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)...either works.
2naSalit
(90,594 posts)Hendrix tune is:
I like others but this one makes me drop everything and rock out, totally unabashed.
ProudLib72
(17,984 posts)I only started listening to Hendrix in the mid-eighties when I was 13. I always wished I could have seen him live one time.
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)Class of 83.
kwassa
(23,340 posts)We learned about this record by word of mouth. No radio stations played this back then. Pre-FM, which would come soon.
spanone
(137,164 posts)Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)From the same
The album was issued in the US on August 23 by Reprise Records, where it reached number five on the Billboard 200, remaining on the chart for 106 weeks, 27 of those in the Top 40.
kwassa
(23,340 posts)and had some different tracks than the English release.
The record blew us away. We played it to death. Everyone had a copy of it.
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)dhill926
(16,736 posts)kentuck
(112,212 posts)Seems that I recall that Sgt Peppers came out about the same time?
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)jalan48
(14,135 posts)beam me up scottie
(57,349 posts)peacebuzzard
(5,216 posts)He turned rock n roll on its head. Mitch Mitchell the drummer was great too. But Hendrix, OMG so so good. He played like no one else. Thanks for this post.
livetohike
(22,656 posts)kentuck
(112,212 posts)I am
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)LeftInTX
(28,871 posts)He was full blow Jimi.
Caressing his guitar and doing sensual things with his tongue.
A bunch of moms freaked out.
Pre-teen girls, who would have preferred a Justin Bieber clone, didn't know what to make of it.
Marie Marie
(9,999 posts)Huge fan here.
johnp3907
(3,810 posts)Zorro
(16,025 posts)Mr.Bill
(24,581 posts)I was 14 and it was the summer before I started high school. I lived 50 miles from San Francisco. I spent a few weekends that summer in the Haight Ashbury. It was a six week block party. As Paul Kanter of the Jefferson Airplane said, "For about six weeks, everything was just perfect".
I smoked my first joint that summer. I often wonder how different my life would have been had I not experienced the Summer of Love.
snort
(2,334 posts)I'm afraid the answer may be no.
Mr.Bill
(24,581 posts)in one way or another. It was at the forefront of a cultural revolution and it touched all of us and we touched it. There were no real leaders or followers, we were all in it together.
7wo7rees
(5,128 posts)It was the overtone on Jimi's playing that was an octave higher or lower.
The effect was used by Jimi Hendrix, and can be heard in guitar solos on the song "Purple Haze". Hendrix preferred to call the device the Octavio, and it is often referred to as such.
After Hendrix's death in 1970 one of the original Octavias became the basis for the redesigned "Octavia (TM)", manufactured by Tycobrahe Sound Company in Hermosa Beach, California, during the mid-1970s. A limited number of the devices were produced, and today a used one in good condition sells for over $1,000 on eBay. Stevie Ray Vaughan owned nine of these devices.
From Wikipedia
Martin Eden
(13,190 posts)I think they're calling our names.
redstateblues
(10,565 posts)duncang
(2,698 posts)Wind cries Mary
Third stone from the sun.
oasis
(51,243 posts)nolabear
(42,655 posts)a number of houses where he is said to have played and practiced and honed. And he's buried just south of the city. Never been there but I know they moved him from the middle to the edge of the cemetery because so many people still come.
I just bring it up to say the man is immortal, and for good reason. There's just no one else like him.