The birth of heavy blues

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When Jimi Hendrix arrived in London in 1966 he blew the minds of the British rock elite including Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck. Soon, however, they would follow his lead and develop an explosive new form of electric blues...

Hear my train a-comin’: the power trio of Hendrix, a Strat and a Marshall stack.
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Like all the great overnight sensations, Jimi Hendrix took years to get off the ground. His was a long road to fame: from the little boy who in 1958 used his beat-up guitar to imitate TV cartoon sound effects, to the 1964 guitar slinger who hired out his talents to Little Richard, the Isley Brothers and others, to the outlandish psychedelic six-string shaman who flew into London in late 1966.

However, within weeks of Hendrix being unveiled to London’s goggle-eyed media at the Bag O’Nails club on Friday November 25, 1966, virtually every major British blues guitarist found himself rethinking his musical direction. Inevitably, the purists would continue to recycle the past, and the unimaginative would slavishly emulate Hendrix. But a handful of inspired innovators would choose to instead fashion their own unique styles, and eventually out of that seething maelstrom of creativity, heavy blues would be born.

1966, NOVEMBER 25

Having created a buzz with a handful of small-venue appearances, including the now legendary jam with Cream at Regent Street Polytechnic that had left Eric Clapton gobsmacked at his prowess, Jimi Hendrix was officially unveiled with a showcase gig in the Bag O’Nails, a tiny but influential music-biz Mecca in London’s Soho. As well as key journalists invited by Hendrix’s manager Chas Chandler, a Bag O’Nails appearance ensured that the fledgeling Jimi Hendrix Experience would be seen by the venue’s regular clientele, which included Paul McCartney, The Who, Eric Burdon and other stars.

JOHN MAYALL (The Bluesbreakers): When Jimi first came to England, Chas Chandler had put the word out that he’d found this phenomenal guitar player in New York, and he could play the guitar behind his head and with his teeth and everything. The buzz was out before Jimi had even been seen here, so people were anticipating his performance. And he more than lived up to what we were expecting.

TERRY REID (vocalist): We were all hanging out at the Bag O’Nails – Keith, Mick Jagger. Brian [Jones] comes skipping through, like all happy about something. Paul McCartney walks in. Jeff Beck walks in. Jimmy Page. [Ed’s note: Page denies having been there.] I thought: “What’s this? A bloody convention or something?”

Here comes Jim, in one of his military jackets, hair all over the place, pulls out this left-handed Stratocaster, beat to hell, looks like he’s been chopping wood with it. And he gets up, all soft-spoken, and all of a sudden, ‘WHOOO

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