Jimi Hendrix - Stockholm (1969)
Jimi Hendrix was
amazing, even on a bad night. And January 9, 1969 was clearly not the
best night for the Jimi Hendrix Experience. It was the second night of
the group’s European tour, and Swedish television was there to capture
the first of two shows that evening at the Stockholm Concert Hall, or
Konserthuset.
“We’re gonna play
nothing but oldies-but-baddies tonight,” Hendrix says at the start. “We
haven’t played together in about six weeks, so we’re going to jam
tonight and see what happens. Hope you don’t mind.” As he steps away
from the microphone he can be heard to mutter, “You wouldn’t know the
difference, anyway.”
Hendrix looks
irritated throughout the 56-minute set. He and the other two members of
the band–particularly bassist Noel Redding–hadn’t been getting along,
and there were problems with the equipment. In the book Are You
Experienced: The Inside Story of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Redding
describes the scene:
On the whole, I
can’t understand how anyone who saw us on this tour could have liked
us. There was a lot of filming for Swedish TV and compared to similar
films in 1967, we were a different group. Jimi was sullen and removed
and actually slagged off the audience during the first set. He rarely
bothered to sing. I paced grimly in my corner and turned my back on him.
The sparkle was gone, very gone, replaced by exhaustion and boredom
which showed in the sloppy repeats of the hits as we stared at the crowd
with dead eyes. We hated playing Sweden. Always the same problem–no
drugs. We were forced to drink the killer Schnapps, and it brought on
Jimi’s mood for the first set.
“Hendrix was
listless and tired,” writes critic Ludvig Rasmusson in the next day’s
Dagens Nyheter. “He seemed like he had a desire to run away from it all.
The joy of playing was gone. He played his guitar carelessly…. All the
other things were gone–liveliness, engagement, impudence, and poetry.”
Perhaps the most
satisfying moment comes near then end, when Hendrix trades his Fender
Stratocaster for a white Gibson SG guitar and plays a soulful version of
his traditional-sounding 12-bar blues, “Red House.” But things go
downhill again, and the concert ends in pathos. After a desultory
instrumental performance of Cream’s “Sunshine of Your Love,” Hendrix
trades back to his main guitar for another song when the master of
ceremonies strides out onto the stage. “That’s the lot, folks,” the man
says, and the audience begins to boo. The musicians look at each other
quizzically, shrug their shoulders and walk off the stage as the crowd
continues to boo. “Well, they told me that you should finish at nine
o’clock. But I guess everyone wants some more–so here they are!” At
which point a bored-looking roadie walks out and unplugs Hendrix’s
guitar.
Don´t forget: Jimi Hendrix was amazing, even on a bad night. And this is perfect broadcast quality !
Mitch Mitchell (drums)
Noel Redding (bass, background vocals)
Jimi Hendrix (guitar, vocals)
Tracklist:
CD 1: First Show January 9, 1969:
01. Introduction 2.22
02. Killing Floor (Burnett) 5.48
03. Spanish Castle Magic (Hendrix) 7.30
04. Fire (Hendrix) 2.56
05. Hey Joe (Roberts) 5.12
06. Voodoo Chile (Hendrix) 13.46
07. Red House (Hendrix) 11.02
08. Sunshine of Your Love (Bruce/Brown Clapton) 6.06
CD 2: Second Show January 9, 1969:
01. Introduction 1.58
02. Don’t Live Today (Hendrix) 8.42
03. Spanish Castle Magic (Hendrix) 5.29
04. Hey Joe (Roberts) 5,54
05. Voodoo Chile (Hendrix) 9.51
06. Sunshine Of Your Love (Bruce/Brown/Clapton) 11.16
07. Red House (Hendrix) 11.31
08. Fire (Hendrix) 2.48
09. Purple Haze (Hendrix) 3.58
10. Star Spangled Banner (Smith) 3.20
Alternate frontcovers
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