Typical BS stereotyping.It was my observation at the time, and I remain convinced that a large portion of the rock n' roll and even pop music of the day was a product of the California drug culture - druggies writing and performing music that only other druggies could understand.
Also nonsense.
My only point is to comment on the statement and its validity, not the writer, who claims to have ben around yet was obviously so far distanced from the *music* he neglected to see the forest for the trees.
Yes, there was an open drug culture. It made its way into country music as well, from alcohol to heroin. "Artists" of any type seem to, according to psychological studies, be prone to certain electrochemical reactions, imbalances, mood swings, etc. The whole drug-culture thing is irrelevant except for its unfortunate toll on human life. Drugs made no better or worse music by themseves; some terrible music was made as a result of chemicals (think Syd Barrett's flameout with Pink Floyd) and some incredible pieces weredone as well (Santana's blistering set at Woodstock, in the midst of a paranoid mood fueled by acid).
If you know anything at all about Hendrix, you would know he was a "showman" - from the earliest days he did the behind-the-head playing in otherwise very straight bands - something inspired by bluesman T-Bone Walker. Kevin Hatton nailed Hendrix as far as music - he truly was an innovator, not an imitator. And the "flaming Strat" was showmanship, pure and simple.
My good friend Bobbe and I don't agree about Hendrix at Woodstock (and he may have only seen the original movie cuts, not the entire set - the producers used only the most electrifying...and polarizing...parts) but I don't think the
2 Marshall stacks" line was necessary, is it took the statement out of the realm of personal opinion to exaggerated "fact". If you don't like something, say what it is...not present an overblown picture of something that didn't exist.
Hendrix took blues-based rock (as opposed to country-based rock; Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, etc) and turned it on its head. Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck were also doing incredibly influential and creative things, but none with the flair of Hendrix.
One may not care for the music he did, but his influence on the direction of popular music cannot be denied.