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 Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967

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Mousme

Mousme


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Date d'inscription : 05/06/2010

Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967  Empty
MessageSujet: Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967    Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967  Icon_minitimeMar 13 Juil 2010 - 21:23

Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967

Ce doit être la seule date où Jimi a joué en Irlande du Nord. Les témoignages d’époques citent un niveau sonore incroyable et que le public a chanté à l’unisson un chaleureux « Happy Birthday ».

Titres du premier show :

1. Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Heart Club Band
2. Fire
3. Purple Haze
4. Hey Joe    Spanish Castle Magic
5. Foxy Lady    Manic Depression
6. The Wind Cries Mary
7. Wild Thing

Titres du second show :

1. Foxy Lady    
2. Fire
3. Slow Blues        
4. The Wind Cries Mary
5. Purple Haze
6. Wild Thing


Présents sur la photo entourant Jimi : Judy Hill, Mitch, Ace Kefford, Noel, June Agnew, et Roy Wood
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Purple Jim

Purple Jim


Messages : 2445
Date d'inscription : 09/07/2010

Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967  Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967    Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967  Icon_minitimeSam 22 Jan 2011 - 13:27

THE BELFAST NEWSLETTER - ‘Hendrix was worth bringing’
“Jimi received an enthusiastic response from the two 1,000 strong audiences […] were grasped entirely by this way-out brand of music, obviously exceptionally skilful., if you appreciate that sort of thing… With Noel Redding and drummer ‘Mitch’ Mitchell, Hendrix captured his audience.”

BELFAST TELEGRAPH ‘Cool Reception At The Whitla’ by George Hamilton:
“The noise being blasted out at the Whitla Hall last night during the Jimi Hendrix concert was the loudest I have ever heard. It was so bad you could feel your insides - and even your chair - resonating...in tune, naturally. […] All these three groups are fine on record, and just as good at reproducing a similar sound “live,” but the enormous amplification swamped everything. Their performance received a polite but cool reception."
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http://hendrix.guide.pagesperso-orange.fr/hendrix.htm
Purple Jim

Purple Jim


Messages : 2445
Date d'inscription : 09/07/2010

Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967  Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967    Belfast “Festival Of Arts” (Whitla Hall, Queen’s College) : 27 novembre 1967  Icon_minitimeSam 22 Jan 2011 - 13:34

GOWN by Liam and Roisin McAuley:
“It is now an acknowledged fact that a Pop Concert should be ear-splitting and kaleidoscopic. Last week’s Jimi Hendrix concert fulfilled both criteria. On stage, amplifiers dwarfed and deafened the performers; in the gallery frenzied amateurs feverishly juggled with six squares of coloured cellophane and two spotlights. Fifteen hundred people sat in the ’Whitla’ and waited for their minds to he blown...
It was Hendrix’ s birthday. The audience sang ‘Happy Birthday’ in a feeble and slightly embarrassed fashion. The compére hurriedly initiated a cry of ‘We want Jimi.’ The lights dimmed and weaved; Hendrix exploded on to the stage; ‘Plug your ears, it’s gonna be LOUD.’ the ensuing welter of noise, confusion and flashing lights could not obscure the fact that Jimi Hendrix is a guitarist of considerable talent and though it is at times difficult to separate sheer gimmickness from genuine musical expression. He played the guitar in fifty different positions from the Kama Sutra, made an indecent assault upon the amplifier, and in a final frenetic gesture smashed a Fender Stratacaster [sic] against the wall (having first displayed method in his madness by unplugging it). It was as though he had finally succeeded in identifying the instrument with his own arrogant virility and subsequently frustrated with the latter had involved it in the final act of destruction. It is now as important to smash a guitar as it is to play it. Hendrix did both with admirable expertise.”

Offstage, Hendrix is incongruously mild, affable, and unassuming. He sat in the dressing room, temporarily detached from the bevy of road-managers, and munched birthday cake. He constantly strummed a guitar covered in psychedelic patterns.”

L&R: [on his painted flying V guitar?]
Jimi: “Just something I painted on in half an hour.”
L&R: [on his dress style?]
Jimi: “The comments on my dress don’t worry me - it’s good publicity.
L&R: [on his hair?]
Jimi: My hairstyle? I got it from watching a lot of old Tony Curtis movies.”
L&R: Playing for anything from £750 to £1,000 for a single performance, Hendrix claims that the money is not so important now, although his original motive in coming to Britain was that be?:
Jimi: “I needed the bread. I don’t mind about the money so long as the atmosphere is good.”
L&R: [on his influences?]
Jimi: “Influences? I’m influenced by Dylan; I’m influenced by the whole world. My songs are usually personal. I was glad, for instance, that “The Wind Cries Mary” [sic - most likely a transcript error by the McAuley’s as Jimi probably referred to “The Burning Of The Midnight Lamp” instead – Caesar Glebeek.] which meant a lot to me, wasn’t a big hit. I wouldn’t like it kicked around like any old Dave Dee number.”
L&R: [on drugs?]
Jimi: “Drugs? If they do something for people then it’s up to them. Take the Beatles for example. People are like sheep, they have to follow somebody. If this Maharishi cat turns them on, I suppose that’s O.K. But I think that a human being should believe in himself a little more.”
L&R: [on Vietnam?]
Jimi: “I have no views on Vietnam because it doesn’t affect me personally. If something doesn’t directly affect my life, then I’m not interested.”
L&R: [on the press?]
Jimi: “The press depict me as some kind of monster.”
L&R: “Hendrix is indeed widely known as “the wild man of British Pop,” but whatever one may make of his performance on the stage, offstage he is polite (he deftly prevented me from sitting in a puddle of cold coffee) approachable and articulate. A monster? Hardly.”
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