Cry Of Love
Cry Of Love
I just listened to an old CD called the Cry Of Love from Hendrix.
Really originally written guitar parts.
I would have loved to hear what he would have done if he lived through the 80's.
Really originally written guitar parts.
I would have loved to hear what he would have done if he lived through the 80's.
The other day I found some songs from the 12/31-1970 Band of Gypsys concert on YouTube. (I have both the vinyl and the cd, but didn't know it was filmed.)
Macine Gun and Who Knows are some of my alltime "Evergreens".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVvtIS2YGVI
Dear Producer: I would love a DVD with the whole Jeff Beck set from Crossroad 2007
It seems to be verry few filmclips from the original Allman Bros, ......give me Duane
Macine Gun and Who Knows are some of my alltime "Evergreens".

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVvtIS2YGVI
Dear Producer: I would love a DVD with the whole Jeff Beck set from Crossroad 2007

It seems to be verry few filmclips from the original Allman Bros, ......give me Duane

That second set of the concert is pure gold!arela wrote:The other day I found some songs from the 12/31-1970 Band of Gypsys concert on YouTube. (I have both the vinyl and the cd, but didn't know it was filmed.)
They played two sets, and Billy Graham told Jimi after the first,
that he he could play better if he concentrated on the playing, rather than doing all the showmanship.
Jimi got mad, but he does play so much better in the second set.
I have both.
J_S
Last edited by zangsta on Tue Apr 08, 2008 11:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Arela, a few years ago, the whole Band of Gypsies-show was sent on TV, with interviews of Billy Cox and Buddy Miles.
They cut up the show with the talk, which I hate, it would have been so much better to start or end with stuff like that and have the concert in one piece.
Still, it was a great moment to see it. I had no video at the time, and have not seen it around since then.
J_S
They cut up the show with the talk, which I hate, it would have been so much better to start or end with stuff like that and have the concert in one piece.
Still, it was a great moment to see it. I had no video at the time, and have not seen it around since then.
J_S
Electric Lady Studios, at 52 West 8th Street, in New York City's Greenwich Village, is a recording studio originally built by Jimi Hendrix and designed by John Storyk in 1970. Hendrix was the first major music artist to own his own recording studio.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_Lady_Studios
http://www.electricladystudios.com/history_1.html
Eddie Cramer and JImi in Electric Lady -studios
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_Lady_Studios
http://www.electricladystudios.com/history_1.html
Eddie Cramer and JImi in Electric Lady -studios
pollux wrote:Yeah, his own studio with dynatube and xite and a StratH-Rave wrote:stardust wrote:He would have dynatube and xite and a Stratocaster....
Or maybe he would have had any amount of Amps he wanted with any number or make of Electric Guitars And of course his own Studio.This seems a bit more likely.
and maybe a dog and a hamster.
zangsta, I remember you being a zappa fan as well, so I hope you don't mind setting you straight...zangsta wrote:Hendrix was the first major music artist to own his own recording studio.

http://www.zappa-analysis.com/studio-f.htm
andy
the lunatics are in the hall
the lunatics are in the hall
Thanks, I had no idea, one way or the other.borg wrote:zangsta, I remember you being a zappa fan as well, so I hope you don't mind setting you straight...zangsta wrote:Hendrix was the first major music artist to own his own recording studio.
![]()
I don't know if zappa was the first, but he had his studio already early in the sixties.
http://www.zappa-analysis.com/studio-f.htm
Just got that of Wikipedia.
I of course knew about Jimi´s studio, and did a fast search , to see if I could find a picture or two,
showing the murals painted there. but no luck, so I went for the wikipedia-info,