Jimi Hendrix's breakthrough performance at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival,
when he blew away American rock 'n' roll fans with a set that concluded when he
burned his guitar and broke it into pieces, will be released on DVD for the
first time on Oct. 16.
"The Jimi Hendrix Experience Live At Monterey" (Universal Music) includes
incendiary versions of original material such as his first single "Hey Joe" and
"Purple Haze," as well as covers of Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor" and Bob
Dylan's "Like A Rolling Stone."
A soundtrack CD and LP will also be released that day and will feature the
tune "Can You See Me." Director D.A. Pennebaker's crew turned off their cameras
during that song and there is not a single frame of footage in the filmmaker's
archive, according to John McDermott, the Hendrix expert who oversees the
guitarist's catalog.
In addition to the usual audiovisual enhancements, the DVD package boasts a
new documentary, "American Landing," featuring previously unseen interviews.
Also included are extensive liner notes and rare photos.
The toast of the London rock scene, Hendrix was not well-known by his
countrymen when he and his Experience bandmates Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell
made their U.S. debut in the all-star lineup at Monterey, near San Francisco on
June 18, 1967.
According to Phillips, Hendrix almost came to blows backstage with Who
principal Pete Townshend because neither wanted to follow the other. After
Hendrix lost a coin toss, he jumped up on a chair and vowed to "pull out all the
stops and blow everybody away."
The mind-bending performance began after an introduction from Rolling Stones
founder Brian Jones, who described his good friend as "a brilliant performer,
the most exciting guitarist I've ever heard." It ended about 40 minutes later
with a cover of "Wild Thing," during which Hendrix played his guitar behind his
back, set it aflame, smashed it to pieces and tossed the fragments into the
stunned crowd.