The guitarist and songwriter Jimi Hendrix became an overnight sensation with the release of his band?s first single, ?Hey Joe?, in 1966. His innovative fusion of blues and experimental rock ? coupled with his extraordinary live performances ? has continued to have a profound influence on popular music long after his death.
Born in Seattle, Washington, USA, James Marshall Hendrix spent the most successful years of his working life in London. He first arrived in the capital in September 1966, three months after having been ?discovered? by the British musician Chas Chandler, who had been impressed by Hendrix?s innovative guitar style and dynamic stage presence. By October, the Jimi Hendrix Experience had been created ? with Noel Redding on bass and Mitch Mitchell on drums.
The band?s first single, ?Hey Joe?, was met with acclaim, while the second, ?Purple Haze?, became Jimi?s signature tune. 1967 saw virtually constant touring in Britain, Europe and America and the release of the Experience?s first albums,?Are You Experienced?and?Axis: Bold as Love. With these records Hendrix explored and then broke all previous boundaries of the electric guitar. It was his innovative twist on rock ?n? roll that paved the way for many acts of the 1970s and onwards.
In 1968 Hendrix joined his girlfriend, Kathy Etchingham (b. 1946), at the flat she had taken in June on the top two floors of number 23 Brook Street. Jimi lived in the flat for some months ??helping to decorate and furnish it to his own taste?? before leaving to tour the USA in March 1969.
He was to return to London for only brief spells in 1970, spending his last night at the Samarkand Hotel, 22 Lansdowne Crescent in Notting Hill, where he died of a drug overdose at the age of just 27.