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JIMI HENDRIX INTERVIEW :: TALKING ISN'T REALLY MY SCENE. PLAYING IS.

By March 1969 Jimi Hendrix was at the top of his game. Still brimming with the success that The Experience's third studio album, Electric Ladyland had brought them, and the immensely successful performances at London's Royal Albert Hall on February 18th and 24th. Hendrix was poised not only to convert the recordings made at the Royal Albert Hall into a proposed live release, his creative influences were now focused on his next studio masterpiece, First Rays Of The New Rising Sun -- a spectacular double-LP set that unfortunately, Jimi would never live to fulfill. On March 11th of that year, Jane de Mendelssohn of the International Times sat down with Hendrix at his Brook Street apartment to talk about his musical future. [ read more ]

JOHNNY A. INTERVIEW :: TRAVELING FULL CIRCLE

The darkened stage explodes into light as guitarist Johnny A. touches off a cool and creamy A13th chord opening his gig at Birdy's in Indianapolis, IN with an original composition entitled "Up In The Attic." Johnny A. and his band are tight and the sound is clean and bright. What grabs the listener however is the tone, a remarkable, retro sound achieved by judicious use of a Bigsby tremolo and Johnny's deft playing ability. This is one smooth cat who knows how to play and he does play well, stunningly so. For the uninitiated who have not heard of him or had a sample of his instrumental CD Sometime Tuesday Morning, they are certainly missing something very special in the world of guitar-featured music. [ read more ]

GEORGE CLINTON INTERVIEW :: THE RETURN OF DR. FUNKENSTEIN

Since we first conducted this interview in the Fall of '99, the music world has witnessed something of a second coming of George Clinton, Funkadelic, and the P-Funk All-Stars. Between guest appearances on chart topping albums, sell-out tours from coast to coast, and a series of hugely popular Nike television commercials, George "Dr. Funkenstein" Clinton continues to dish out his unique blend of funk, rock, and soul – and creating a sound that truly can be defined as his own. Despite reading this now, two years into the future from whence it was written, almost everything that Clinton has to say here stands as strong today as it did when we first spoke. It's an interesting journey, behind-the-scenes with one of music's most beloved artists. [ read more ]

BEN HARPER INTERVIEW :: GOOD WILL HUNTING

Somewhere within the sprawl of Inland Empire, California that runs east of Los Angeles to the Joshua Tree desert, a six-year-old Ben Harper was given his first guitar. "It was a cheap nylon string classical model," he recalls. "I'm not sure if I spent as much time playing it as I did riding my bike over it."

Harper was born into a musical family. Before moving west, his grandparents hung around with the Seegers and other members of the first family of East Coast folk music; his grandfather somehow ended up with Woody Guthrie's guitar but sold it. "My dad played percussion, and my mom and grandmother played guitar and sang, and they all had tremendous record collections," says Harper. "Their love of music was a huge part of growing up for me." [ read more ]

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