Jimi Hendrix wasn’t just a rock star. He was a full-blown experience.
A self-taught guitarist who learned by listening to legends like Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf, Hendrix — widely ranked the world’s greatest guitarist (Rolling Stone) — started his career backing bigs including Little Richard, King Curtis, and the Isley Brothers. It wasn’t long before the six-string innovator was redefining rock guitar, playing with his teeth, and creating riffs that would shape rock history.
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His defining moment may still be “Purple Haze.” The hit has been repeatedly ranked among the greatest rock songs and guitar riffs of all time, with outlets Fender and Ultimate Classic Rock praising its lasting influence. A psychedelic blast reportedly inspired by a dream, the track “and its sonically stunning riff” helped change the sound of rock music.
Released in March 1967 on the North American edition of Are You Experienced, the opening track fuses blues roots with bold experimentation. Hendrix pushed the electric guitar into new territory using heaving distortion, controlled feedback, a Fuzz Face pedal, the so-called “devil’s interval,” and the now-iconic “Hendrix chord.” The result was a sound-scape that felt raw, unpredictable, and entirely new.
A breakthrough, the song peaked at No. 3 in the U.K., introducing The Jimi Hendrix Experience to a global audience. Even better, it reset expectations by rewriting what rock guitar could sould like and influencing generations of musicians.
Hendrix once told NPR, “When I die, I want people to just play my music, go wild and freak out, do anything they want to do.”
More than 50 years later, that’s exactly what happened. “Purple Haze” remains one of the most influential songs in rock history, reinterpreted across genres from classical to bluegrass, with an opening riff that isn’t just iconic; it’s the moment guitar music changed forever.
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