Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

4. The Jimi Hendrix ExperienceAre You Experienced

Jimi Hendrix is one of our local heroes in Seattle, and we only have a handful. He walked the same streets than we did. Interestingly enough, he had to come over here to break out. We were always proud to be from the same town that he came from. I remember in the very early days of this band, we would drive to the cemetery, go to his grave and crack a few beers or whatever. We knew that a lot of people did that too. So if we were low on weed, we could probably show up and always find at least a joint or two… Which we did more than a couple of times too [laughs]! People would leave guitar picks, half burnt roaches, sometimes full joints. And we would hang out with Jimi and smoke the pot that people left on his grave.

He was a phenomenal guitar player. The band that he had, the trio on that record, it’s legendary. Are You Experienced? is the first of his albums I was introduced to. And I still think it’s the best. He was an innovator, he was extremely unique. He had a uniqueness that passed the test of time. And the only other guy, for me personally, to make that sort of a change, another guitar player of the same calibre that I kind of acknowledge as "this guy is the fucking shit!" is probably Eddie Van Halen, a couple of generations back.

Selected in other Baker’s Dozens: Hamid Drake, , George Clinton, Pixies
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