View allAll Photos Tagged Hendrix

cassette tape on canvas 2015

Here is another version. I have the picture further processed, I have adjusted the light so strongly that the picture has assumed a striking character.

And because I could not decide me, which image I like better ... well .... I upload both * smile *

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZBlqcbpmxY

Title: Hendrix [for Sale]

Artist: Jimi Hendrix

AcrylicPunk on canvas

100x70 cm

2017/10 by York

 

please visit my ArtPage: www.art-of-york.berlin

I seem to have grown a tail.

Right outside of the Japanese Tea Garden in Golden Gate Park, I took a candid shot of this street performer who was just about to pack up his guitar. I couldn't help but thought about Jimi Hendrix. This was also my first roll of first film on my Leica MP.

 

Film: Fujifilm Acros II pushed 1-stop

Lens: Voigtlander Nokton 35mm F1.2 Asph III

Camera: Leica MP

Hanging on the wall in an antique shop in Dahlonega, GA

Re-issued vinyl - The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Are You Experienced (originally released 1967) - for sale at store. - Parker, Arizona

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Brick Lane, London

Bombay male cat

So many things that I like - all contained in one little photo.

 

Northern England

Signs

Lettering

Blue (like Manchester City’s home strip)

Fish and Chips

and

Jimi Hendrix!

 

Even though it has been several decades since Jimi passed away, the last piece of music I purchased (only this week in fact) was one of his tracks - Little Wing. I play the Stevie Ray Vaughan instrumental version quite a lot but realised that I didn’t have a digital version of Mr Hendrix’s original.

 

One of my favourite records of all time is Jimi’s version of Bob Dylan’s ‘All Along The Watchtower’ which is deemed to be one of the, if not THE, greatest “cover versions” ever. It reminds me so much of the bikers pub I used to frequent when I was sevent….oops I mean eighteen, when it was always blasting out of the jukebox. Several decades later, I still love it.

 

The chippy is in Tynemouth, about 8 miles away from where Jimi’s manager, Chas Chandler, was born. Chas was in The Animals and later went on to manage Slade. In the 1970s my father once said of Slade, “you’ll never of heard of them next year”. Which is a bit ironic given that even 40 plus years later Merry Xmas Everybody is reputed to earn its writers somewhere between a quarter and a half a million pounds in royalties every year. I once saw them live and they were brilliant. And very loud. My life is blighted by tinnitus these days. I don’t think that Noddy and the boys helped :-(

....one of my favorite musicians. Jimi is part of the club 27.

Unfortunately I never may experienced him live because he died much too early, so I could not take a picture of him. So I taked a old photo as a template and made my own picture. A smudge painting. At the smudge painting will blurs the photo until it looks like a painted picture.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLV4_xaYynY

  

Rock star portraits for Beat Club in Fitzrovia, London

Stencil, spray and acrylic

Dudleya hendrixii is an extremely rare succulent found only on a few acres of flat mesa on Punta Colonet in northwest Baja California.

 

Colonet Mesa

Ensenada Municipality, BC

Hendrix emerging from the shadows on the door of a local bar.

Henderson plays Hendrix bei Rock für Wiesbaden

Jimi Hendrix

This is one page from a 1968 Jimi Hendrix Concert Tour souvenir photo booklet that cost $1.50 (show was $7.00). The title of the10 page book is "The Electric Church" I've got the rest of the book on my flickr homepage. I have a Jimi Hendrix video on youtube if you want to watch it.

www.youtube.com/stratocasterbob

How did all my lp's get to be 50 years old? Turns out Bubba is not much of a Hendrix fan.

Although only 14 shots were printed in the book there were more taken.This guitar was his favorite. He named her Black Betty .For those that would know more see the" Inner world of Jimi Hendrix " By Monika Danneman

Seattle pic

Leica M9-P 50mm Summicron

f/2 1/350 ISO160

Lightroom 5

Browns Lane, Paisley

 

James Marshall "Jimi" Hendrix (born Johnny Allen Hendrix; November 27, 1942 – September 18, 1970) was an American guitarist, songwriter and singer. He is widely regarded as the greatest guitarist in the history of popular music and one of the most influential musicians of the 20th century. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame describes him as "arguably the greatest instrumentalist in the history of rock music.

 

Quoted from Wikipedia

"Hendrix" bridge Zagreb at night.

Fantastic panel art from a recent meet. @OmmotImagery

Still playing around with those collectible minifig parts.

British postcard in the Greetings series. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

 

Green-eyed and dark-haired American actress Wanda Hendrix (1928-1981) achieved stardom in her teens and played in about 20 films in the late 1940s and 1950s. Her first, brief marriage was to the most decorated soldier of World War II, Audie Murphy.

 

Dixie Wanda Hendrix was born in 1928 in Jacksonville, Florida, to Max Sylvester and Mary Faircloth Hendrix, nee Bailley. Her father was a logging camp boss who later worked for Lockheed Aircraft. After graduation from junior high school, she joined the Jacksonville Little Theatre, where she was discovered by a Warner Brothers talent scout. The 16-years-old moved to Hollywood. She made her debut as Else, the char-girl with the thickened brogue who develops an ill-fated allegiance with Charles Boyer in Confidential Agent (Herman Shumlin, 1945). Before she was out of her teens she had starred in several other films, including the Film Noir Nora Prentiss (Vincent Sherman, 1947) with Ann Sheridan, Robert Montgomery’s exemplary 'ultra- Noir' Ride the Pink Horse (1947) and the comedy Welcome Stranger (Elliott Nugent, 1947) with Bing Crosby. In 1946, WWII hero-turned-actor Audie Murphy saw her on the cover of Coronet magazine and his mentor, actor James Cagney, called the magazine and got her address. Audie asked her to dinner, and they fell in love immediately. They got engaged in 1947 and promised her parents that they would defer marriage for two full years. Her parents moved to Hollywood, where they bought a ranch. In 1949, the young couple married and the press reported: "Audie Murphy thinks his little Hendrix honey is Wanda-ful!" However, Murphy wanted her to give up filming and move with him to Texas. He had terrible nightmares from his war experiences and always had his gun with him. During 'flashback' episodes he would turn on her, once holding her at gunpoint. In her later years, Hendrix spoke of Murphy's suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder with sympathy. Murphy had a passion for horse racing and for making big-money bets on long shots. Eventually, he gambled away all of her savings. In 1950, after 13 months of marriage, she received a divorce in 1951. Los Angeles on the grounds of mental cruelty. The couple had no children but together they produced the Western Sierra (Alfred E. Green, 1950).

 

Among Wanda Hendrix's best-known films are the comedy Miss Tatlock's Millions (Richard Haydn, 1948) with Richard Lund, The Prince of Foxes (Henry King, 1949), with Tyrone Power and Orson Welles, the drama Song of Surrender (Mitchell Leisen, 1949), the Western Saddle Tramp (Hugo Fregonese, 1950) starring Joel McCrea, and the adventure film The Highwayman (Lesley Selander, 1951) with Charles Coburn. Later, she starred with John Derek in the action film in Sea of Lost Ships (Joseph Kane, 1953), and she sizzled and showed off her hips in the Roger Corman–produced crime drama Highway Dragnet (Nathan Juran, 1954) with Richard Conte. In 1954, she married wealthy sportsman James L. Stack, brother of the actor Robert Stack, and she briefly retired. Her second marriage also made headlines when it came to an end in 1958 with both sides charging ''mental cruelty.'' Hendrix went to work again, on TV mostly. One of her films in this period was the thriller Johnny Cool (William Asher, 1963) with Henry Silva. According to IMDb, she developed a drinking problem in the 1960s due to the few acting roles she was offered. In 1969, she married Italian financier and oil company executive Steve La Monte in a single-ring ceremony at a plush suite of the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was 34; she listed her age on the marriage license as 33. La Monte divorced her in 1979 or 1980 (the sources differ). Despite breaking up after a year of marriage with Audie Murphy, she had continued to love him and was devastated when he died suddenly in a plane crash in 1971. She considered collaborating with author Douglas Warren on an autobiography of Murphy, but it never came to fruition. Her last role for the big screen was in the Civil War horror One Minute Before Death (Rogelio A. González, 1972), based on a short story 'The Oval Portrait' by Edgar Allan Poe. The film in which she co-starred with Barry Coe, was never theatrically released. Her final screen appearance was in an episode of the TV series Police Story (1974) with Scott Brady. In 1981, Wanda Hendrix died of double pneumonia in Burbank, California. She was 52. Hendrix was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.

 

Sources: Chuck Stephens (Film Comment), New York Times, Glamour Girls of the Silver Screen, Wikipedia and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

My baby boy Hendrix

 

Named after the legendary Jimi

 

Had to get a picture with a guitar in it

 

1x AD200 above model with shoot through brolly on 1/32 power

 

D7100

46mm

F3.5

1/160

ISO200

Mural by creativerealm seen on the wall of the Congress Theater

at 2135 N. Milwaukee Avenue in the Logan Square area of Chicago, Illinois.

 

Photo by James aka @urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.

 

Edit by Teee

Jimi Hendrix setting on fire his gun?

4 seconds exposure, caught the train.

1st album by the Jimi Hendrix Experience for sale at the Golden Nugget Antique Flea Market - Lambertville, New Jersey - USA.

Dutch postcard, no. 1089. Photo: Universal International.

 

Green-eyed and dark-haired American actress Wanda Hendrix (1928-1981) achieved stardom in her teens and played in about 20 films in the late 1940s and 1950s. Her first, brief marriage was to the most decorated soldier of World War II, Audie Murphy.

 

Dixie Wanda Hendrix was born in 1928 in Jacksonville, Florida, to Max Sylvester and Mary Faircloth Hendrix, nee Bailey. Her father was a logging camp boss who later worked for Lockheed Aircraft. After graduation from junior high school, she joined the Jacksonville Little Theatre, where she was discovered by a Warner Brothers talent scout. The 16-years-old moved to Hollywood. She made her debut as Else, the char-girl with the thickened brogue who develops an ill-fated allegiance with Charles Boyer in Confidential Agent (Herman Shumlin, 1945). Before she was out of her teens she had starred in several other films, including the Film Noir Nora Prentiss (Vincent Sherman, 1947) with Ann Sheridan, Robert Montgomery’s exemplary 'ultra- Noir' Ride the Pink Horse (1947) and the comedy Welcome Stranger (Elliott Nugent, 1947) with Bing Crosby. In 1946, WWII hero-turned-actor Audie Murphy saw her on the cover of Coronet magazine and his mentor, actor James Cagney, called the magazine and got her address. Audie asked her to dinner, and they fell in love immediately. They got engaged in 1947 and promised her parents that they would defer marriage for two full years. Her parents moved to Hollywood, where they bought a ranch. In 1949, the young couple married and the press reported: "Audie Murphy thinks his little Hendrix honey is Wanda-ful!" However, Murphy wanted her to give up filming and move with him to Texas. He had terrible nightmares from his war experiences and always had his gun with him. During 'flashback' episodes he would turn on her, once holding her at gunpoint. In her later years, Hendrix spoke of Murphy's suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder with sympathy. Murphy had a passion for horse racing and for making big-money bets on long shots. Eventually, he gambled away all of her savings. In 1950, after 13 months of marriage, she received a divorce in 1951. Los Angeles on the grounds of mental cruelty. The couple had no children but together they produced the Western Sierra (Alfred E. Green, 1950).

 

Among Wanda Hendrix's best-known films are the comedy Miss Tatlock's Millions (Richard Haydn, 1948) with Richard Lund, The Prince of Foxes (Henry King, 1949), with Tyrone Power and Orson Welles, the drama Song of Surrender (Mitchell Leisen, 1949), the Western Saddle Tramp (Hugo Fregonese, 1950) starring Joel McCrea, and the adventure film The Highwayman (Lesley Selander, 1951) with Charles Coburn. Later, she starred with John Derek in the action film in Sea of Lost Ships (Joseph Kane, 1953), and she sizzled and showed off her hips in the Roger Corman–produced crime drama Highway Dragnet (Nathan Juran, 1954) with Richard Conte. In 1954, she married wealthy sportsman James L. Stack, brother of the actor Robert Stack, and she briefly retired. Her second marriage also made headlines when it came to an end in 1958 with both sides charging ''mental cruelty.'' Hendrix went to work again, on TV mostly. One of her films in this period was the thriller Johnny Cool (William Asher, 1963) with Henry Silva. According to IMDb, she developed a drinking problem in the 1960s due to the few acting roles she was offered. In 1969, she married Italian financier and oil company executive Steve La Monte in a single-ring ceremony at a plush suite of the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was 34; she listed her age on the marriage license as 33. La Monte divorced her in 1979 or 1980 (the sources differ). Despite breaking up after a year of marriage with Audie Murphy, she had continued to love him and was devastated when he died suddenly in a plane crash in 1971. She considered collaborating with author Douglas Warren on an autobiography of Murphy, but it never came to fruition. Her last role for the big screen was in the Civil War horror One Minute Before Death (Rogelio A. González, 1972), based on a short story 'The Oval Portrait' by Edgar Allan Poe. The film in which she co-starred with Barry Coe, was never theatrically released. Her final screen appearance was in an episode of the TV series Police Story (1974) with Scott Brady. In 1981, Wanda Hendrix died of double pneumonia in Burbank, California. She was 52. Hendrix was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.

 

Sources: Chuck Stephens (Film Comment), New York Times, Glamour Girls of the Silver Screen, Wikipedia and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

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