Fender Stratocaster guitar

Fender Stratoscaster

 

Enumerations

 

I am sit­ting in a wooden uphol­stered chair built in the nine­teen fifties (I know because the table it came with had the orig­i­nal sales receipt from 1957) at my com­puter desk lis­ten­ing to Jimi Hendrix per­form­ing with the Band of Gypsies on New Years 1970 at the Filmore East almost two years before I was born.

My cat Sibyl is sleep­ing behind me. She is almost 13. Hard to believe. She looks five and has the most beau­ti­ful black/​orange tortoise-​​shell fur I have ever seen. She also has an incred­i­bly sweet and talk­a­tive dis­po­si­tion. (I have known many cats and by far she is the most gregarious)

I am 36. Time is spin­ning a web around my head. I am think­ing that the chrono­met­ric pars­ing of our small gasps of life may be the death of us, machine­like, or at least make our oxy­gen scarcer and sleep con­se­quently less pleas­ant, but would we know the dif­fer­ence? But not tonight, as the cd rips and my thoughts kick into a level of medium aware­ness, equa­nim­ity, this is where I like to be, lucid, but inspired.

Jimi is play­ing Machine Gun, this dou­ble cd is great because it actu­ally has both ver­sions he played on the two nights of his Filmore East shows. Non-​​sequitur, but Vernon Reid, gui­tarist for Living Color once men­tioned in an inter­view that he had been cer­tain Hendrix was a Vietnam vet because of the pas­sion that infused not just the song, but every note of that spe­cific per­for­mance of it. (The orig­i­nal Band of Gypsys album only had one of the two per­for­mances, I’m pre­sum­ing that’s the one he meant…) But no, Jimi never went to war, though he was in the 101st Airborne and jumped out of air­planes many times, the expe­ri­ence no doubt influ­enc­ing the scope, the spec­trum, the vast sonic VISION that was core to Hendrix’s genius.

Hendrix knows how to squeeze every bit of feel­ing out of each note and he does it in tech­ni­color. I am pulled into the walls of tonal smoke and chronic fire, the blaze of com­bat­ing chords and scream­ing notes, whammy drops and pulses that he author­i­ta­tively ener­gizes from mas­sive fin­gers. When I think of my own finger-​​shredding strug­gles with the instru­ment over many years — I am a decent rhythm gui­tarist at best, com­fort­able with barre chords but don’t ask me to do any light­ning work — and rel­a­tively small hands and fin­gers my own dif­fi­cul­ties with the phys­i­cal­ity of the rock thing make sense to me. It’s taken me almost thirty years to get a mod­icum of gui­tar tech­nique when the Maestro was wow­ing them within a few years of pick­ing up the instru­ment, although by all accounts even he had a learn­ing curve. But what an apogee! how far he could take it and make it scream in ecstasy!

And here I am 38 years later groov­ing to the beat and the heat and the thought. The other anec­dote that sticks out to me about the per­for­mance is some­thing I think I heard from the 1972 Jimi Hendrix doc­u­men­tary which VHS tape I still some­times throw in now and again. Hendrix began his New Years per­for­mance with the usual show­man­ship shenani­gans — play­ing with his teeth, beyond his head, etc. — and Promoter Bill Graham, who wanted a solid record­ing, said some­thing to him about it, not in the nicest way. Jimi was enraged but went back out and per­formed, well, stand­ing stock still, but he put every iota of his being into the show, and that is the per­for­mance we have recorded (and the one I am lis­ten­ing to as I type this). One of the most incred­i­ble pieces of extended impro­vi­sa­tion we have from a rock musi­cian, and it speaks pro­foundly of the good in human beings placed there by the cre­ator that we expe­ri­ence when we hear it. And as he says good­night to every­one and the cd fades to silence I am left with more than I can even begin to know how to describe.


–Tony Jones

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Tony Jones is a 36 year old poet who has been writ­ing seri­ously for 21 years, and has been pub­lished in jour­nals like Virginia Writing and Kronos. He lives in the beau­ti­ful Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, and took a suc­ces­sion of dead-​​end jobs that were nonethe­less very pro­duc­tive of cre­ative inspi­ra­tion, though gen­er­ally in a neg­a­tive way, before decid­ing to fin­ish his Masters in Religion, which occu­pies him presently. He lives with a cat, Sibyl, and far too many books on his­tory, phi­los­o­phy, the­ol­ogy, sci­ence fic­tion and, well, you get the picture…

 

Copyright ©2008, Tony Jones and Spinozablue. All Rights Reserved.

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