In January 1967, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, played their first date at Brian Epstein’s Saville Theatre on Shaftsbury Avenue. Cream were in the audience that night listening to Jimi do a souped-up rock’n’roll version of B.B. King’s ‘Rock Me bay’, ‘Like a Rolling Stone’, ‘Wild Thing’, ‘Hey Joe’ and one of Jimi’s compositions, ‘Can You See Me?’ Eric Clapton later related to Rolling Stone how Jimi’s performance that night inspired Cream’s most famous song, ‘Sunshine of Your Love’:
“He played this gig that was blinding. I don’t think Jack [Bruce] had really taken him in before. I knew what the guy was capable of from the minute I met him. It was the complete embodiment of all aspects of rock guitar rolled into one. I could sense it coming off the guy. And when he [Jack] did see it that night, after the gig he went home and came up with the riff. It was strictly a dedication to Jimi. And then we wrote the song on top of it.”
Coincidently, Jimi used to play this same song as a dedication to Cream, one of his favourite bands, unaware that he was in fact playing his own dedication.
Source: Jimi Hendrix – Electric Gypsy by Harry Shapiro & Caesar Glebbeek, Heinemann 1990.
The name Bob Dylan conjures up images of the 1960s and a legendary back catalog of music. Mind you, we don’t need to conjure: we’ve got an amazing selection of vintage pictures right here. From obscure details blowin’ in the wind, to Dylan’s fascinating personal and creative life that keep him forever young, here’s the electrifying lowdown on the timeless strummer, told through stunning photography.
Zimmerman into Dylan
Born Robert Zimmerman, he entered the world on May 24, 1941, growing up in the port city of Duluth, as well as Hibbing, Minnesota. Zimmerman changed his name in 1962, but why? “Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, Marshall Matt Dillon of TV’s iconic western Gunsmoke, and Dillon Road in Hibbing have all been suggested as possible sources,” noted an article on the website of Marquette University Law School…