Identifier | 3374764 |
Created At | Tue May 23 2023 23:54:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) |
Reference Number | 0004167358 |
Status | 1 |
Media Type | CD |
Media Count | 1 |
Note | Jimi Hendrix - Jim Morrison
John Winters - Buddy Miles 3-7-1968 The Scene - NYC, NY source: Liberated Bootleg Track 4 ,"Morrison's Lament," features a hideously dosed Morrison throwing an acid tantrum with gentle Jimmy trying to calm him down and keep his groove. Despite of (or because of) the heavy medication sizzling on these tracks this is some really great music... Here are the tracks as they are described on the CD: Hendrix_01 - Red House> [10:56] Wake Up This Morning Hendrix_02 - And You Find Yourself Dead [8:01] Hendrix_03 - Bleeding Heart [12:25] Hendrix_04 - Morrison's Lament [5.14] Hendrix_05 - Tomorrow Never Knows [3:28] Hendrix_06 - Uranus Rock [3:06] Hendrix_07 - Outside Woman Blues [8:04] Hendrix_08 - Sunshine of Your Love [2:15] Total Length: 53:42 If you know more about this show or have any comments, drop me a line at stel27@hushmail.com More info.... Johnny on Jimi Hendrix: "I first met Jimi at The Scene [popular New York City nightclub]. I was a Hendrix groupie, and he was a Johnny Winter groupie. .... We jammed together at The Scene a good bit; he'd jam with anybody who stayed there long enough. What we would often do after the club closed is go over to a studio where he had recording time booked regularly, and play around with things, maybe play for several hours and then some other day listen to the tapes to pick out the good parts for ideas to work into songs. One of the things that the studio people were interested in putting out from the jams was an old Guitar Slim tune "The Things I Used to Do." I was playing slide and Jimi was playing regular guitar and singing. It was just playing around, but it was a lot better than some of the stuff that was put out after he died. Some of that stuff should never have been released. The trouble when we played together was that we both respected each other's playing so much that we'd each lay back and wait for the other to play lead. I never really learned much from playing with Jimi, though, because we had both learned from the same people; we had the same influences - but the music evolved in different ways. I guess I did learn from him some, however, though I didn't want to be copying him. It's just that any guitar player can learn from someone who has that many ideas and can do so much." The photo accompanying the article shows Johnny, Steven Stills, and Jimi playing on stage with Steven singing and playing a left-handed bass upside down (??!), mirroring Jimi's upside down right-handed Strat played left-handed. and more info.... Mississippi-born blues rocker Johnny Winter has enjoyed a long a distinguished career since recording his first solo album `Johnny Winter' in 1969. Johnny jammed with Jimi Hendrix on several occasions. UniVibes: When did you first meet Jimi Hendrix? Johnny Winter: I met him at The Scene club that my manager Steve Paul had in 1968. Jimi was always at The Scene when he was in New York and we played many times together. He was just everywhere - he went out and jammed everywhere he was. There was a club called The Experience where he always went when he was there - no matter where he went he would go out and play with whoever was around and do a lot of recording with other people, just recording the jamming. They would be down at the club all night and then whoever was sober enough he would bring back to the studio at the end of the night - you know, he really did like to play! UV: What was your impression of Jimi as a person rather than as a musician? JW: I never really got to know Jimi as a person. He was always involved in music and never talked about anything `serious' [OK, we know what he means!]. We talked about music and that was it. He didn't seem like a very open person as far as talking about his problems and things like that... He would never say, `Hey man, I really don't feel good today.' He would just keep to himself if he didn't feel good. I'm sure he had a lot of people he was closer to than me that he did talk to, but he just didn't seem to be that open a person except about music and that was what he did, you know. I don't what he was like as a person. UV: You recorded at the Record Plant with Jimi, Stephen Stills and Dallas Taylor. What do you remember of that? JW: Yeah, well, I recorded at the Record Plant with Jimi and I played with Dallas and Stephen at The Scene but I don't think they were on the record though. I don't think they were at the studio but I'm not real sure - it's been a long time! [note: Stephen Stills confirmed that the session at the Record Plant was with Jimi, Johnny, Dallas and himself]. UV: You recorded Guitar Slim's `The Things We Used To Do'... JW: Yeah, we did. That just came out on [`Lifelines', 1990]. I've got it on cassette, there are four cassettes, a whole lot of things he did in different ways and some stuff that hadn't been released before. It's a kind of interesting bunch of tapes and `The Things I Used To Do' was on that. It was OK for an impromptu kind of jam. UV: You're sometimes credited as playing on a Jimi Hendrix bootleg called `Sky High' along with Jim Morrison and others playing `Red House', `The Sunshine Of Your Love' and several other songs... JW: Oh, I never even met Jim Morrison! There's a whole album of Jimi and Jim and I'm supposedly on the album but I don't think I am `cause I never met Jim Morrison in my life! I'm sure I never, never played with Jim Morrison at all! I don't know how that [rumour] got started. UV: You were at the Band of Gypsys concert at Madison Square Garden on 28 January 1970 where Jimi walked off the stage. What did you think was wrong with him? JW: I dunno. I heard all kinds of things like he took some bad acid... Who knows? I was there that night and it was real obvious that something was wrong. I really don't know if it was drugs or he just had a bad night, but it was really scary. I don't have the faintest idea what it was but it was one of the scariest things I ever saw. UV: Can you remember when you last saw Jimi? JW: No, I sure can't. He was around pretty much all the time. I was always running into Jimi some place but I really don't remember the last time. UV: If he had lived what do you think he would have gone on to do? Do you think he would have gone on to greater things? JW: I think he would have definitely done better things. I've never seen anybody who loved to play more than him and he always had some kind of an idea. I don't know whether it would have been in a commercial way or he might have come up with something very strange but he was always up with new ideas. I think if he had lived he would have stayed as great as he always was. He would have probably had to go through some pain to do it but I'm sure things would have been OK. This interview was previously published in UniVibes issue 4, November 1991 and reprinted with permission in `Guitarist' (France), May 1995. |
Source Info | Liberated Bootleg- "Live at the Scene Club" |
Tech Note | All |
Trades Allowed | |
Attendence | 0 |
Performance
Jimi Hendrix & Jim Morrison 1968-03-07 The Scene Club, New York, NY | |
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Set 1 | Red House, I'm Gonna Leave This Town-> Everything's Gonna Be Alright, Bleeding Heart, Morrison's Lament, Tomorrow Never Knows, Outside Woman Blues-> Sunshine Of Your Love |
Set 2 | ALTERNATE SET 1: Red House, Wake Up This Morning And Find Yourself Dead, Bleeding Heart, Morrison's Lament, Tomorrow Never Knows, Uranus Rock, Outside Woman Blues, Sunshine Of Your Love |
Set 3 | |
Comment | Comment: Unknown Band Name: Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Winter, Jim Morrison,
Buddy Miles and/or Randy Zherringer, and Randy Hobbs. Exact date uncertain. Silver cd "Sunshine of Your Love" : Red House; Wake Up This Morning And Find Yourself Dead; Bleeding Heart; Morrison's Lament; Tomorrow Never Knows; Uranus Rock; Outside Woman Blues; Sunshine Of Your Love; Goodbye, Bessie Mae; Soul Food |