Fenderman wrote:I wouldn't say the Shads are in danger of being 'forgotten' about (at least not yet!).
Indeed forgotten about is probably the wrong term but i have to say, most people of my age group that i know (who like music) think they're a joke and the only reason the younger ones know them is coz i've played them the good stuff and raved about them. In particular the Cliff connection has done them no favours although obviously without him there'd be no Shadows !
humdrum wrote:I agree the 3 experience studio albums were brilliant but that was in the studio were anythings possible re-takes,overdubs etc. But live i thought he was terrible. if he hit a bum note you would accept it as part of the solo combined with all the overdrive fuzz etc that he hid behind. When Hank plays there is nowhere to hide cause the tunes are known note for note by all his followers. Plus with overdrive anyone can sound good (even me). I banged out 3 chords to my 14 year old nephew on overdrive.......He now thinks i'm a genius......NUFF SAID.
A look at the Experience recording sessions show that the first 2 albums were recorded in very few sessions. AYE and the a and b sides for 3 singles in around 10 sessions. Axis was recorded in around 10 dates. Hardly excessive by the standards of the day. Chas Chandler reined Jimi in on the first album due to lack of funds.
I'm jealous you saw him live. I disagree that he hid behind overdrive/fuzz.
Where would Hank be without an echo box and whammy bar ? Not half as interesting.
Is it as much of an inaccurate generalisation to suggest Hank played the same tunes the same way night after night for decades ? Sounds awfully boring to me. Certainly Jimi played some bad notes and some bad concerts but he was usually not playing exactly the same solos and fills every night and was frequently going for it. Some tracks like Red House are radically different from performance to performance, always developing moving on covering a wide range of styles not just the psychedelic blues "thing" more like the way Coltrane developed My Favourite Things or Impressions.
As for your last sentence -
a/ depends what 3 chords you played
b/ i'm sure he probably described your performance as "epic"
c/ Interviewer - You've been called a genius many times..
Orson Welles - Oh it's one of those words. i suppose there's only been two or three geniuses this (20th) century, we all know who they are...Picasso, Einstein and somebody in China we've never heard about".
Interviewer - So you don't accept the..
OW - "oh i accept anything i get but i really wouldn't want try to edge my way into an elevator that was for geniuses only"
enjoy it while you can Humdrum. Once your nephew learns that 4th chord it's back to frozen pea commercials for you !