Jimi Hendrix: The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Live At The Atlanta Pop Festival


The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Live At The Atlanta Pop Festival
Jimi Hendrix (guitar, vocals); Billy Cox (bass); Mitch Mitchell (drums)
By the beginning of the 1970s, Jimi Hendrix was unquestionably one of the most exciting rock musicians of his generation, having captivated the world with his highly stylized approach to blues guitar. Paul McCartney freely admits to worshiping him, adding, “We all played guitar. We all knew a bit. But he seemed to know more than us.”
Jimi Hendrix put the rock festival concept on the map with his blistering performance at California’s Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, headlining 1968’s inaugural Miami Pop Festival, and providing the soundtrack for the counterculture with a dazzling set at Woodstock in 1969.
His performance at the Second Atlanta International Pop Festival was not only significant on a musical level, but also in terms of socio-political dynamics. The organizers were keen to push back against the cultural divide that was very much in evidence in the Deep South. It was assumed that rural audiences would not take kindly to “long-hair” bands, and that black and white artists could not comfortably exist on the same bill; Atlanta Pop set out to challenge those beliefs. Hendrix’s music and message of universal love made him the ideal artist to represent that pushback, and, appropriately, was the first act booked for the festival.
In the sweltering Georgia heat, amongst intimidating bikers who were hired as security, hundreds of thousands of mostly young music fans descended upon the festival grounds, eventually knocking over fences and leaving the organizers with no choice but to declare it a free event. Law enforcement, not equipped to handle such crowds, adopted a hands-off policy with regards to crowd control, drug use and nudity. Against incredible odds, the event proved to be largely peaceful. By the time the Jimi Hendrix Experience took the stage on the evening of July 4, the audience swelled to more than 300,000.
Massive, anarchic music fests in the U.S., unencumbered by high ticket prices and corporate sponsors were soon to be extinct, and the Atlanta Pop Festival was the last of this dying breed. Glenn Phillips (Hampton Grease Band) says, “This was, certainly in retrospect, sort of the end of an era, and a great end to an era. It was a powerful moment.”

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Track Listings

Disc: 1
1.  Fire
2.  Lover Man
3.  Spanish Castle Magic
4.  Red House
5.  Room Full Of Mirrors
6.  Hear My Train A Comin'
7.  Message To Love

Disc: 2
1.  All Along The Watchtower
2.  Freedom
3.  Foxey Lady
4.  Purple Haze
5.  Hey Joe
6.  Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
7.  Stone Free
8.  Star Spangled Banner
9.  Straight Ahead

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