🌰 1967.
House of Rudolf Valentino, Los Angeles. (Foxy Lady video clip in b/w: 3 minutes)
🌰 1968.
The Experience travel to Atlanta where they perform at the Atlanta Municipal Auditorium at 3 p.m. and again at 8 p.m.. They are supported by Amboy Dukes (for the first show only), Eire Apparent, Vanilla Fudge and Soft Machine.
https://vimeo.com/93524264
Comment by Keith Strickland (Vimeo): ….I went to the matinee concert. I was fourteen years old. I met Jimi, Mitch and Noel after the show. They were sitting in their limo waiting for the driver. I shook Jimi's hand and told him it was a great concert, he said, "Ahhhh, it wasn't soooo good."
Concert (see Debbie’s post for details)
https://plus.google.com/109564805347348145270/posts/h82BrqBq9Hg
🌰 1969.
Woodstock…
Sunday, August 17 – Monday, August 18
Joe Cocker and The Grease Band 💮 Country Joe & the Fish 💮 Ten Years After 💮 The Band 💮 Johnny Winter (Edgar feat.) 💮 Blood, Sweat & Tears 💮 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young 💮 Paul Butterfield Blues Band 💮 Sha Na Na 💮 Jimi Hendrix / Gypsy Sun & Rainbows
Jimi relocated to Shokan, a quiet upstate New York village near Woodstock for the balance of the summer. Here Jimi was accorded sufficient time to relax and refine his new musical direction. In time, the rustic summer retreat served to rejuvenate his creative spirit.
“Jimi was taking a kind of vacation out in the country, trying to get his act together,” explains Eddie Kramer. “It was all part of his developmental process, wood shedding if you want to call it that. With Billy Cox in tow, Jimi revisited his Tennessee roots once more, reaching back to guitarist Larry Lee, another old friend and veteran of the chitlin’ circuit. Where Cox had been actively involved in various music projects prior to heeding Jimi’s call, Lee had just returned from a stint in Vietnam. Also invited to Jimi’s vacation retreat were percussionists Jerry Velez and Juma Sultan. Jimi met Velez at Steve Paul’s Scene Club prior to the breakup of the Experience.
“I had just finished jamming with The McCoys,” explains Velez. “When I walked over to my table, Jimi and his entourage were sitting behind me. A little later, I joined the band on stage again for a few more tunes. When I came back to sit down, he leaned over and said, ‘Listen, I’m recording this jam over at the studio tonight. We’ll be starting around four, after this thing ends tonight. Do you want to come down and jam?’ I said sure. I went over that night and jammed with Jimi and Buddy Miles, and we seemed to hit it off.”
Juma Sultan was actively involved with the Aboriginal Music Society in Woodstock, New York, and was a highly respected percussionist who would performed regularly at the Tinker Street Cinema. Both were received well during their jam’s back at the house and were invited to join Hendrix’s expanded ensemble, Gypsy Sun and Rainbows.
In the weeks prior to the Woodstock festival, Jimi jammed at his rented home, as well as the Tinker Street Cinema in downtown Woodstock. Making its first and only official public appearance, Hendrix’s expanded ensemble Gypsy Sun and Rainbows performs at the Woodstock Music & Art Festival in Bethel, New York. Jimi takes to the Woodstock stage on Monday morning with the support of Mitch Mitchell (drums), Billy Cox (bass & backing vocals), Larry Lee (rhythm guitar), Juma Sultan (percussion), and Jerry Velez (percussion). His extended set includes his magnificent rendition of the “Star Spangled Banner”.
🌰 1970.
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