"The definitive film about the legendary rock musician, Jimi Hendrix."
I just viewed the new ( and much overdue) American Masters documentary about Jimi Hendrix. It was a good film, and contained a lot of new footage & interviews with friends and fellow musicians. But it had the same oversight that most docs and biopics of the man do: it overlooked his aboriginal ancestry, and the crucial influence that spending a part of his childhood with his Cherokee Indian grandmother in Vancouver had on his outlook, composing and playing. It isn't just that his first album contained an ode to the American Indian (I Don't Live Today), his second album a signature ballad that he referred to as an "Indian thing" (Little Wing) or that these references run throughout his music (Voodoo Chile, Cherokee Mist). What he gets from his indigenous background is an entire naturalist metaphysic that informs both his playing and his composing and the deep organic connection between them.
I also thought that interviewing some blues, jazz and classical musicians (BB King, JOhn McLaughlin/Gil Evans/ miles Davis, Nigel Kennedy) would have brought to light the truly universal aspects of Hendrix's music in a way that still is a little under-appreciated. That mixture of African-American, aboriginal and Whitebread Seattle was the perfect crucible for everything that was current in American popular music and culture up to that time. John McLaughlin simply referred to Hendrix's music as "contemporary music".--as perfect synthesis of blues, jazz R&B and rock as you'll ever find, bound together in part by the sounds of nature.
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