Jimi Hendrix Hated These Five Bands

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  • čas přidán 10. 05. 2024
  • Jimi Hendrix Hated These Five Bands
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @worldgonewrong2049
    @worldgonewrong2049 Před 14 dny +396

    Hendrix spent more time praising and welcoming musicians than he did crapping all over them. So I think a lot of what is put together here is BS.

    • @kingtrance307
      @kingtrance307 Před 14 dny +7

      No - Carman Appice says much of the same in live interviews.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny +21

      true but not LZ. Jimi praised both Jimmy Page and John Bonham as musicians but naturally Jimi would have intimately know all of the songs LZ ripped off on their first two albums.

    • @user-it8on1qp9m
      @user-it8on1qp9m Před 14 dny +2

      @worldgonewrong2049....That's kind of what I thought. I left a comment but I should've questioned the integrity of this video first.

    • @kingtrance307
      @kingtrance307 Před 14 dny +21

      Zeppelin borrowed from everybody (that’s very obvious) but it’s not like it’s a great sin. Everybody borrows from everyone and musicians call them their “influences.” It’s just that in Zeppelins case it was a little more obvious. No doubt they were a legendary and talented band though.

    • @Chakirisan
      @Chakirisan Před 14 dny +22

      Most of Floyd’s most prolific music came out well after Hendrix died. The early stuff with Sid Barrett was simple by today’s standards but at the time in England it was progressive. I doubt Hendrix wasted any time criticizing other bands.

  • @DanC-go9lc
    @DanC-go9lc Před 13 dny +222

    I personally spoke with Jimi at the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970 and he told me he specifically loved all the bands (and Motown) you mentioned. However, he also mentioned 5 things he really did HATE --- clickbait, posers, influencers, the internet and camera phone addiction.

  • @williamfarr8807
    @williamfarr8807 Před 14 dny +259

    Just for some perspective, Jimi Hendrix died on September 18, 1970. Led Zeppelin had only been around 22 months and Led Zeppelin III and IV had not been released. Likewise, Hendrix died before the releases of Pink Floyd’s Atom Heart Mother, Meddle, or The Dark Side of the Moon, and before Floyd’s big stadium tours with light shows.

    • @jimwerner9785
      @jimwerner9785 Před 14 dny +18

      I don't think he would have changed his mind on Zeppelin stealing songs - he didn't say they were bad, just that they stole material

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny +6

      Obviously you don't know much about LZ. Otherwise, you are making excuses for them. LZ1 had 6 cover songs from 9 songs. LZ2 had 4 cover songs from 9 songs. The big hits such as Whole Lotta Love were a complete rip off. Whole Lotta Love was a double cover and stole the Small Faces cover of the original You Need Love.

    • @eaglesonmusicgroupltdeagle8138
      @eaglesonmusicgroupltdeagle8138 Před 14 dny +1

      I ll take jimi over any of those others . Always.
      Pages song writing grew morr inyeresting than the 1st album . I ll give them that.
      Gilmout and waterd song writing came along wsy too. But if u seen them in a club without the big production striped right down. I think u would get what jimi meant.
      As for morrison. Well when u get on stsge with jimi. U aint in the doors. . Different story.
      Jimi was the most incredible by far
      And thats a. Unanimous statement

    • @doscwolny2221
      @doscwolny2221 Před 14 dny +6

      ​@@eaglesonmusicgroupltdeagle8138 If you strip Floyd's songs back, you still get really nice songs..
      Anyway Hendrix didn't dislike Floyd later(he did earlier in his career) he said something to the effect of' what people don't understand about Floyd is they are rocks mad scientists ' at this point he admired them.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny

      @@eaglesonmusicgroupltdeagle8138 LZ were a band. Page did not exclusively write songs. He cannot be compared in any way shape or form to Hendrix. Robert Plant wrote the lyrics to Stairway

  • @sgblues4238
    @sgblues4238 Před 14 dny +29

    You know your drug use is out of control when Hendrix thinks you’re too stoned and your behavior is inappropriate.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 11 dny

      Ironically, Jimmy Page said he bumped into Hendrix in a club in 1969 (I think) but Hendrix was totally out of it and so Page couldn't talk to him properly as Hendrix was wasted.

    • @metacosmos
      @metacosmos Před 6 dny

      @@lyndoncmp5751 SOME SAY HENDRIX WAS KILL WITH DRUGS BY THE cia BECAUSE HE WAS SO PROLIFIC AND INFLUENTIAL AND CREATIVE. The cia WAS RIGHT IN KILLING hENDRIX BECAUSE HE WAS THE FIRST TO RAISE THE VOLUME OF THE AMPLIFIERS TO SATURATION LEVELS, inventing by this way hard rock e, heavy , punk and other styles which rely in distortion and high amplification, bringing a decade , the 70's , of excesses followed by the 80's with more excesses even.

    • @diegoferreiro9478
      @diegoferreiro9478 Před 2 dny

      The worst part is that Jimi taped it all.
      Jim was particularlly drunk that night.

    • @kevinmcconnell3641
      @kevinmcconnell3641 Před 20 hodinami

      Hendrix is reputed to seldom got on stage that he wasn’t tripping on LSD!

  • @philipbrackpool-bk1bm
    @philipbrackpool-bk1bm Před 14 dny +140

    If you read about Hendrix you’ll know this is total garbage.

    • @dyndas7943
      @dyndas7943 Před 14 dny +5

      I agree ,Led Zeppelin was just starting and I doubt he even heard of Pink Floyd -trying to get views with the title ?

    • @Ian-sj1wy
      @Ian-sj1wy Před 14 dny +10

      ​@@dyndas7943 You dont know what you are talking about. Hendrix toured the UK with Pink Floyd and the Move in 1967.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny +5

      Actually, it is true. However the word "hated" would not apply.

    • @dyndas7943
      @dyndas7943 Před 14 dny +1

      @@Ian-sj1wy you may be right -just the years didn't match.

    • @alanstrom2221
      @alanstrom2221 Před 14 dny +3

      @@dyndas7943
      Pink Floyd started in 1965, plenty of time for people to hear of them.

  • @VIDSTORAGE
    @VIDSTORAGE Před 13 dny +17

    He would have liked Floyd and Zep if he had survived a decade more

    • @mikej70
      @mikej70 Před 13 dny +3

      He did have criticism of all of them this is overblown he did say zeppelin borrowed too much but said Bonham had afoot like a rabbit said page was a good player but didn't listen to them

    • @VIDSTORAGE
      @VIDSTORAGE Před 13 dny

      @@mikej70 OH yea , many vids have hyped titles when its about celebrities .. It does get the clicks

    • @graciekattan6618
      @graciekattan6618 Před 12 dny +1

      Idk he might find them too sex charged with their lyrics. That’s also how Kurt felt about them. Especially if Jimi had a strong moral compass he might not have liked it 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 11 dny

      He really got into Led Zeppelin II later in 1970 according to one of his technician friends. He was a latecomer to Zeppelin but he got there in the end. A lot of people didn't 'get' Zeppelin at first, but caught onto them eventually. Seems like Jimi was one of them.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 11 dny

      @graciekattan6618
      Hendrix? The guy who got his penis plaster cast by Cynthia Plaster Caster, to be put on display in her collection of penis casts? That guy? Moral compass? 😂

  • @WARDISWARD
    @WARDISWARD Před 14 dny +28

    Hnt : If yo want to upload videos , don't rely on those artificial A;I. voices , it sucks and brings the quality of your video's below freezing point

  • @rustybear5125
    @rustybear5125 Před 14 dny +129

    I guess lighting your guitar on fire isn't considered a gimmick....OK.

    • @christheother9088
      @christheother9088 Před 14 dny +16

      Or playing with his mouth.

    • @SmokeyTreats
      @SmokeyTreats Před 13 dny +9

      @@christheother9088 Or F'ing the front of his Marshalls.

    • @JackSparrow-yb3lq
      @JackSparrow-yb3lq Před 13 dny +15

      The lighting his guitar happened once and it was after the performance. It was not a regular part of his show.

    • @JayWalsh
      @JayWalsh Před 13 dny +4

      Because that hadn't been done before.

    • @tomasvanecek8626
      @tomasvanecek8626 Před 13 dny +2

      @@christheother9088 You cant really do THAT :) believe me.. I tried. It was all just a legato played by his left hand there.. oh, his right hand, cos he was a leftie

  • @GeorgeSmiley77
    @GeorgeSmiley77 Před 14 dny +27

    His criticisms of LZ resonate with me even tho they're in my top 5 fave rock bands. The artists they "borrowed" from got paid eventually, but by then a lot of their lives was already in the past, and they'd deserved to get that money while they were still young. His criticisms of PF made sense _at the time._ Jim Morrison was certainly a drunken jerk at times. The Monkees were created as a TV band, nothing much should be expected of them, their biggest hits were written by others.

    • @plantagenant
      @plantagenant Před 13 dny

      Some of the artists they "borrowed" from were already dead...the Estate of the artists got it. Regardless, many of them , especially the blues artists would have been languishing in obscurity if they hadn't been rediscovered esp by the British Blues Rock artists of the 60's. They probably made more money from LZ and others covering their tunes than they'd earned before or would have.

    • @Stublinsky
      @Stublinsky Před 13 dny

      Led Zeppelin didn't "borrow" shit, Led Zeppelin literally stole other people's songs and credited them to themselves !
      Compare the songwriting credits on Zeppelin's original albums to the songwriting credits on Zeppelin's re-issued albums !
      NOTICE ANY DIFFERENCE ?????????
      The original artists got paid only when the Led Zeppelin plagiarists were confronted by serious legal action.
      Led Zeppelin were the lowest of thieving mangy dogs !

    • @eahannan
      @eahannan Před 13 dny +1

      I agree with this. Any criticism of LZ is valid . He wasn’t the only one. But while validating criticisms their music soars with and above the best . For 100% Authenticity you will end up writing two tracks a year.

    • @yokailover
      @yokailover Před 13 dny +2

      Oddly enough, the 4 bands that were named all sold more albums during their tenure than JH.......

    • @Eatpoopandexpire
      @Eatpoopandexpire Před 12 dny

      Exactly how I feel, except for Motown. Motown is for times when you just want to BBQ or sit by a pool and soak up some sun. Good times music is fine with me.

  • @franksullivan1873
    @franksullivan1873 Před 14 dny +90

    Well if Zep stole from everyone ,they sure did know how to spend it.

    • @rcameron4091
      @rcameron4091 Před 14 dny +9

      I always remind Zep haters . There isn't a band on earth that is totally original . We all learn and are influenced by someone before us . Zep weren't afraid to take any genre and make it their own .

    • @steveludwig4200
      @steveludwig4200 Před 13 dny +7

      @@rcameron4091 Zep was lameass LIVE because Page and Plant were always stoned....

    • @Stublinsky
      @Stublinsky Před 13 dny

      @@rcameron4091 Yeah, and unlike Led Zeppelin, people like Jimi Hendrix gave credit where credit was due without being dragged into court.
      Led Zeppelin literally stole other people's music and claimed it as their own !
      Take a look at the songwriting credits on Zeppelin's original albums, and compare them to the songwriting credits on Zeppelin's re-issued albums !!!
      NOTICE ANY DIFFERENCE ???????
      When Eric Clapton covered a JJ Cale song, he gave credit to JJ Cale; when Jimi Hendrix covered a Bob Dylan song he gave credit to Bob Dylan.
      That's the difference between plagiarizing mangy dogs like Led Zeppelin and people like Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, and Pete Townshend.
      It's called integrity, and that's something thieves like Led Zeppelin never had !!!!!!

    • @rcameron4091
      @rcameron4091 Před 13 dny +2

      @@steveludwig4200 Yep . They weren't the only one's under the influence on stage .

    • @rocketpigrecords3719
      @rocketpigrecords3719 Před 13 dny

      Willie Dixon stole the majority of his songs from country buskers fresh off the bus from the Delta or wherever.
      "Here's $20, play that again."
      He was a broke junkie in the South Side by the 70s, and would've remained that way if not for Zep and his lawsuit.

  • @tattyshoesshigure5731
    @tattyshoesshigure5731 Před 14 dny +53

    Strange that Jimi thought Motown music was lacking in genuine emotion… classic recordings like Dancing In The Street, Shop Around, Ball of Confusion etc are so emotionally charged they can move you to tears!

    • @GeorgeSmiley77
      @GeorgeSmiley77 Před 14 dny +11

      _It was the third of September / That day I'll always remember / Coz that was the day / That my daddy died_
      Nope, no emotion there at all!
      _Tears of a Clown_ - nothing to do with emotion
      _Sitting on the Dock of the Bay_ - pure triteness

    • @bigg4454
      @bigg4454 Před 14 dny +8

      Probably dug more rawness in music and not the highly "polished" sound of Motown. I can relate to his take on Motown. Not a bad thing mind you, but just a opinion.

    • @ednicholson7839
      @ednicholson7839 Před 14 dny +4

      Motown, with its string sections and marching rhythms, was more polished than Atlantic with Ray Charles and Aretha Franklin, and Stax with Otis Redding and Isaac Hayes, and all the other smaller labels that had everyone from James Brown to Solomon Burke to Al Green. Before he became a star Jimi played on the chitlin circuit with Little Richard and the Isley Brothers -- he probably preferred the more down home stuff.

    • @kevincurpheymusic
      @kevincurpheymusic Před 14 dny +3

      Bowie felt the same way about Motown music. He said Pennsylvania was the true home of R&B, and that Motown was given the credit, after stealing it, for political reasons.

    • @paddymeboy
      @paddymeboy Před 13 dny +1

      Speak for yourself! I hate Dancing in the Street, for one, and obv although there were some talented people at Motown it was basically manufactured music - a hit factory.

  • @Gohot229
    @Gohot229 Před 14 dny +15

    I visited Jimi, at the time in LA's history that he lived in the Afton aparments and before I went to Vietnam.. Some of his friends called him Marshal Dillon, kind of after Gunsmoke. James Marshal Hendrix. Anyway as we sat in his living room he played. I could of swore he was playing like voices almost making his guitar sound like it was talking. He was that GOOD. I never saw him again and sadly he came to a tragic end.

    • @alanstrom2221
      @alanstrom2221 Před 14 dny

      The correct English grammar is "I could have sworn"
      not what you typed "I could of swore"
      LSD makes it sound like the Guitar is talking.

    • @dennissourvanos737
      @dennissourvanos737 Před 14 dny +5

      @@alanstrom2221 Way to go, critiquing someone story. Does that make you feel like a real man????

    • @geraldtanderson9044
      @geraldtanderson9044 Před 14 dny +6

      @alanstrom2221 You know what he meant, why be an "ass" about it. Or the correct English grammar, why be an "asshole" about it.

    • @wtf1185
      @wtf1185 Před 14 dny +1

      @@alanstrom2221 People often confuse could've for could of and Jimi's ingenious use of his wah wah pedal and phrasing made it seem like words were coming from his guitar.

    • @Gohot229
      @Gohot229 Před 13 dny +2

      @@alanstrom2221 ...curiously enough that is why I went to his place, to score a hit of acid. He had and gave me one hit, a strawberry barrel. Jimmy was a friend of Odin Fong in Laguna Canyon's Orange Sunshine crowd. However I was 100% straight when we were in the aparment and he was picking.
      The correction, well through it all, I suppose picking apart gives you the loss. An unexpeced consequence of .....well, carry-on.. NEVERHELESS, I thought Jim could make the guitar talk in the months to come.. Thinking back, I did see him again at the Wisky on Sunset...

  • @LANDSEAAIRCANADA
    @LANDSEAAIRCANADA Před 12 dny +8

    how strange many YT channels convey information from Long Dead musicians... you never knew him nor do you have any connection to this man

    • @linuswang6572
      @linuswang6572 Před 7 dny

      Oh, shut up. There's tons of old JH interviews available if you care to look for them. You don't need to be bff with the guy find out info of the kind that's in this clip.

    • @LANDSEAAIRCANADA
      @LANDSEAAIRCANADA Před 7 dny

      @@linuswang6572 no you shut up

  • @ImYourOverlord
    @ImYourOverlord Před 14 dny +9

    He didn't hate Led Zeppelin. Hate is an extreme position to take.

    • @JackSparrow-yb3lq
      @JackSparrow-yb3lq Před 13 dny +1

      The title of this video said hated but then contradicted by then saying that Jimi said he doesn't think about them at all. Not exactly hating.

    • @ImYourOverlord
      @ImYourOverlord Před 13 dny

      @@JackSparrow-yb3lq I recalled that from the first time I saw an interview where he said exactly that, so yeah, plus the kind of person he was...no real hate :)

    • @jeffreycollier1059
      @jeffreycollier1059 Před 6 dny

      The word 'hate' back then (and for a long time) was used to mean dislike or strongly dislike, not 'appalled'.

  • @filmsforsmartpeople3587
    @filmsforsmartpeople3587 Před 14 dny +25

    I was somewhat surprised Jimi hated Led Zep, The Doors, and Pink Floyd. so, whatever, it's his opinion...I hated The Monkees back then too, but today i think their songs are actually better than the bland crap they call pop music today.

    • @edgarwalk5637
      @edgarwalk5637 Před 14 dny +3

      He just didn't get along with Jim Morrison, but I'd bet he liked the band as a whole. As for Led Zep, and Pink Floyd, I don't like them much either; they have some good songs and all, but I could not for the life of me sit through a whole album from either of them,

    • @gavintuesday4959
      @gavintuesday4959 Před 12 dny +3

      The Jim Morrison stories are true. After a big gig , Jimmy and Janis Joplin were jamming in a New York club, and Morrison made a total wanker of himself . He was also extremely rude to Joplin

    • @gavintuesday4959
      @gavintuesday4959 Před 12 dny +1

      @@edgarwalk5637why would he liked the band ? The Doors were a rip off of Them (Van Morrison) and other British groups

    • @dellafenton2417
      @dellafenton2417 Před 8 dny +2

      ​@@gavintuesday4959I suppose we'll never know for sure, we weren't there. I have read that Janis and Jim Morrison had beef with each other. I'm a huge fan of all of them, the only thing that's certain in my mind is that they'll never be forgotten and their music lives on....

    • @TheMistige
      @TheMistige Před 6 dny +2

      3:01 in the vid: it reads Jimi said he hated the SPOT they put him to play: right before the Monkees came up.
      Just not the audience for Jimi's band.
      It also reads he got along with (at least) two of the Monkees.

  • @jamesanderson348
    @jamesanderson348 Před 14 dny +35

    This is bogus. I have lots of reservations about what he supposedly said.

    • @linuswang6572
      @linuswang6572 Před 7 dny

      Oh, shut up. There's tons of old JH interviews available if you care to look for them. To me, these comments seem pretty much in character for Hendrix.

  • @jeffmcmillan1786
    @jeffmcmillan1786 Před 14 dny +27

    1) Led Zeppelin
    2) Pink Floyd
    3) The Monkees
    4) The Doors (Mostly Jim Morrison though)
    5) some Motown bands Jimi had worked with (not named specifically)

    • @SS_Psyops
      @SS_Psyops Před 12 dny +2

      Seems like a solid list although I do like Pink Floyd’s first record TBF. The rest, not at all though.

    • @cbotten106
      @cbotten106 Před 6 dny

      The Monkees? Lol, Jimi had that one right.

    • @richardnolan3903
      @richardnolan3903 Před 6 dny +1

      @@cbotten106 The Monkees were never meant to be anything other than a fictional band for the TV show of the same name. However, they were actually pretty good.

    • @willwilliams7491
      @willwilliams7491 Před 7 hodinami

      @@richardnolan3903 Most of their album songs were played by studio musicians, including Neil Diamond. The Wrecking Crew was also responsible for a lot of their studio compilations. Unless you've seen them live, it's hard to tell how good/bad they were instrumentally.

  • @sstaners1234
    @sstaners1234 Před 14 dny +12

    The funny thing is that Pink Floyd and the Monkees toured with Hendrix. I can’t help but wonder who he would have listened to in this day and age.
    I’m guessing everyone who came out of the CBGB’s.

    • @anitaanderson2871
      @anitaanderson2871 Před 11 dny

      Actually, Hendrix toured with The Monkees - he opened for THEM.

    • @jono1457-qd9ft
      @jono1457-qd9ft Před 7 dny

      And he toured with Pink Floyd in late '67

    • @robertjackson2663
      @robertjackson2663 Před 5 dny

      Taylor Swift !

    • @willwilliams7491
      @willwilliams7491 Před 7 hodinami

      I do know that Terry Kath was one of Hendrix's favorite guitar players. As for what the future looked like for Jimi, he wanted to get more into Jazz and orchestrated music. There are a few tunes that he actually got out that had that production.
      Chances are, he would have been entertained by that style today, along with other genres as he himself wrote across the board.

  • @danielschaeffer1294
    @danielschaeffer1294 Před 14 dny +6

    I can see why Jimi dismissed Morrison. Jimi was a stoner and a peacenik, Morrison was a drunk, and drunks can get really obnoxious, violent, and embarrassing. The fact is, though, that Jimi was clearly heavily influenced by the blues - “Voodoo Child” is a rewrite of Son House’s “ Death Letter Blues,” for example - and such modern jazz people as Wes Montgomery, Larry Coryell, Sandy Bull, and John McLaughlin. When Morrison could get temporarily sober, The Doors were equally professional and sophisticated, which is why their music is still fresh and valid.

  • @patrickcolon8809
    @patrickcolon8809 Před 13 dny +8

    The Monkees, especially Michael Nesmith, loved Jimi Hendrix ...... when Hendrix was booed off of the stage when he opened for the Monkees, Nesmith was embarrassed for him and felt like the audience had no taste.

    • @josh-rz3uq
      @josh-rz3uq Před 9 dny +1

      If they had taste they wouldn't be paying to see the Monkees.

    • @patrickcolon8809
      @patrickcolon8809 Před 9 dny +3

      @@josh-rz3uq Anybody that knows anything about the Monkees knows that they were criminally underrated. They had no taste because they booed Jimi Hendrix, not because they came to see the Monkees.

  • @KaBoomChannel
    @KaBoomChannel Před 13 dny +62

    He didn't like Taylor Swift

  • @stuartjones7229
    @stuartjones7229 Před 14 dny +6

    Hendrix was a musician par excellence, and the like of him will never be seen again.

    • @rogernevin7461
      @rogernevin7461 Před 8 dny

      Well said Stuart,I was lucky enough to see him in 1967 when i was 15. He was the 'dog's bollocks' then and he still is now. Often imitated never equalled.

    • @Narsuitus
      @Narsuitus Před 4 dny

      I saw and heard a lot of Hendrix in Stevie Ray Vaughan.

  • @deanberolzheimer2658
    @deanberolzheimer2658 Před 9 dny +2

    I met Jimi backstage at the Filmore, He told me hated Steely Dan, he hated their "curlycue" guitar and their sophmoric lyrics, he also told me he really hated ABBA and The Talking Heads. He also told me their was an 11 year kid named Stevie Ray Vance or something like that that steals everything from everyone!

  • @broomfool
    @broomfool Před 14 dny +135

    Hendrix was dead before Led Zeppelin's golden patch happened.

    • @bernardopanato3803
      @bernardopanato3803 Před 14 dny +14

      he´ll be proud of zeppelin if he saw stairway to heaven

    • @McGovP
      @McGovP Před 14 dny +18

      and Floyd

    • @broomfool
      @broomfool Před 14 dny +19

      @@bernardopanato3803 Kashmir would have got a smile out of Hendrix.

    • @jimwerner9785
      @jimwerner9785 Před 14 dny +14

      he was also dead before all the lawsuits for stealing songs! He didn't like them for stealing material - I don't think he would have changed his mind much on that subject

    • @GreggOliverBass
      @GreggOliverBass Před 14 dny +12

      He said they stole from everybody... that's been proven over and over... that being said, most rock musicians steal quite a bit from each other and call it "influence". Hendrix was an anomaly because lots of the songs on Axis and Electric Ladyland are unlike anything that preceded it.

  • @jonathanedwards8696
    @jonathanedwards8696 Před 14 dny +16

    I wonder what Hendrix thought of King Crimson.

    • @wz2001
      @wz2001 Před 14 dny +22

      He called King Crimson the best band in the world. No lie.

    • @williamfarr8807
      @williamfarr8807 Před 14 dny +13

      I know Hendrix had high praise for Robert Fripp’s guitar playing.

    • @jonathanedwards8696
      @jonathanedwards8696 Před 14 dny +2

      @@wz2001 Thanks! Good to know!

    • @jonathanedwards8696
      @jonathanedwards8696 Před 14 dny +1

      @@wz2001 Thanks! Good to know! Where did you read that? I remember reading someplace that all those bands like The Who, The Stones, The Beatles, The Kinks, The Yardbirds, all hung out at the same place in London. So they all knew each other.

    • @wz2001
      @wz2001 Před 14 dny

      @@jonathanedwards8696 Look for the video where Robert Fripp talks about when he met Hendrix.

  • @user-qq4ev6il2r
    @user-qq4ev6il2r Před 14 dny +16

    Hendrix' equipment manager Gerry Stickells said "He liked the Zeppelin and had their records" and girlfriend Kathy Etchingham confirmed this when an interview in "Guitar World" magazine elicited the fact that he had a copy of "Led Zeppelin II" in his record collection at their Montague Street flat in London. He also liked Motown, played for the Isley Brothers and basically copied James Jamerson's bass style when he recorded his version of "All along the Watchtower", which Noel Redding had refused to play on.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 11 dny

      Yes I also heard he really liked Led Zeppelin II.

    • @linuswang6572
      @linuswang6572 Před 7 dny

      Well, he's quoted dissing Motown quite heavily here so... And Motown was regarded as exrtremely polished and commercial 'assembly line-produced' music at the time. It makes sense that it wasn't his cup of tea.

  • @janicefrantz1831
    @janicefrantz1831 Před 14 dny +3

    Chris Squire, of Yes, tells a story of Hendrix. Chris offered to sit in on a Hendrix gig because Noel Redding didn't show up. After the show, Hendrix said to Chris, "if you can't play, why did you offer?" 😅

    • @dan-ws2sf
      @dan-ws2sf Před 12 dny +6

      Maybe Jimi was stoned out of his trip as usual because Chris Squire was one of the best rock bassists ever🙄

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman7582 Před 13 dny +3

    A lady who lives around the corner from me went to see the Monkees as a teen in the old Odeon Renfield Street Glasgow and walked out on the support act, Jimi Hendrix.

    • @gavintuesday4959
      @gavintuesday4959 Před 12 dny

      The fact that she went to see the Monkees says it all, anyway , she already paid so ..

  • @bernardopanato3803
    @bernardopanato3803 Před 14 dny +15

    jimi hendrix once said: Music is religion.

    • @wtf1185
      @wtf1185 Před 14 dny

      Jimi Hendrix Experience: Electric church, Atlanta Pop Festival July 4, 1970. Great DVD, great concert. I was there.

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud Před 18 hodinami

      so did j morrison

  • @cataclysmicconverter
    @cataclysmicconverter Před 13 dny +36

    Hendrix's whole career was shorter lived than some things I have in my freezer.

    • @deenine
      @deenine Před 11 dny +4

      Yup...and look at the influence he still has...

    • @cataclysmicconverter
      @cataclysmicconverter Před 11 dny +1

      @@deenine No argument about that. Just perspective of the bogus info and timeline in this whole video.

    • @sharonlee4773
      @sharonlee4773 Před 11 dny

      What's you point?

    • @cataclysmicconverter
      @cataclysmicconverter Před 10 dny +1

      @@sharonlee4773 Only the perspective to the numerous points made that he could not have been around to have heard the music/bands he supposedly didn’t like.

    • @JonByrd-ip6ko
      @JonByrd-ip6ko Před 9 dny

      Amen !!!😂

  • @richardhincemon
    @richardhincemon Před 13 dny +3

    Mickey Dolenz was a huge Hendrix fan and got his manager to agree to tour with the Monkees 😂

  • @antonio8897
    @antonio8897 Před 13 dny +3

    I can understand where Hendrix is coming from. Guy was a deep thinker in regards to music as an art form.

  • @lorenzor2555
    @lorenzor2555 Před 14 dny +9

    I think he liked especially Dylan, the Cream and the Beatles

  • @CAMPGMAY
    @CAMPGMAY Před 11 dny +3

    Hendrix didn't hate

  • @Aikitide
    @Aikitide Před 14 dny +28

    Bull Pucky. Too much creative imagination on the part of whoever put this together.

    • @geraldtanderson9044
      @geraldtanderson9044 Před 14 dny +1

      Some 20 year old to lazy to get a real job, sitting on his bed in his Mothers house (not Studio Six), digging up any old video footage he can find and then embellishing everything.

  • @user-qb1sm3rk9r
    @user-qb1sm3rk9r Před 14 dny +11

    Hendrix didn't really "hate" any of these. He didn't think much of Led Zeppelin because he knew the plagiarism. The Monkees- well he toured with them but they were the total opposite of his music. And he was actually friends with Jim Morrison.

  • @matthiasjanbrungers4978
    @matthiasjanbrungers4978 Před 13 dny +4

    Hendrix liked the early Pink Floyd

    • @AP-sd1fl
      @AP-sd1fl Před 2 dny +1

      The only creative Pink Floyd with Syd Barrett.

    • @squiddygirl1633
      @squiddygirl1633 Před dnem

      ​@AP-sd1fl Facts! Syd's Pink Floyd is the true Pink Floyd 💯

  • @kiloechocharliekool2151
    @kiloechocharliekool2151 Před 13 dny +10

    Most amazing guitarist produced by this planet, however...
    If Zepplin didn't redo the old blues tunes by black artists, you'd never know their names today.
    Morrison was an unhinged drunk and a boor.
    Why would he, even if broke, agree to a bill with the Monkees?
    Pink Floyd? Why would he care? Apples and oranges.
    What would he think of the shite, tripe and crap of today?
    He'd have to be hospitalized...

  • @Allen-jn4kx
    @Allen-jn4kx Před 10 dny +2

    Actually Hendrix said that he did like Pink Floyd. There is audio of him talking about it. Though I never got the impression he was a super fan.

  • @econecoff1725
    @econecoff1725 Před 13 dny +11

    Zep's "borrowing" is not a sin in my book, but rather not giving credit. I enjoy great reinterpretations of older material, but Zep should have acknowledged them.

    • @gavintuesday4959
      @gavintuesday4959 Před 12 dny

      It’s theft, by every definition . Theft and specifically plagiarism, as in passing off work that it not yours is a sin in the art world . Go back to English language class . Ffs . Zeppelin fan boys really are idiots

    • @DonTerhune1200cc
      @DonTerhune1200cc Před 12 dny

      Agreed. However it's reasonable to suspect their manager Peter Grant had a lot to do w/ that decision.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 11 dny

      There were at least half a dozen songs where Zeppelin did credit others, without prompting. Including 2 on the first album. There were another 2 songs they didnt claim they wrote.

  • @user-it8on1qp9m
    @user-it8on1qp9m Před 14 dny +23

    Didn't like gimmicks? The man who set guitar on fire? Integrity of performance? Out of tune and playing with teeth? Motown was badass. So much great music. Didn't like Motor City jam? Huh. Well anyway...Jiminy certainly got credit for his contributions. RIP

    • @doscwolny2221
      @doscwolny2221 Před 14 dny +2

      Lol. Yes you are correct.
      The old psychology trick of blaming others for what you are doing.

    • @christineobrien7707
      @christineobrien7707 Před 14 dny +1

      I believe the guitar playing with his teeth was seen as cunnilingus .Then Morrison exposing himself on stage numerous times.Neither one was better than the other!

    • @user-it8on1qp9m
      @user-it8on1qp9m Před 14 dny

      @christineobrien7707 OH I agree completely! Both were born into that Era.

    • @angelanunn1155
      @angelanunn1155 Před 13 dny

      Well said, totally agree

    • @tomasvanecek8626
      @tomasvanecek8626 Před 13 dny +1

      @@christineobrien7707 He NEVER played a guitar with his teeth.. it cant be done, just try it :) I did.. utter nonsence, gimmick.. the notes you hear are his fingerboard hand playing legato... yep, he fooled so many :))

  • @Teachering
    @Teachering Před 14 dny +3

    I'm laughing because I love some of the bands discussed in this video. I mean, why would anyone hate The Monkees? LOL They recorded great tunes.

    • @georgewilliams4258
      @georgewilliams4258 Před 13 dny +2

      Considering that Tork and Nesmith and Mickey Dolenz all talked about what a great guy Jimi was and how they all hung out while they were touring I don't put much faith in this.Granted at that point The Monkees hadn't started recording their own material but I think Jimi was being sarcastic when he said that he hated them.

    • @gomezthechimp1116
      @gomezthechimp1116 Před 13 dny

      Wasn't Nesmith the only musician? They weren't hired as musicians but as comedy actors. I'm sure Hendrix knew that. The fact that they had to learn to play basic tunes at least to go on tour is fantastic, and something that wouldn't happen now. The show would all be mimed and no-one would care. I loved The Monkees as a kid...

    • @georgewilliams4258
      @georgewilliams4258 Před 12 dny

      @@gomezthechimp1116 Peter Tork was a folk singer from New York and could play something like 8 different instruments.Dolenz could play guitar and drums and had one of the first Moog synthesizer.The first two albums were produced by Don Kirshner and they basically sang over pre recorded tracks.Nesmith and Tork rebelled because when they signed on they were promised some degree of studio work.Their third album was played by the 4 of them along with the producer and a horn player.They used studio musicians on the latter albums but played on them.

  • @miltiadisathanasiou4058
    @miltiadisathanasiou4058 Před 13 dny +2

    He has said in interviews that he admired Floyd

  • @michaeldennistooley4271
    @michaeldennistooley4271 Před 14 dny +2

    Different strokes for different folks. Or I guess different sounds for different ears.

  • @jazzonthemoonBACKUP
    @jazzonthemoonBACKUP Před 14 dny +7

    Remember this when someone says your favourite band is not going places / is not talented, people.
    It's just humans criticising humans, usually because no matter their knowledge and experience, they can't understand what's following their own golden era (or they simply have different taste).

  • @LaserRanger15
    @LaserRanger15 Před 14 dny +9

    I think this is a bit exaggerated. Like others said, Floyd and LZ hit their stride after he OD'd. Jim Morrison was a tool, but most of The Doors music was pretty darn original. Of course, The Monkees were lightweights (with some decent pop songs) but the "entire" Motown sound? Nope.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny

      what is exaggerated is claiming LZ & PF are so great when it took them so long to finally get it together. Jimi was commenting on what he heard & saw.

    • @thegreatuniversalprotectio1203
      @thegreatuniversalprotectio1203 Před 14 dny

      @@BarbarraBay There is an interview from 1970 where Jimi says he likes Pink Floyd somewhere.

    • @unabonger777
      @unabonger777 Před 13 dny

      I can't imagine a world where Jimi wouldn't like Stevie Wonder, I don't think I've ever met anyone who doesn't, let alone another musical genius

  • @andrewdalembert3005
    @andrewdalembert3005 Před 14 dny +2

    Whats that song 1:38 ? please

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny +2

      Nobody's Fault But Mine, from the 1976 LZ album Presence, a cover of Blind Willie Johnson 1927 original.

    • @andrewdalembert3005
      @andrewdalembert3005 Před 14 dny +1

      @@BarbarraBay Thank You :)

  • @Geekeric
    @Geekeric Před 14 dny +2

    Opinions about music from the late '60s and early '70s seem pretty naïve in hindsight, but the Jimi Hendrix Experience were some pretty incredible musicians even though their aesthetic was flawed just like everybody else back then. Except for Stevie Wonder, that guy is the man!

  • @user-sp6jk3zz5b
    @user-sp6jk3zz5b Před 14 dny +6

    To dismiss Led Zeppelin as just copycats is rather ignorant.
    They had some of the greatest musicians in the group and they rocked like no one else before them
    They are legend

  • @FrapyardLP
    @FrapyardLP Před 14 dny +20

    Hendrix died even before Pink Floyds Meddle came out, so way before Dark Side of the Moon. It's actually a surprise he had even heard of them, since their last release before his death was Ummagumma, and I can't blame him for not liking that. I don't know how his opinion has formed though, because I don't think Pink Floyd had big lightshows before DOTM, but I might be wrong. Sounds to me like someone made that up though.

    • @hammer44head
      @hammer44head Před 14 dny +6

      Jimi was very familiar with Pink Floyd, i believe they either played a concert together or a mini tour in 67 with the pinkies, there is a photo with all the bands that played also with Hendrix experience and Pink Floyd and very weird dead eyed Syd.

    • @FrapyardLP
      @FrapyardLP Před 14 dny +4

      @@hammer44head interesting, thanks for letting me know!
      Too bad he couldn't see the greatness they achieved later on.

    • @hammer44head
      @hammer44head Před 14 dny +3

      @@FrapyardLP - He was so young and yeah he missed quite a bit but i'm positive Jimi still had a lot of music in him to give also.

    • @slowpawstevet3676
      @slowpawstevet3676 Před 14 dny +4

      Pink Floyd were famous for their early light shows in the 60's.

    • @FrapyardLP
      @FrapyardLP Před 14 dny +2

      @@slowpawstevet3676 Well, I didn't know that. I saw some of their early concerts where they only played on small club stages with not much of a show. Very interesting to hear!

  • @death2pc
    @death2pc Před 4 dny

    Hendrix visited a Jack In The Box in West Los Angeles one night. He had a plain cheeseburger with some fries and a coke. He drove away in a late model Buick.

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Před 14 dny +1

    3:30 "That's OK fella, I can handle it myself." .. Quite an interesting choice of words.

  • @macabre2007
    @macabre2007 Před 14 dny +9

    this is all based on hearsay - Jimi wasn't known to distain music, his onus was what it was, but all the things he mentions competed with his brand, that's simple to see. This is puerile juvenile revisionism of a substandard content creator

  • @fastaxe107
    @fastaxe107 Před 14 dny +11

    I think it's the remarks made in this video are BS.. Being old enough to remember Jimi Hendrix he was a mellow guy who sometimes didn't even take himself seriously,, and everything that was happening was cool to him,, he never appeared to be a type of person that would insult or put someone down. He always just expressed a lot of love,,,peace and love.

  • @flightsimbuilder
    @flightsimbuilder Před 11 dny +1

    I doubt he would have said any of this had he lived long enough!

  • @trueclean4099
    @trueclean4099 Před 14 dny +1

    If originality was mostly his issue with these bands, I wonder what he would of thought bout Black Sabbath?

  • @user-js2dr9gv1u
    @user-js2dr9gv1u Před 14 dny +5

    I'm very surprised he didn't like The Monkees. How anyone could not like The Monkees is beyond me.

  • @godspeed2939
    @godspeed2939 Před 14 dny +7

    Bullshit that he didn’t like Led… shame on you Jimi would never put down Floyd either.

    • @DonTerhune1200cc
      @DonTerhune1200cc Před 12 dny

      Jimi didn't live long enough to hear Pink Floyd w/ David Gilmore.

    • @godspeed2939
      @godspeed2939 Před 11 dny

      @@DonTerhune1200cc damn straight !

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 11 dny +1

      Elsewhere I read that Hendrix really got into Led Zeppelin II.

  • @jaythompson01
    @jaythompson01 Před 10 dny +1

    alot of musicians don't know, they THINK they know, but they really and truly have no idea about how to play the opening riff of Hendrix's song "Voodoo Chile".
    the riff is played by Hendrix, a left hand user, with a right-handed guitar that has been re-strung for a left handed user.
    they get the pedal work fine and dandy but they constantly fail to know about how Hendrix played.

  • @ShawnPGMaloy
    @ShawnPGMaloy Před 12 dny +1

    Don't know why I'm wasting time doing this but this is probably how all bands talk about each other till they "make it" and if they have still would have had staying power if he didn't die, they would have probably all done projects with each other later.

  • @gaoxiaen1
    @gaoxiaen1 Před 11 dny +4

    The Monkees weren't really a band, they were a TV show about being a band.

  • @tompaulcampbell
    @tompaulcampbell Před 14 dny +5

    I wonder if Hendrix would have been any good if he learned to tune a guitar?

    • @allenblevins7430
      @allenblevins7430 Před 14 dny +3

      They didn't have locking nuts, and tail pieces on guitars then. All of the great guitar players in England went to listen, and were in awe of him. Hendrix did things with the guitar no one had done before. The feedback from his amp seems like old hat now, but that's just one example. LZ couldn't play their own music when the performed for their record label going out of business. Find it, and listen because they sucked big time, and not just from being out of tune.

    • @damianwhite504
      @damianwhite504 Před 14 dny

      or played it the right way up

    • @Bottled-Soap
      @Bottled-Soap Před 13 dny

      Well I will admit he was pretty good

  • @raymond7427
    @raymond7427 Před 8 dny +1

    Hendrix really should have been a boxer, slugging it out in the ring.

  • @doscwolny2221
    @doscwolny2221 Před 14 dny +3

    Hendrix comment on floyd was early on in his career. Later he actually admired pink floyd saying they were the mad rock scientist of the day.
    Hendrix wasnt afraid of calling a spade a spade but he was big enough to accept when he was wrong. He would have loved later floyd and zep

  • @PeterTea
    @PeterTea Před 14 dny +3

    Personally I doubt Hendrix had much disdain for Zeppelin, especially if it is being quoted by Carmine Appice who often had a tenuous attachment to the truth. Didn’t Hendrix complement and even covet John Bonham’s abilities? Would be nice to have some accreditation to these statements too.

  • @patrickcolon8809
    @patrickcolon8809 Před 13 dny +1

    I suspect that Hendrix' dislike for the Monkees was due partly to the fact that he was booed off of the stage when he opened for them. In fact, the Monkees were the embodiment of musical resilience ...... they were a fake band that somehow managed to evolve into a real band, fighting for their right to play their own instruments on their studio albums, and touring live without a back-up band.

  • @bigg4454
    @bigg4454 Před 14 dny +1

    I felt the same thing about Motown myself, but I dug the Chittlin' Circuit tho'. More musical and down to earth.

  • @gingertunstall7739
    @gingertunstall7739 Před 14 dny +3

    And who wrote " All Along The Watch Tower?"

    • @MarkDavid-gi9vw
      @MarkDavid-gi9vw Před 14 dny +3

      Bob Dylan

    • @plasticweapon
      @plasticweapon Před 14 dny +1

      @@MarkDavid-gi9vw ...who hendrix said he liked.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny +2

      LZ had 10 cover songs from 18 songs on their first two albums (which Jimi would have heard). Jimi had 3 cover songs from 46 songs on his first three albums. Or lets say 1 cover from 30 songs on his first 2 albums. Big difference.

    • @doscwolny2221
      @doscwolny2221 Před 14 dny +1

      And Hendrix gave credit to who he covered​@@BarbarraBay

    • @johndransfield1265
      @johndransfield1265 Před 13 dny

      ​@@BarbarraBayI can't name the other 43,
      could anyone?

  • @douglasdingwall1596
    @douglasdingwall1596 Před 14 dny +3

    Everybody stole from what came before.

  • @fivedaysinjune
    @fivedaysinjune Před 13 dny +1

    I wonder what Hendrix would have thought of punk.

  • @TheJohnOlivarez
    @TheJohnOlivarez Před 13 dny +2

    This video was created to try to start a controversy. This is BS Hendrix sang other peoples songs Like Hey Joe it was sung by The Leaves on American Band Stand.
    Along the Watchtower by Bob Dylan, it's just two songs by other artist that Jimi Hendrix did. I'm no expert but I will look up to see if Jimi Hendrix did say "That he hated the Bands" mentioned in this video.

  • @brianferris8668
    @brianferris8668 Před 14 dny +3

    Led Zeppelin covering songs? Jimi Hendrix: All Along The Watchtower, I Was Made To Love Her, Day Tripper, Hound Dog, Born Under A Bad Sign, Killing Floor, Like A Rolling Stone, Wild Thing , Hey Joe. People in glass houses.

    • @williamfarr8807
      @williamfarr8807 Před 14 dny +3

      Jimi Hendrix covered songs. Led Zeppelin plagiarized songs. There is a difference.

    • @nicholasprotz4297
      @nicholasprotz4297 Před 14 dny +4

      @@williamfarr8807Zeppelin transformed old songs by arranging them into master pieces. But you’re right they should have paid their dues when they recorded the songs. However it’s bollocks to say they plagiarised everything. Such a small amount when you look at their canon of work over a twelve year period.

    • @jayclarke6671
      @jayclarke6671 Před 14 dny +2

      ​@@nicholasprotz4297agreed. It's usually jealous Beatles or Stones fans that hype up the 'stole' mantra. The songs they took from were virtually unknown and their versions of them are light years ahead in terms of arrangements and performance.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny

      LZ had 10 cover songs from 18 songs on their first two albums (which Jimi would have heard). Jimi had 3 cover songs from 46 songs on his first three albums. Or lets say 1 cover from 30 songs on his first 2 albums. Big difference.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny

      @@nicholasprotz4297 whole lotta love was their big song. It was a cover of a cover. Why don't you listen to the Small Faces version to see how it was ripped off

  • @RH-xs8gz
    @RH-xs8gz Před 14 dny +6

    Hendrix valued authenticity? How authentic is it to go out on stage and play while you’re strung out on artificial substances like LSD and heroine?

  • @samjenner2429
    @samjenner2429 Před 11 dny +1

    Jimi Hendrix is a perfect example of someone who's been more popular dead than he ever was alive.

  • @LoyalOpposition
    @LoyalOpposition Před 14 dny

    Trust actual Hendrix interviews.. Speaking of, I just heard one where he says he's a huge fan of Chicago (CTA at the time). "You gotta see them live!"

  • @FrankMuchnok
    @FrankMuchnok Před 11 dny +3

    So Hendrix was an opinionated dick. That's so rare in rock musicians. I could care less what any of them think. I don't need their opinions, just their music.

  • @lgbet6w58g4
    @lgbet6w58g4 Před 11 dny +3

    Don't waste your time on this video.. If Hendrix never killed himself, he'd be jammin with Page, Clapton,
    Jeff Beck, Gilmour, etc. If he was alive today, at 81 yrs old, he'd probably be playing with Ringo's All-Star band. Only thing worse than Rock'n Roll snobs is Jazz snobs.

    • @hopebgood
      @hopebgood Před 11 dny

      I didn't watch this vid for too long (click bait - GUILTY!) and you're 100% right about the jamming. I know nothing about "Jazz snobs".

  • @eahannan
    @eahannan Před 13 dny

    It’s normal to dis the competition even though you know they’re good you gotta say how it is too - cos you’re genuine too and a true artist , you gotta say why you are the real thing

  • @bossanovaboy
    @bossanovaboy Před 6 dny +1

    Specifically about Pink Floyd - Jimi died in 1970 and never had a chance to listen to their really great albums Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here and more. Maybe he would change his mind if he had this chance. In fact he hadn't listen much of Zeppelin neither - probably only the first and second album.😎😀

  • @GeoZeppelin1979
    @GeoZeppelin1979 Před 14 dny +3

    Hendrix hate LZ coz he was jealous of them,coz as a band LZ wiped the floor with everyone....AND they both had same source,had he lived to see the progression of LZ he would have changed his mind

    • @yeti1002
      @yeti1002 Před 12 dny +1

      You said it bruh , jealousy is big in the music business. Just ask Pete Townshend 😭😭😭

  • @stevemack4643
    @stevemack4643 Před 7 dny +2

    I totally agree on the comments about Zep. I was never very impressed with them.
    Jimi was on a level they could only dream to achieve.

  • @gregwilliams3120
    @gregwilliams3120 Před 14 dny +2

    I don't think he was a big fan of The Beach Boys, either.

    • @itnow
      @itnow Před 11 dny +1

      just said that surf music was obsolete

  • @carlwalnjr6928
    @carlwalnjr6928 Před 13 dny

    They are all unique in their own way..The irony is, it's the same argument in this day & age of music.Where artists & listeners are concerned..✌️

  • @howardsternssmicrophone9332

    I heard a bootleg of Morrison and Hendrix I got at a record shop one time. It was rather vulgar.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny

      indeed. I did not realize Janis was there. If Morrisons vulgar remarks were towards Janis then Jimi would have despised this. Jimi was all about music and honored musicians (generally). Some of the coolest photos are Jimi with Mama Cass Elliot.

    • @wassupnomesayin
      @wassupnomesayin Před 14 dny +2

      A very infamous bootleg. Morrison was drunk off his ass. We used to play it for laughs.

  • @eddyvideostar
    @eddyvideostar Před 13 dny

    To Studio Number, Please write the 5 bands that JH didn't like?

  • @HamptonGuitars
    @HamptonGuitars Před 12 dny

    By the Monkees 3rd album, Headquarters, they had revolted and insisted they play everything themselves and picked all the songs to cut, many written by Mike Nesmith.

  • @JayGee-ti7oe
    @JayGee-ti7oe Před 13 dny +2

    I feel Hendrix was talking through his arse. I've NEVER got into Hendrix . . . EVER. Zepplin, Floyd , Motown . . all great music . .

  • @alanderickson7347
    @alanderickson7347 Před 11 dny +1

    Hendrix also absolutely eviscerated Lawrence Welk, even though he had shamelessly stolen that incendiary gimmick after seeing Myron Floren torch his accordion onstage while they performed together (for the last time) at a nursing home in Fargo.

  • @slingshotchicken4695
    @slingshotchicken4695 Před 14 dny +2

    I love and respect Hendrix for all of eternity but as far as Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and The Doors go, they are GREAT. I don't dislike the Monkeys either. I don't blame Hendrix for distancing himself from Jim Morrison, Jim was not a match in several ways, although The Doors music is awesome. I can relate to his opinion regarding Motown, I much prefer the Hendrix style, that's putting it mildly.

    • @BarbarraBay
      @BarbarraBay Před 14 dny

      if you know what happened, Morrison was singing "@@@@! her in the @@@" towards Janis Joplin.

  • @LeftistUprising
    @LeftistUprising Před 8 dny

    I had no idea that he didn't like LZ or PF!!!

  • @kevinjoseph517
    @kevinjoseph517 Před 9 dny +1

    JH liked blues n 60s pop..he liked beatles, cream, zz top.

  • @user-wd2iy9bc7y
    @user-wd2iy9bc7y Před 11 dny

    I remember Hendrix calling Zep "Carry On Baggage"

  • @edgarwalk5637
    @edgarwalk5637 Před 14 dny +2

    I would swap the Doors for the Rolling Stones, but agree for the most part on the rest. I kind of appreciate the Monkees more lately though.

    • @terrymay8114
      @terrymay8114 Před 4 dny

      doorts not in same lg as stones dont talk garbage

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud Před 17 hodinami

      @@terrymay8114 get off the pipe.... jagger had to reroute his whole game post '68 as morrison had eclipsed him as the most dangerous lead in rock by '68. no one benefitted more from the miami meltdown of morrison then jagger.... stones were talented but always revisionist & derivative. from '66-'68, no one in morrisonzs zipcode.

  • @BRH2100
    @BRH2100 Před 12 dny +1

    My guess is..He would've changed his opinion of Pink Floyd had he lived long enough to hear their work in the 70s like Dark side of the moon

  • @barneybrown2092
    @barneybrown2092 Před 13 dny

    Smokey Robinson said it himself when he spoke of Motown's unapologetic intention when making their very polished, bowtie music. He said "We were going to make music that EVERYONE could relate to ... not the music of Black America, but the music of YOUNG America." I wonder what Jimi thought of Stax Records. Stax put way more emphasis on a grittier, unpolished "soul" sound (and with more current social-related themes in the records) than pristine pre-70's Motown.

  • @markhilbert6573
    @markhilbert6573 Před 10 dny +1

    I heard he really hated grime and rap. Also he wasnt keen on bananrama

  • @dantofthegenxfamily9529
    @dantofthegenxfamily9529 Před 13 dny +2

    Pretty accurate, and Zep along with the Monkees are manufactured,, hand pucked, Pop.
    I agree, if he said led Zeppelin.
    Silly pop rhythm and blues music.
    He's right about existing music because about eight of their tracks on the first three records were copies.
    Yep.

  • @mosriteminioncause7741

    Funny thing.... Hendrix worked with the Isley Brothers as a Motown Group. They Broke away from Motown and formed T-Neck Records...Their powerhouse re-worked 1973 hit "That Lady"...better known as "Who's That Lady?" spent three weeks at No.6 on the pop chart and reaching No.2 on the US R&B Singles chart. Ernie Isley's guitar riff (heavily influenced by Voodoo Child) as an homage, channels Hendrix's playing. I think Jimmy would have loved this song...

    • @allenblevins7430
      @allenblevins7430 Před 14 dny +1

      Hendrix worked for the Isley Brothers, and Little Richard as a hired hand. He wasn't allowed to show what he could do until he went to England.

    • @mosriteminioncause7741
      @mosriteminioncause7741 Před 13 dny

      @@allenblevins7430 ☮👍🎸

  • @tubalcain1039
    @tubalcain1039 Před 12 dny

    Like many things posted online, you shouldn't always believe it before investigating.

  • @kbgamentions9045
    @kbgamentions9045 Před 11 dny +1

    This just in:
    Not every musical genius has good taste in music...