Jimi Hendrix teste 3

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Al Hendrix:

Jimi's father and sole heir to Jimi's estate.

Kirsten Nefer:

Jimi's girlfriend who he proposes marriage to. Seen in a photograph happily having dinner with her and her family. Media catches wind of their "engagement" and runs stories on it. As a model and actress, Nefer is needed to shoot a movie and departs four days before Jimi dies.

The Cry of Love tour:

Jimi's last tour, billed as The Experience (Jimi/Billy/Mitch).

Rainbow Bridge (album):

:a posthumous fifth studio album by American guitarist Jimi Hendrix, released in October and November 1971 in the US and UK, respectively. It was the second Hendrix studio album released after his death and was engineered, mixed and compiled by Eddie Kramer, John Jansen and Mitch Mitchell.

Leo Branton:

Al Hendrix's lawyer throughout the rights hearings. He was responsible for negotiating the sale of the rights, and wound up selling the Hendrix rights to an off-coast business which he also worked. Was later sued by Al to get the rights back.

Miles Davis:

Alan Douglas arranges a studio session with Jimi and Miles, but before being able to close the deal, Miles demands $50,000 for the session. The request is rejected and the epic arrangement falls through.

Tony Bongiovi:

As an engineer, he worked the console for a number of sessions with Jimi Hendrix, as well as some of Hendrix's posthumous releases under producer Alan Douglas (Wikipedia).

Billy Cox:

Bassist in Band of Gypsys. Jimi's friend from his stint in the Airborne. ...Was unknowingly dosed with LSD when his drink was spiked. Was sent home on 9/9/1970 to recover from his LSD-induced psychosis. This ended the Cry of Love tour

Chas Chandler

Chandler testified in support of Jimi, claiming the band received gifts all the time and Jimi had no way of knowing they were drugs. ...Jimi goes to Chas' house a couple of days before his death to ask him to produce for him again.

Paul Allen:

Co-founder of Microsoft....highest bid, but was ignored...funded Al Hendrix's lawsuit against Alan Douglas and Leo Branton...

Chuck Wein:

Director of the film Rainbow Bridge (A.K.A. Wave). Had good reputation (had done 3 films with Andy Warhol's Factory). Wein befriended Jimi during filming and his subsequent 2 week vacation in Hawaii. At one point on the vacation, Jimi asked Wein to commit suicide with Jimi. ...Friend of Mike Jeffrey.

Buddy Miles:

Drummer in Band of Gypsys. Also lead vocals on "Changes" and "We Gotta Live Together." Jimi wanted Buddy to sing for the band from there on out. ...Was fired by Mike Jeffrey.

Monika Dannemann

Ex-figure skater from Dusseldorf. Jimi met up with her on September 15th, 1970. Dannemann claimed she and Jimi had been in a close relationship for years and even claimed they were engaged. Much of her story regarding Jimi has been discredited. Dannemann was with Jimi the night he died. Jimi overdosed on her sleeping pills (Vesparax). Her story about his death varied. In the mid 90's, Kathy Etchingham took Dannemann to court twice for defamation and won both times. This resulted in Dannemann committing suicide.

Isle of Wight:

Festival in London Jimi was playing in late August of 1970. 600,000 attendees (exceeding Woodstock). Jimi's set ended with protesters launching flares onto the wooden awning of the stage. Jimi's last performance on British soil.

Rainbow Bridge (film):

Film Jimi did in Maui Hawaii in late July and early August of 1970. Directed by Chuck Wein. Regarded as one of the oddest, trippiest movies ever made. (A.K.A. Wave)

Michael Jeffrey:

Half-and-half partner with Jimi for Electric Lady Studio. Also Jimi's manager at the time and held Jimi's publishing contract. ...Afterv Jimi's death, Mike Jeffrey wanted to make 3 albums out of all of Jimi's tapes and then destroy them all. ...Died in a 1973 mid-air collision over france, along with 68 other people; only his luggage was recovered.

Janie Hendrix:

Half-sister to Jimi, and the executor of Jimi's estate after Al's death. Had Jimi's body exhumed and moved from his original resting place — which so happened to be near his mother's — to an extravagant mausoleum built in his honor, within the same cemetery.

Diana Carpenter:

Has a daughter named Tamika that is alleged to be Jimi's.

Alan Douglas:

In October of 1969, Alan Douglas becomes Jimi's producer. Jimi even tended to use Alan as his "spokesman." Alan was previously known for taking the works of the recently deceased *Lenny Bruce* (comedian) and packaging them up for sale. After Jimi's death, Alan took control of and produced Jimi's posthumous music releases. During the mid 70's Douglas and attorney Leo Branton controlled Jimi's estate. In 1993, Al Hendrix filed suit against Douglas and Branton to regain control of Jimi's estate (Al's suit was funded by Paul Allen). By 1995, Al won but had to pay $9 million dollars to them to regain full control.

Isle of Fehmarn (Germany):

Jimi's last show before his death. Originally scheduled to play on 9/5/1970, but heavy rain and gale-force wind interference delayed their appearance to the next day. Hendrix could have gone home on the 5th but he decided to play a day later at noon, and *was booed* for his troubles by the festival crowd at the start of his show (Wikipedia).

The Band of Gypsys:

Jimi's live band consisting of Billy Cox on bass, Buddy Miles on drums, and Jimi on lead guitar and vocals. They played 4 live shows around New Year's at the Fillmore East going into 1970 that would be recorded for "Band of Gypsys" the album. This would be released under Capitol Records with all profits going to Ed Chalpin.

Kathy Etchingham:

Jimi's longtime, off-and-on girlfriend. Jimi was so distraught to learn she was married that he flew to London to see her about it. ...On the last day of Jimi's life, he happened to run into Kathy on the street. ...She later sued Monika Dannemann for defamation of character.

Electric Lady:

Jimi's studio in New York he was building with Michael Jeffery. The two had spent $369,000 and borrowed $300,000 more from Warner Bros to finish. Studio opened on August 26th, 1970. Regarded as the best studio in New York at the time.

Jimi's Toronto trial:

Jury trial on December 8th 1969 for prior drug bust in Toronto. Lab tests discovered drugs were heroin. Jimi claimed he had a headache the day of the bust and a fan gave him what he thought was Bromo-Seltzer. Chas Chandler testified as a compelling character witness, supporting Jimi. Jimi was found not guilty.

Sid Bernstein's Winter Festival for Peace:

Location of Band of Gypsys final show. Festival at Madison Square Garden. Jimi was messed up for this show and after a few bad attempts at some songs, Jimi stopped playing and just sat down on the stage in complete silence. He had to be led offstage. Speculation was that either Michael Jeffery or Devon Wilson gave him too much LSD. A few days later, Jeffery fired Buddy Miles. Band of Gypsys was no more.

Fillmore East, New York:

Location of the 4 New Year's (1970) Band of Gypsys' shows which would eventually become the album "Band of Gypsys."

Devon Wilson:

Long time girlfriend of Jimi. Total drug addict. Primarily got Jimi into heroin. Jimi wanted to cut things off with Devon near the end of his life because of the drugs. Jimi wrote "Dolly Dagger" about Wilson after watching her seduce Mick Jagger in front of him (sucks the blood off of a cut on his finger). ...Devon flies to London on 9/12/1970 due to rumors about his engagement to Nefer.

Bill Graham:

Music writer for Bill Graham Presents. Gave Jimi a negative review after his first show of the 4 at Fillmore East. Jimi was angered by this. After a much better second show, Jimi taunted Graham backstage asking "That good enough for you, Jack?" Graham wrote of the second show: "Aside from Otis Redding, there will never be anything like that show."

Eric Burdon:

One of the last few to see Jimi alive. Upon discovery of Jimi's dead body, Dannemann called Burdon. Burdon came over and cleared all the drugs and paraphernalia out of the apartment. Burdon found a song Jimi had written the night before ("The Story of Life") and mistook it as a suicide note. Burdon then wrongly told the press Jimi's death was a suicide.

Buzzy Linhart:

Played vibes for "Drifting."

Loose Ends:

Posthumous 7th studio album released in February 1974 in UK. (4th posthumous album) Released by Michael Jeffery (WIKIPEDIA)

The Ronettes:

Sang backing vocals for "Earth Blues."

Jimi's death (Know month and year!):

September, 1970.

Eva Sundquist:

She claims her son, James Sundquist, is Jimi's son. James Sundquist is later paid off with a cool million bucks, and lives his life in relative obscurity.

Heaven Research:

The Band of Gypsys album gives credit for production to "Heaven Research" (A.K.A. Jimi Hendrix...I am unsure why he went under this moniker).

Fulfillment of the Ed Chalpin/PPX suit:

The Ed Chalpin/PPX suit required Jimi to record an album for Ed Chalpin. This would be released under Capitol Records. He would get all the profits from this album's sales. They recorded 4 live shows at the Fillmore East. These live recordings were turned into the album "Band of Gypsys." With this fulfilled, Jimi owed nothing more to Ed Chalpin.

Arthur and Albert Allen (The Ghetto Fighters) A.K.A. Tunda-Ra & Taharqa Aleem:

The GHETTO FIGHTERS were formed in 1970 by Jimi and the Aleem Brothers (who are identical twins) to explore new projects that would go beyond the work Jimi had been doing and expand the sounds he was working with. "The music and material sounds brand new," according to TaharQa, "and for all intents and purposes it is. It'll surprise and delight current fans and new ones to come."

Crash Landing:

The controversial album released by Alan Douglas after Jimi's death (first produced for Jimi by Alan). Controversial due to the use of session musicians that had never met Jimi to re-record/overdub original, unfinished material — changed the "feel" of the songs (Wikipedia).

Hendrix in the West

a posthumous live album by Jimi Hendrix, released in January 1972 by Polydor Records, and later in February by Reprise Records. The album contains songs from Hendrix's performances at the Royal Albert Hall on February 24, 1969, the San Diego Sports Arena on May 24, 1969, Berkeley Community Theatre on May 30, 1970 and the Isle of Wight Festival on August 30, 1970. The album's credits mislabel "Little Wing" and "Voodoo Chile" as being recorded at the San Diego Sports Arena, when in fact these two tracks were recorded at the Royal Albert Hall on February 24, 1969.[1] The album reached No. 7 in the U.K. albums chart,[2] and No. 12 in the Billboard 200. (wikipedia).

War Heroes:

a posthumous sixth studio album by American guitarist Jimi Hendrix, released on October 1 and December 1972 in the UK and the US, respectively. It was the third Hendrix studio album released after his death and was engineered, mixed and compiled by Eddie Kramer and John Jansen. Though Hendrix produced many of the songs, he was not credited for such.

Cry of Love:

posthumous fourth studio album by American musician Jimi Hendrix, released in February 1971. It was the first Hendrix album released after his death and was engineered, mixed and compiled by Eddie Kramer and Mitch Mitchell. The album cover illustration was by Nancy Reiner.(wikipedia)


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