WASHINGTON POST - ‘Hendrix: The Rare Concert’ by Richard Cowan:
“Last Friday night [16 May], Jimi Hendrix experienced the BaltimoreCivicCenter. There, more than 12,000 people saw one of the rare rock concerts that happen every once in a while in the Washington area. This is not to say that there are not many groups which play here; it means that the audience is reacting, strongly and visibly, to the artist’s performance. During the last piece on the program, ‘Little Child’ [sic] people in the orchestra section of the great hall jammed the aisles, overflowed into seating rows, stood on the chairs, sat perched on shoulders, clapped in rhythm to Mitch Mitchell’s drum solo, and, in general, had a fantastic time, an experience.
Hendrix was the ideal star performer - he not only played the audience, he let the audience play him. A flower thrown onto the stage was twined into the strings of his guitar. He played requests of the songs he has become famous for: ‘Foxy Lady,’ ‘Purple Haze,’ ‘Fire’ (Before playing “Purple Haze,” he chided the audience mildly for requesting old material, saying, ‘This song is dedicated to all the people in here born in 1733.’) But the audience loved it, and he loved the audience in return. In ‘Little Child,’ [sic] he went through his ‘trademark’ routines: playing with his teeth, slinging the guitar around his neck and through his legs, letting his picking hand rest while fingering a magnificent solo. Hendrix demonstrated his actual instrumental virtuosity in a piece called ‘Red House,’ which was played without any of his showmanship gimmickry; it didn’t need it. His abilities as a bluesman came through, and affirmed our judgment of him as one of The World’s leading guitarists.”