Showing posts with label Jimi Hendrix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimi Hendrix. Show all posts

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Jimi Hendrix-Are You Experienced






Are You Experienced is the debut album by English/American rock band The Jimi Hendrix Experience.It Was released in 1967, it was the first LP for Track Records.


Jimi Hendrix-Are You Experienced @320
1. Foxy Lady
2. Manic Depression
3. Red House
4. Can You See Me
5. Love Or Confusion
6. I Don't Live Today
7. May This Be Love
8. Fire
9. 3rd Stone from the Sun
10.Remember
11.Are You Experienced
12.Hey Joe
13.Stone Free
14.Purple Haze
15.51st Anniversary
16.The Wind Cries Mary
17.Highway Chile

Here:
part1:
www.mirrorcreator.com/files/NLCQIFLR/JH-AYE.part1.rar_links

part2:
www.mirrorcreator.com/files/EVY2A4ZW/JH-AYE.part2.rar_links

Friday, March 6, 2009

Jimi Hendrix-Live At The Isle Of Wight Festival (Re-Up)



Isle Of Wight Festival was the last music gathering of the 60's.
It marked the return of Jimi Hendrix in England after eighteen months.
Three weeks later Hendrix died in London.


Jimi Hendrix-Live at the isle of Wight Festival @320

1. Intro, God Save The Queen
2. Message To Love
3. Voodoo Child
4. Lover Man
5. Machine Gun
6. Dolly Dagger
7. Red House
8. In From the Storm
9. New Rising Sun



Here: part1 www.uploadjockey.com/download/715107/JH-LATIOWF.part1.rar
part2 www.fileducky.com/OJzbVgEB/

Jimi Hendrix-God Save the Queen(Isle Of Wight)

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Jimi Hendrix-Woke Up This Morning And Found Myself Dead( Re-up)

Info By Wikipedia:


This Album was recorded by Hendrix himself at New York's Scene Club in March 1968. Contrary to urban legend, however, Johnny Winter was not included in the lineup. During track 3, Jim Morrison of the Doors joins the band onstage and remains onstage until Uranus Rock, when he leaves after twice knocking the microphone over.
This recording has been released under a number of titles including High, Live, 'N Dirty, Bleeding Heart, Sunshine of Your Love, Live at the Scene Club and Red House







Jimi Hendrix-Woke Up This Morning And Found Myself Dead @320
1 Red House
2 Woke up this Morning and Found Myself Dead
3 Bleeding Heart
4 Tomorrow Never Knows
5 Morrison's Lament
6 Uranus Rock
7 Outside Woman Blues
8 Sunshine of Your Love




Here:
pt1: sharebee.com/4a68d361
pt2: sharebee.com/0535740f


Jimi Hendrix - Hear My Train A Comin' (Acoustic)

Friday, December 26, 2008

The Jimi Hendrix Concerts-A Collection Of His Most Exciting Concerts (Reupload)

Review by DAVID FRICKE:

The record industry probably has no greater sin on its conscience than the artistic and commercial rape of Jimi Hendrix. Unofficial releases of old hack studio sessions with Curtis Knight and the Isley Brothers dogged him during his lifetime. Since his death in 1970, "greatest hits" reruns, concert and studio-outtake compilations and a virtual torrent of pre-Experience dross have flooded the marketplace. Precious few of them have shown even a fraction of the care and imagination Hendrix diligently applied to record making.
At first glance, The Jimi Hendrix Concerts seems a noble attempt to right a few of those wrongs. Unlike other live Hendrix albums, bootlegs excepted, this set attempts to simulate a complete Hendrix concert performance with selections taken mostly from a 1968 stand at San Francisco's Winterland with the original Experience. Yet for all the incendiary rage and manic daring with which Hendrix attacks his guitar on nowclassic blasts like "Fire" and "Voodoo Chile (Slight Return)," this album is hardly "a collection of his most exciting performances," which is how it's billed on the back cover. For starters, producer Alan Douglas has put these tracks through a studio ringer that compresses the Stratocaster shriek that shook the world into a seductively muted sting. Where "Little Wing"–with its high cathedrallike grace and serenading melody – should sing, it merely shrugs, the dulled edge of Hendrix' guitar aggravated by the moping pace of the Experience. And compare the slightly glazed guitar tone of the breathless opener, "Fire," with the savage, unretouched bite of "Johnny B. Goode" on the now deleted Hendrix in the West.
More significant, The Jimi Hendrix Concerts finds Hendrix, a year after Monterey, already caught between his rock & roll muse and the hard place of stardom. His frustration with the "wild man of rock" image is evident in the rote recitation of his Monterey show-stopper, "Wild Thing." He introduces a London 1969 take of "Stone Free" as a "blast from the past," opening up the song in an extended solo that falls back on familiar licks and feedback grandstanding before dissolving into a blustery Mitch Mitchell drum break. There are moments when he breaks gloriously free. "I Don't Live Today" explodes in metallic shards of guitar and feedback flames, Hendrix painting white-noise abstractions with a stupefying harmonic logic. "Are You Experienced" is rich in dissonant grandeur, an electrifying example of Hendrix' orchestral manipulation of high volume and harmonic overtones. His inventive blues expansions get ample space in "Bleeding Heart," and the soul at the heart of it all hits a locomotive peak in the passionate finale, "Hear My Train a-Comin'."
On the whole, this is a marked improvement over previous "official" live issues, and occasionally it approaches his real genius. But the emasculating postproduction and sometimes confused performances are a distorted mirror of Jimi Hendrix' true achievements. The Jimi Hendrix Concerts, for all its good intentions, is not the real experience

The Jimi Hendrix Concerts @320
1. Fire
2. I Don't Live Today
3. Red House
4. Stone Free
5. Are You Experienced?
6. Litte Wing
7. Voodoo Chile
8. Bleeding Heart
9. Hey Joe
10. Wild Thing
11. Hear My Train a Comin'
12. Foxey Lady

Here:
pt1: sharebee.com/c29352c8
pt2: sharebee.com/47071da2
ps: echoesof-the-past.blogspot.com