Elvis and Michael had better watch out. Jimi is making a move.
Forty years after his death, Jimi Hendrix is enjoying the kind of resurgence in the posthumous rock-star derby that might rival the sales of Elvis Presley and Michael Jackson. Last week, Hendrix's estate released the first bona fide "new" Jimi album in decades (the often awesome, occasionally underwhelming "Valleys of Neptune," recorded mostly in 1969) as well as deluxe remastered versions of his three landmark studio albums. A Hendrix "Rock Band" video game is promised this year, and there's talk of a Jimi "Anthology" a la Beatles.
In the Twin Cities, there's a trippy Hendrix audio/visual exhibit at Walker Art Center (lie on a fringe-decorated hammock and groove to Jimi) and a concert tour coming Wednesday to the Orpheum Theatre called "Experience Hendrix" -- an all-star revue of guitar heroes, including Joe Satriani, Robert Randolph, Ernie Isley and Jonny Lang, performing tunes from the Hendrix catalog.
Isley said the mission of "Experience Hendrix" is to prove that the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer was well-rounded -- a first-rate songwriter, imaginative interpreter and, as any rock fan knows, a pioneering guitar virtuoso.
"He brought to the electric guitar what Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis brought to the trumpet. He expanded the boundaries of the instrument," said Isley, who is making his first foray on this tour, which did brief runs in 2007 and '08. "He got out every sound that the instrument or amplifier could make. He was like George Washington -- there might be other people to follow you, but you'll always be the first."
Growing up with 'Jimmy'
Isley knew Jimmy Hendrix (he hadn't changed the spelling yet) firsthand. From spring of 1963 until Thanksgiving 1965, the guitarist lived in the Isley family's New Jersey home while playing with the Isley Brothers, the R&B stars known then for "Shout" and "Twist and Shout."
Isley, who was 11 at the time, remembers watching the Beatles' debut on "The Ed Sullivan Show" with Hendrix sitting on the couch between him and his younger brother Marvin.