Baker's Dozen

Artists discuss the 13 records that shaped their lives

It was such a turning point, this album. I remember putting it on the Dansette and ‘Purple Haze’ coming on, and those opening notes, and going bloody hell I want this. When you hear something that really works for you it’s almost not a conscious decision. It’s a chemical reaction that your ears and your soul have. I heard it and it was like being grabbed on the inside and told you’re going to go with this. You like this, whether you want to or not. I’ve pretty much always had a copy of this album, and I don’t think it does everything that Jimi Hendrix does best, but it does a lot of it.

I think he was very smart because he never overdid the solos, certainly not on this album. They’re all fairly short songs. And also seeing the cover, back then, it was like wow, here’s this black bloke, and he’s dressed as a hippy. That was quite a shocking image for then, and you knew it was going to be great, just by looking at it. But it had that terrible lettering on the cover and it said "Smash Hits" and you immediately went oh my god, because that was what you had every Christmas, those K-Tel Smash Hits records. You never expected a serious musician, let alone one who played like that, to have that kind of title.

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