Mar 03 2023
5
Look, Iâve been pretty hard on some of the âclassicâ, âgreatest-of-all-timeâ records that appear on this list and there are very few that I plan on giving five stars. Itâs not without good reasonâŠa lot of those âclassicâ records, weâre just supposed to accept theyâre classics because they sold a lot of copies or weâve been told by the music press for decades that theyâre important. I donât think Rumors is a 5 star recordâŠshit, I donât even think Sgt. Pepperâs is a five star record. They both have their flaws to me and Iâm not going to ignore them because everyone else thinks theyâre perfect.
Now Iâm going be a little hypocritical.
Are You Experienced? is not a perfect record, but it is a 5 star record.
Why, you ask?
Well, and hereâs where Iâll be a little hyperbolic, itâs because no one on earth, since Jimi Hendrix, has had as much of a long lasting impact on music. This is a record that changed the world and continued to change the world for many decades after its release.
There is rock music before and after Hendrix. He is the line in the sand, so to speak. He completely changed the way the guitar is played and used in rock music. The man basically created a new language for everyone else to learn and figure out. He is without a doubt the greatest of all time.
You can track his influence all over the music that was released in the years, decades, half century following his debut.
As an example, go ahead and listen to âThird Stone from the Sunâ and try and tell me you canât draw a straight line to the guitar squall and experimentation of Sonic Youth.
Or listen to Eddie Hazelâs solo on Funkadelicâs âMaggot Brainâ or his playing on their â74 record, âStanding on the Verge of Getting it onâ
Or Stevie Ray Vaughan
Or J Mascis
Or Prince
Or John Frusciante
Or read about how Eric Clapton walked off stage the first time he saw Hendrix play. I believe âIs he really that fucking good?â was Claptonâs response to Chas Chandler right after he left the stage.(TBH, Jimi gets 5 stars just for knocking Clapton down a peg)
Jimi Hendrix was so influential that Miles Davis started playing his trumpet through a wah pedal.
I mean, I could keep naming musicians here, but you get the point, right? There is a pretty good chance that whichever guitar player you like wouldnât be the player they are without Hendrix.
I donât think an album with the wealth of influence that Are You Experienced? left behind deserves anything other than 5 stars.
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Feb 11 2021
5
Sometimes you just gotta toss your 5 stars to the wind and let Jimi take over. Genre-bending, passionate, energized, psychedelic. Incredible album from a powerful trio. Fantastic drumming, impeccable guitar work. If I wasn't wading through clouds of drywall dust while feeding a baby and keeping a barking dog at bay I'm sure I could opine for hours on how much I enjoy listening to this album. It never gets old.
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Apr 22 2021
2
I imagine Hendrix sounded amazing when he arrived on the scene, unlike anything else. Now though, so many people have done so much better. He's obviously a legend and all, can't dispute that, but I struggle to listen to him for too long without finding it annoying. A couple of tracks here are fine, a whole album is too much for me.
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Jan 13 2021
5
The songs are still brilliant. It is easy to get caught up in Jimi's excellent guitar work but the other pieces of the band are just as great. There is a rawness to the guitar though that is so difficult to replicate that I once described as a imprecise precision. Jimi never misses a note and you get the feeling that he hits everything just as he wanted and yet there is a feeling of searching in the melody, like an artist sketching out a drawing. I once listened to someone play a Hendrix song and commented while they played well, that they played too well. Their cover was too clean and it lost the energy of the original. That is on no better display than on this album.
The album contains some of my favourite Hendrix songs including The Wind Cries Mary and Are You Experienced. However, the songs do form a random collection of tracks and lack a sense of cohesion to tie them together which I think is a missed opportunity.
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Oct 31 2021
3
Ce que j'ai reproché au précédent album de Jimi à propos de l'emplacement de ses "tubes" dans la chronologie du projet n'est pas tombé dans l'oreille d'un sourd, et c'est une bonne chose.
Vous savez probablement que j'ai fĂȘtĂ© la semaine derniĂšre le premier anniversaire du jour oĂč je me suis fait licencier de mon premier cabinet d'avocats. Je vous dois la vĂ©ritĂ© sur cet Ă©pisode.
Alors que je m'y rendis un matin avec le mĂȘme entrain qu'habituellement, ma tutrice me convoqua dans son bureau. "Ferme la porte" me dit-elle une fois que j'eus franchi celle-ci. Je m'assis en face d'elle et c'est alors qu'elle dĂ©buta son laĂŻus truffĂ© de reproches :
- RobserpillÚre, cela fait maintenant trois semaines que tu travailles chez nous et plusieurs de tes agissements nous poussent à nous interroger sur ta présence ici.
- Quoi ?!
- Nous t'avons plusieurs fois demandé de décrocher les posters de Hugh Masekela que tu as fixés sur les murs de la salle de réunion, tu n'en as pas tenu compte.
- Mais hein ?!
- Vendredi dernier, alors que j'Ă©tais en rendez-vous avec un client trĂšs important, tu as allumĂ© ton enceinte et diffusĂ© l'album O.G. Original Gangster d'Ice T dans le couloir. C'Ă©tait extrĂȘmement inappropriĂ©.
- Ta gueule ?!
- De plus, tu as pris pour habitude de dĂ©brancher l'aspirateur de notre femme de mĂ©nage car cela t'empĂȘche apapremment d'Ă©couter ton album du jour. Ce comportement est inacceptable.
- Pardon ?!
- Tu es viré, RobgaziniÚre...
Voilà , vous savez tout désormais.
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Apr 21 2024
5
I'm embarrassed to admit that while I've heard many songs from this album, this is the first time I've listened to the album outright. So, *now* I can say I'm experienced, I suppose. And what a great experience! Not every song can be as contagious or definitive as "Purple Haze" or "Foxey Lady", but even today it's not all that hard to understand how revolutionary the whole album was (or why it was so immediately popular).
The Wikipedia entry for the album is a great read too (even if it's a little too long in the tooth at times). And now I know why Jimi Hendrix's sound is so distinctive on the album, given that he was literally blasting everyone out in the studio (and even causing computers above one of the studios to mess up). I'm really glad to know that Chas Chandler played a significant role in helping Jimi Hendrix bring his genius to the world.
Finally listening to this album in its entirety only makes me even more baffled that the high school in Seattle I went to, and where he (briefly) attended much earlier than I did, had only a small, unlabeled bronze bust of Hendrix buried deep in the high school library, and nothing else to celebrate a brilliant musical artist.
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Feb 17 2025
5
I think the music you hear when you are 12-14 has an outsized impact on not just your taste but the kind of person youâre gonna turn into. I first got into Jimi Hendrix at 12 (at Seanâs house) and Are you experienced is probably the album that made me quit all the sports teams I was on, grow my hair long, start smoking wind tea (teabags soaked in windex, pretty epic high/ intense nausea) and locking myself in the basement to play guitar and write songs about girls I thought were hot but was too afraid to talk to. Never really course corrected, unfortunately. Gonna make sure my son just listens to pointless AI slop so he thinks music sucks and does his math homework.
I have no recollection of doing the foxy ears mime during Lesbian Makeout Partyâs debut at the 8th grade talent show in 2001, tho I remember Sean being pissed. I canât be held responsible for my actions - I was not Frank that day, my mind went blank, I was but a mere vessel through which Jimiâs immortal spirit flowed.
Anyway Jimi is creativity incarnate and without question the most influential electric guitarist of all time. I donât think his songwriting gets enough credit either for its uniqueness. I actually like Axis Bold as Love better as an album but this one is almost as good.
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Mar 09 2025
5
Really is incredible this came out in 1967, on another level compared to the rock music of that time, with one or two notable exceptions. A unique voice in music that accomplished so much in the short time he was around.
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Mar 05 2025
5
5 stars. Next question.
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Mar 03 2025
5
Okay, for this review, I listened to the North American release of this album, and excluded the bonus tracks added to the 1997 CD reissue, from "Stone Free" to "Red House".
It's been a while since I heard from Mr. Hendrix, after getting Axis: Bold as Love as album #3 on my journey. It was an enjoyable piece of familiarity in a rather experimental first week. So it is no surprise that the prior album is also great, perhaps even better.
Are You Experienced is one of those bona fide debut albums long recognized as a game-changer. You can hear how Jimi and his band took the blues rock structure and flipped it on its head, incorporating other styles and techniques. From the backward masking of the guitar and drums on the title track, to the tribal rhythms of "I Don't Live Today", to the blazin' fast funk of "Fire", to the serene ballad "The Wind Cries Mary" and the triple meter of "Manic Depression", Jimi wrote and composed with such wild tenacity. Both Noel Redding on bass and Mitch Mitchell on drums were well-prepared to maintain the backbone of these tracks. Even the cover of Billy Roberts's "Hey Joe" is given new life with the fuzzed out guitar soloing and equally matched ferocity of the backing band.
I could go on, but my point is clearâAre You Experienced is a phenomenal debut album that quickly cemented the legacy of the Jimi Hendrix Experience. It is truly groundbreaking.
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Apr 21 2024
5
Fantastic album that blew my mind the first time and still does. Manic depression is one of my favorite Hendrix songs.
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Oct 31 2023
5
How could you go wrong with Jimmy Hendrix on the experience⊠Every single song on this album is five stars. Itâs blues, rock, psychedelic, everything you ever imagined anymore. Must listen.
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Feb 17 2022
5
The 1968 Bob Gibson season of albums. Even in the so-called "Year Of The Pitcher", Gibson having an ERA of 1.12 is just insane. So are 28 complete games and 13 shutouts. It's similar to an original album that contains Purple Haze, Hey Joe, May This Be Love, The Wind Cries Mary, Fire, however you want to spell Foxey Lady, and of course, the title song. There will never be another Bob Gibson. And there's never been anyone like Jimi Hendrix.
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Feb 11 2021
5
Uhh, best guitar player ever (arguably) and Mattâs favorite drummer playing psychedelic rock, yeah, youâre asking for Matt to hand out his first 5. The album is filled with banger after banger, no bad songs. Iâve always thought of this as a Jimi Hendrix Psychedelic album, now I realize itâs an album where Jimi spans like 5 genres and adds his magicians Psychedelic touch to each of them. Iâm hearing R&B, folk, blues, rock, rockabilly, bebop and proto-funkâwhich is essentially what Jimi Hendrix is, a holy amalgam of skills, experiences and his time and setting spanning these genres to create psych rock. This album sets the stage for so many albums which follow it. This band might just be the perfect 3 piece, an insane guitar player with a really tight rhythm section. Every song has a great lick and impressive groove. Enough has been said about Purple Haze, itâs the single off an album that is made up of singles. The groove on manic depression is incredible. Hey Joe is perfectâmisogynist lyrics notwithstanding. Wind cries Mary is perfect. Let me stand next to your Fire bangs. Third Stone is a solid jam session. Are you experienced is Jimi doing a Beatlesâesque hippie anthem. Stone free is a great mix of R&B-psych. The only strike on this album, as with many Hendrix songs, there are some egregious fade outs, you want the song to keep going, heâs set the table for a breakdown and it just fades out. Stone Free and 51st Anniversary are the two worst offenders in this, though nothing will be as bad as bad, give you bigger rock blue balls than Little Wing (different album). Love that Hendrix ties it all together at the end with a solid blues cover, paying homage to the forebearersânote the Easter egg fart (distortion blip) at 3:14 on this song. Amazing album, long, love it even though Iâve heard it about 1 million times and it was my first real classic rock exposure at 12, doesnât matter still tapping my feet to it at 36.
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Mar 22 2021
5
It's been a few months since I last listened to Jimi Hendrix. Thus, I'm not sure if my enjoyment of the debut is different because of context or just because it's a better record. This is immediately obvious, virtuosic guitar music of the highest caliber. The vocals are tucked back in the mix, because they aren't the focus of the music. But they also can be there because the meaning is crystal clear with the instruments in front of it. The hour flies by with the album in the background, but each song stands up to closer listening as well. There's simultaneous appreciation of rock history and creative innovation.
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Nov 09 2020
5
The great tracks we all know and the other great tracks. Nearly loses a point for some of the lyrics.
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Jan 25 2025
3
ĐĐŸĐčĐŽŃŃ
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Jan 20 2025
3
Yeah fine, can't really listen to JH anymore for some reason
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Apr 17 2024
3
Always a great album to check out. Not one of my favorites but it is good.
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Mar 10 2025
5
This was pretty damn good. I will say that it was a tad longer than it probably should've been but lots of hits and famous songs of the era on this. I've heard a bunch of them but never in one shot like this, so, I'm glad to say that I've been experienced. 9/10.
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Feb 25 2025
5
Thereâs a reason no other guitarist has universal appeal as the greatest guitarist to ever live. It wasn't just his playing was a cut above the rest, but his innovation bringing together sounds, genres, and technology to create something entirely new set him apart. Growing up as a bedroom guitarist, I share a common experience held by many before me and many still todayâThe first time you hear "Purple Haze" coming through the speakers at the start of this album. It only gets better from there. Thank you, Jimi Hendrix.
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Feb 23 2025
5
fire front to back, runs together a hair but the individual songs all offer something excellent, mind bending even now
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Feb 22 2025
5
Great album. Great musician. Great music.
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Feb 19 2025
5
Masterpiece. Classic.
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Feb 18 2025
5
Seminal hard rock. Driving rhythm section combined with virtuoso playing. Foxyyyyyyyy
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Feb 17 2025
5
Yesterday I was getting my haircut and next to the chair was huge hand painting of Hendrix by a local artist.
The painting got me wondering about Jimi in San Francisco. Learned that in 1967 he played a show for 400 people in the Panhandle park near Haight Ashbury, on the bed of a truck owned by Jefferson Airplane, not too far from where Ted and I live today.
Not much to say here - insane that this was a debut album. Itâs like a greatest hits. Have always loved Wind Cries Mary.
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Feb 11 2025
5
I mean it's Jimi Hendrix. So many iconic songs here, an amazing debut album.
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Feb 11 2025
5
Every time I listen to this album I marvel that I donât own it, I love it. Sure sometimes the guitar solos are a little over the top but thatâs allowed when youâre Jimi Hendrix. Iâm always impressed by how cohesive this album is and how quickly it seems to go. Red House is an absolute favorite at my house.
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Feb 11 2025
5
I can't imagine how this must have sounded to someone on their first listen in 1967. It's an amazing set of songs, the band sounds great. It's psychedelic without losing the blues/funk plot either. It's Jimi playing extremely well.
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Feb 07 2025
5
One of the best album of music history!
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Jan 28 2025
5
girl he released this in 1967.......that's crazy. i said this before with my post about Pearl and Janis Joplin but it truly is such a tragedy that he died so young- especially considering just HOW innovative he was with his guitar playing- think about how different rock and roll guitar music might sound today if he had lived only even ten years longer and was able to release more music. i know there have been a lot of posthumous albums released with demos, jams, and studio outtakes but i kind of have mixed feelings about that bc it just isn't the same as having a polished finished product to evaluate and appreciate. still, it is clear from the very first notes of this album how important and influential and frankly groundbreaking these songs are, and it's only his debut! also, in addition to his insane guitar skills, you can tell that Hendrix is an amazing frontman just from the way he delivers his lyrics- I don't even need to see his face to know that. many other rock guitarists cannot say the same! truly a once in a lifetime talent and i'm so grateful his work is immortalized for us to listen to and inspire us whenever we want.
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Jan 27 2025
5
Unreal. All time great
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Jan 27 2025
5
an experience indeed...
favorite track: purple haze
other picks: hey joe, the wind cries mary, fire, red house, foxey lady
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Jan 27 2025
5
Absolutely incredible.
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Jan 27 2025
5
Just exceptional for a debut album. So many great tracks.
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Jan 18 2025
5
The number of amazing songs on this is unbelievable. Will always be my favorite Hendrix album.
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Jan 17 2025
5
Liked this more than I remember. Definitely my favourite Jimi album. I don't love the more psychedelic tracks, but there are some bangers in here.
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Jan 14 2025
5
Fantastic album. Not my favorite Hendrix but some absolute classics on it. 8.5/10.
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Jan 14 2025
5
Unreal. Never been imitated and still stands out as fresh and original amongst the 50 years of music thatâs come after it (to only give away is the production quality). Shout out to the drummer too.
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Jan 14 2025
5
A classic.
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Jan 14 2025
5
Top 10 album of all time. 50 years later it stills sound music defining!
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Jan 13 2025
5
Got to give this 5. Blues rock isn't usually my favourite but Hendrix blends it seamlessly with psychedelic rock. The guitar playing is sort of raw but everything feels absolutely perfectly placed and executed at the same time. I also like little moments like Jimi saying "how was that?" at the end of Red House that were caught on mic and left in, it adds a lot of character to both the album and the band
It's so clear how influential his guitar playing was on countless acts that followed him. I'm a big fan of stoner rock so I get a kick out of what is an extremely early root of the genre here as well
Also have to mention his great vocals and the drumming. Everything comes together perfectly to create a seamless, unbeatable 38 minutes (going by the UK release)
Highlights: Foxy Lady, Fire, Third Stone from the Sun
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Jan 10 2025
5
Rating: 9.5/10
One of the best debut albums of all time. Innovative guitar playing and songwriting while still being wildly enjoyable from start to finish.
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Dec 19 2024
5
Purely belter
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Oct 21 2024
5
Hits right in that sweet spot between blues rock and psychedelic. Are you experienced? You will be after this.
I recommend going for the UK track listing rather than the US, feels more cohesive to me but YMMV. Both digital versions contain the same tracks regardless.
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Sep 04 2023
5
Hey, wait, which of the dozen different versions of this album are we meant to be listening to? Think I'm fine with the 17 tracks on my hard drive, a rare case of the bonus tracks being essential - Hey Joe and Purple Haze feature.
I expected to be torn over this. Many of these songs are foundational to me, my dad inculcating a love for the band, whom he'd seen in Chelmsford as a teenager. Recent dips into Hendrix's work have provided a patchy harvest; Electric Ladyland might be a more challenging assignment. But scanning the track listing, the first five tracks I didn't need to listen to again (though I did) to know they're incredible, and most of the rest is similar.
His guitar never gets dull, and he had the most beguiling singing voice of his contemporaries, a seductive conversational tone.
Misogyny is impossible to ignore, particularly after hearing the bonus track 51st Anniversary. To paraphrase Norm MacDonald, that Joe was a real jerk!
But Third Stone From The Sun! Feel like thatâs a path that was never successfully followed, apart from by Right Said Fred, as pointed out by my dad, angry and tipsy one NYE when â Iâm Too Sexyâ emerged on Capital Radioâs Listenersâ Best Songs Ever countdown, and my dad furiously sought out his original LPâŠ
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Nov 15 2022
5
Most people agree, the 1001 ratings scale should top out at 11.
This survey says it all.
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/92Y86QN
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May 18 2022
5
So this has easily three of the most powerful and potent Hendrix songs. Not only that, but it is the debut! Fucking nuts.
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May 17 2022
5
He really is one of the greatest guitarists. This album canât be overrated.
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Mar 10 2022
5
Hendrix first album one of the greatest. Can listen to it over and over again. Not a bad song on it.
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Dec 22 2021
5
An undisputed essential in rock history. In many ways, this is not only Hendrix at his best, but 60s rock at its most far out, psychedelia at its peak, the electric guitar at its most expressive. It's blues, soul, R&B, psychedelia and pop all crammed into a 40 minute package, and I had so much fun hearing it again for the first time in years.
I've gone between the different track listings of the UK and US versions when listening to this album (US adds three singles, including the iconic "Purple Haze", but removes "Remember", "Can You See Me" and "Red House"). For me, the US version wins out on a song-by-song basis, but the UK is structured more comfortably as an album, with more ebb and flow between the hard-edged rock and the lush ballads.
As far as individual tracks, they're all winners, though I'd single out the instrumental "Third Stone From The Sun" as a blissful freak-out, full of guitar effects, feedback and intricate drum patterns, held together by a hypnotic three note bassline. The main guitar riff in this track, vibrato and all, is one of my favourite Hendrix moments on the record.
"Are You Experienced" is another classic, all hinged around one chord, intoxicating marching snare beat and the insistent one-note piano refrain solidifies the band as a force to go down in history.
"Red House" is the most forgettable track for me, leaning too far into a standard mid-tempo blues than the other songs on offer.
There's little else I can add to the heaps of praise already given to this album, other than:
Hendrix's voice suits the songs beautifully- it's bluesy husk is perfect and underrated.
Noel Redding's bassline in "Fire" is exceptional.
The ballads on offer are sublime and deserve as much credit as the rockers: "The Wind Cries Mary", "Remember" and "May This Be Love" all have beautiful melodies that cascade around the guitar lines.
So it's a real classic and essential listening for rock music fans. Some of the techniques used might be dated now (trippy stereo panning, backmasking, wah pedals) but they only serve to capture the Jimi Hendrix Experience as true pioneers in 1967, riding the wave that would ultimately be too large even for them.
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Nov 21 2021
5
Jimi Hendrix is glaringly the greatest, most charismatic, most talented artist of the 60s, and here we have his debut. In truth, this is not so much structured as an album but rather as an assemblage of Hendrix songs, showcasing what voodoo mojo geetar freakoutery he could do.
But what a showcase! Virtually every moment and every aspect stuns the listener. Since everyone knows Hendrix's guitar virtuosity (he was quite good, apparently), I shall instead talk about his voice. Hendrix himself was rather disparaging about his voice, and was very self-conscious about it. To every other listener, Hendrix's dismay is baffling. His voice is somehow warm and seductive yet simultaneously masculine and fiery. Another aspect perhaps overlooked, though to a lesser extent, is the range of styles Hendrix adopts and mutates into his own; the rock, ballad, blues, raga, soul, R&B and psychedelia displayed here all bend towards Hendrix's star, a process sustained in his later albums. Hendrix had talents far beyond the guitar, and this album is proof. Why aren't you listening to this now?
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Aug 30 2021
5
Favs: May This Be Love and Manic Depression are personal favorites. The Wind Cries Mary. Fire. Hey Joe. Foxey Lady. Purple Haze.
Mehs: No mehs on Jimi albums. I guess Third Stone From the Sun is my least favorite, but it's still good
Hendrix's guitar work is still a mind blowing display of blues guitar. You get that with Mitchell's great drums, and you still get the clever lyrics: "You can hear happiness staggering on down the street Footprints dressed in red." Great stuff.
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Jul 31 2021
5
âAre You Experienced?â by The Jimi Hendrix Experience (1967)
In 1967 there were older people, authority figures even, who were contemptuously dismissive of music like this, regarding it as cacophonous nonsense. They refused to listen, refused to engage. They were wrong. The worst (and best) thing about the Silent Majority was their silence. They merely produced within the psyches of young music lovers a visceral commitment to never close their ears to the next generation of musical creativity. Please pass the baton, kids.
Listening back, âAre You Experienced?â is clearly one of the best albums in the history of recorded music, almost entirely due to the artistic genius and virtuosity of Jimi Hendrix. Hendrix is, as demonstrated on this album, one of the top four or five electric guitarists of all time. He did many things with the instrument that had never been done before and he did one or two things that will likely never be done again.
Hendrix had a sublime sense of what it takes to fill a measure with guitar sounds, utilizing only two other musicians on this record, and with only slight dependence on them to boot. His flawless and deft leaps from the lower strings to ballistic highs, and skillful weaving of effects (listen especially to the interludes in âThird Rock from the Sunâ). His guitar arrangements were capable of generating multiple layers through harmonics, feedback, fuzz, phase, wah, echo, backmasking (âAre You Experienced?â!), and the sustain of previously played notes. None of it is random or accidental. My mom was wrong. This is not ânoiseâ. It is symphonic.
His fret work was nearly unsurpassed in his day, leaving the gluttonous listener yearning for just one more lead passage in each song. But the mature listener will recognize the mastery of restraint. A snippet of his own lyric expresses it well: âFeeling, sweet feeling drops from my Fender's fingersâ. And feeling plays off of dynamic variation. Feeling is not bombast. It knows when to back off.
Hendrixâs voice is not stellar, requiring reverb and sometimes other effects, but he uses vibrato sparingly and effectively, always suitably passionate. He carries the lyric with impact, but never gets in the way of the music.
Now the recording is flawed by some of the unnecessary weaknesses peculiar to the late 1960s: excessive separation and isolation in the mix, gimmicky left/right alterations & reversals (âMay This Be Loveâ is silly in this regard), and a âhollowâ studio sound. Also, Mitch Mitchellâs drum performance frequently drops tempo on fills. But these are quibbles. Jimi Hendrix more than compensates with his potency and adroitness. No dull moments here.
âAre You Experienced?â Is rock and roll history. It still moves today.
5/5
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Apr 27 2021
5
Where modern electric guitar began.
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Feb 11 2021
5
Hell yes. It's a perfect album. Beautiful soft balllads, explosive songs, trippy arrangements, huge hooks too. Even just they way this album sounds is perfect. The warm tape. It must've been recorded together live rather than track by track. A goddamn masterpiece. At one point I thought, maybe it's too long, but then realized Spotify added 6 songs to the end and doubled the album lenght!
Favorite tracks are the trippiest - Third Stone and Are You Experienced. I had a quintessential stoner moment with that song, just the right slight high and pulled into my driveway and it came on. Sounded so good I put it on repeat, louder and louder, until Rico came outside a bit worried.
We all know Jimi's considered the greatest guitar player, largely on the back of his soloing. I think more music critic ink needs to be spilled on his rhythm guitar chops. He would curl his thumb over the top of the neck to fret the low E and do these percussive melodies with the other four fingers below the neck. MASSIVE HANDS. A+
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Apr 09 2021
5
One of my favourites and first got me into psychedelic music. The bass line and guitar coming in and out on Third Stone is what sold it for me. Foxey Lady is just such a great song
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Jun 12 2021
5
Been a while since Iâve Jimiâd
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Jul 09 2021
5
Excellent Album -- Masterclass in electric guitar and blues rock.
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Mar 08 2025
4
This album is just bangers after bangers. The true god of guitar. This kind of music is the original "dad rock" for me lol.
I like the songs better here that on the first Hendrix album I got before: "Electric Ladyland".
Unfortunately I'm not a guitar player so I never had the desire to explore his career more. I hate that this kind of rock, harsh and raw, doesn't translate well to my instrument.
Another thing on the production side is that there are weird choices for the stereo use. For example having the lead vocals only on one side. I listened to the versiĂłn that's on TIDAL. Those weird stereo things definitely make the songs sound outdated.
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Mar 07 2025
4
8/10
Way superior to Electirc Ladyland and really, really good.
Straight up rock with heavy r&b influences and a psychedelic edge
Extremely well produced and sung. Excellent wall of noise. Hendrix vocals are great
Best: Are You Experienced?
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Feb 24 2025
4
Really enjoyed!!!
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Feb 19 2025
4
Obviously good but quite long. Would have loved to have heard it in it's time. I couldn't give it less than 4 stars because I know deep down it's a 5 star album.
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Feb 11 2025
4
Album of bangers!
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Feb 11 2025
4
These are the singles I want, 1000% on point. There are some tracks I might swap out, but more amazing than meh.
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Feb 10 2025
4
Red House and Are you Experienced are my highlights
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Jan 23 2025
4
Absolute classic with a number of bangers. Good all around.
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Jan 22 2025
4
Hendrix was a phenomenon: the voice, the guitar, the look, the early death. This almost obscures any critique of the music itself. Hey Joe sums up the phenomenon, some of the rest of the album doesnât. 4
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Jan 21 2025
4
"Good but not right now..."
Something I'm learning with this exercise is that music is as much about the mood you're in as it is objective quality. I hadn't really given Hendricks a shot. Weird since I started as guitarist but I think the opening of purple hay is just turned me off to the whole endeavor which is foolish. I listen to all of this, I found my head nodding along to most of it, it's obviously It's actually still a pretty transformative work. I mentally earmarked it, "this is great, why do I listen to this more?" And I realized chad I'm just not in a mood. All that often that's syncopatico with this type of work. Maybe that means I'm too uptight? But it's really interesting to find good music that's accessible and yet still a bit of a mismatch for where I am. Good but not right now.
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Jan 21 2025
4
A legend and a must listen
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Jan 21 2025
4
Classic!
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Jan 17 2025
4
Love Jimi. I totally acknowledge his genius and put him at the very tippy top of the guitar hero mountain. That having been said, most of his albums are very uneven with huge peaks and some very meh songs mixed in. In total I'll take what we got.
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Jan 16 2025
4
Pretty good
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Jan 14 2025
4
Jimi's best album in my opinion. Lot of classic songs here. "Purple Haze", "Hey Joe", "The Wind Cries Mary", and "Are You Experienced?" are all bangers. Similar to Jimi's other albums I wish this was a little shorter but otherwise this is an all timer.
Favorite track: The Wind Cries Mary
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Jan 14 2025
4
I'm feeling pretty experienced.
Idk, the last Hendrix album I got was a bit lackluster from what I remembered it being, but this is the one with mostly all the hits. Super solid & ground breaking.
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Feb 03 2023
4
There's some fantastic guitar playing on this album, as you might expect. It really feels like something from ten years ahead of when it was recorded. Jimi changed the way that rock bands did guitar. Most surprising was learning that part of I'm Too Sexy by Right Said Fred was lifted direct from a riff on Third Stone from the Sun.
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Mar 13 2022
4
Now Jimi played guitar
Jamming good with Weird and Gilly
And The Spiders from Mars
He played it left hand
But made it too far
Became the special man
Then we were Jimi's Band
Jimi really sang
Screwed-up eyes and screwed-down hairdo
Like some cat from Japan
He could lick 'em by smiling
He could leave 'em to hang
He came on so loaded, man,
Well-hung, snow-white tan
So where were the spiders
While the fly tried to break our balls?
Just the beer light to guide us
So we bitched about his fans
And should we crush his sweet hands?
Oh yeah
Jimi played for time
Jiving us that we were Voodoo
The kids was just crass
He was the naz
With God-given ass
He took it all too far
But boy, could he play guitar
Making love with his ego
Jimi sucked up into his mind (ah)
Like a leper messiah
When the kids had killed a man
I had to break up the band
Jimi played guitar
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Nov 06 2021
4
ooOOoo foxey lady
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Jul 25 2025
3
Like the other Hendrix albums that I've listened to: a lot of fluff held afloat by some bangers.
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Jan 24 2025
3
A bit anxiety inducing 3.5
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Jan 20 2025
3
Great opening song along with classic Jimi Hendrix shredding. The stereo effect on "May This Be Love" is incredible.
Unfortunately, I've just never been able to get into Hendrix as much as I probably should so this doesn't rate super high for me. I can appreciate the raw talent and his contribution to music, though.
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Jan 17 2025
3
not quite my tempo
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Jan 15 2025
3
A lot of great energy, but also a lot of guitar (obviously), but over the whole album it gets too much for me, although individualitet several great tracks. So a bit divided here
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Jan 14 2025
3
I can appreciate it, it's just really not my jam.
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Feb 27 2024
3
back in like 2008 I ran across a guy called Purple Haze on MW2 and, being the child I was back then, thought this was one of the coolest names that I had seen in a while and decided to copy it with my own twist. I ended up running with the name Pink Haze for a month or so until my next fad name came around. It wasnt until a decade had passed and I had started to get more into listening to music that was foreign to me that I found out that Purple Haze was the name of a Hendrix song / a strain of weed.
With that said, I don't vibe too much with the album. Unsure if its a 3 or a 2 but since I have heard much worse albums that I have rated a 2 I will give it a halfway rating
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Oct 31 2021
3
Vous n'ĂȘtes pas sans savoir que je possĂšde 3 gĂ©nĂ©rateurs pirates en plus du gĂ©nĂ©rateur des 1001, afin d'Ă©tendre au maximum ma culture musicale. Aujourd'hui, robpenitenciĂšre, qui avait dĂ©jĂ rĂ©ussit le tour de force de s'incruster dans mon aventure des 1001, a rĂ©ussi Ă dĂ©nicher le lien menant Ă mon gigantesque fichier Excel proposant ces 3 gĂ©nĂ©rateurs clandestins.
A peine arrivĂ©, il tente dĂ©jĂ de remodeler le fichier selon ses prĂ©fĂ©rences, alors mĂȘme que la communautĂ© pirate vivait jusqu'alors dans une parfaite harmonie musicale. Il dĂ©truit les classements des uns et les commentaires des autres, ne laissant que fumĂ©e et pleurs sur son passage.
La communauté des générateurs clandestins prépare une réponse à cette intrusion, je vous tiendrai au courant dans une prochaine review des avancées de la rebellion.
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Jun 30 2025
2
you see the thing is...
blues, psychodelic and hard rock fuckin sucks almost always
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Jan 26 2025
2
TOO LONG.
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Jan 13 2025
2
Better Hendrix but very frustrating stereo mix, causing drop from 4 stars to 2.
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Jan 14 2025
1
Meh
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Aug 13 2021
1
Annoying and dumb
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Jul 26 2025
5
Excellent Album
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Jul 25 2025
5
Hey Joe, Foxey Lady, Purple Haze are lit
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Jul 22 2025
5
Hendrix debut. A new chapter in electric guitar is born
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Jul 19 2025
5
Purple Haze immediately jumps to one of the main contenders for best first track off a debut album, it might be his best song. May This Be Love is good, feels like a different brand of Jimi Hendrix. I bet the Allman's loved it. My only complaint is some of these 60s bands playing with the stereo recording too much. The album tracks are great. Stevie Ray Vaughn owes Hendrix a career, two legends lost before their time. Third Stone From the Sun loses me a little bit, I like the jazzy feel, but the altered vocals, I wonder if Yello got the idea for Oh Yeah from this song, guitar distortion and silly Hendrix poem lose me. The Allman's definitely lifted part of this song though, maybe just in Mountain Jam, but it's like note for note. I never really loved Foxey Lady, it is a little corny. Are You Experienced? on the other hand is my favorite Hendrix song.
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Jul 15 2025
5
Just my little gay self listening to 'Purple Haze' singing at the top of my lungs 'Scuse me while I kiss this guy!
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Jul 14 2025
5
Existe uma guitarra antes e depois de Jimi Hendrix, e esse disco é a primeira demonstração disso, é injusto dar qualquer outra nota
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Jul 11 2025
5
I've been meaning to listen to Jimi's discography for a fat minute and the fact that I got his debut first, surely it must be fate. This is so unbelievably peak. There is too much to love and nothing to hate.
Majority (if not all) of the songs on here are bangers
NO BAD SONGS
5/5
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Jul 11 2025
5
Instant 5. Legendary album by a legendary artist who inspired nearly all who came after him.
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Jul 11 2025
5
Jimi taituroi
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