"This is what Britain sounded like in late 1966 and early 1967:
ablaze with rainbow blues, orchestral guitar feedback and the highly personal
cosmic vision of black American emigre Jimi Hendrix. Rescued from dead-end
gigs in New York by ex-Animal Chas Chandler, Hendrix arrived in London
in September 1966, quickly formed the Experience with bassist Noel Redding
and drummer Mitch Mitchell and, in a matter of weeks -- when he wasn't
touring the country or jamming in clubs -- was recording the songs that
comprised the original, differing U.K. and U.S. editions of his epochal
debut. The incendiary poetry of Hendrix's guitar was historic in itself,
the luminescent sum of his chitlin-circuit labors with Little Richard
and the Isley Brothers and his melodic exploitation of amp howl. But it
was the pictorial heat of his composing and the raw fire in his voice
in "Manic Depression," "The Wind Cries Mary" and "I
Don't Live Today" that established the transcendent promise of psychedelia.
Hendrix made soul music for inner space. "It's a collection of free
feeling and imagination," he said of the album. "Imagination
is very important." Drugs were not. Widely assumed to be about an
acid trip, "Purple Haze," the opening track on the '67 U.S.
LP, had "nothing to do with drugs," Hendrix insisted. "
'Purple Haze' was all about a dream I had that I was walking under the
sea." (Rolling Stone)
Total album sales: 4 million // Peak chart position: 5
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