Tag Archives: the jimi hendrix experience

#806: The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Manic Depression

The Jimi Hendrix estate is usually very stringent on what songs it allows on YouTube. At the time I’m writing this, you can listen to the song through the player above, but that may be taken by the time I actually publish this. We’ll see how it goes. But there it is anyway, ‘Manic Depression’ by the Jimi Hendrix Experience from the band’s debut album Are You Experienced?.

Really, the groove of this track is the best part. Right from the start and throughout, the guitar and bass play the same climbing, triple-time lines with Mitch Mitchell swinging drum pattern as clanging on those ride cymbals and striking the tom-toms. It’s a track that’s at full force and never lets up until that final strike of the last guitar chord. Jimi Hendrix doesn’t sing too badly either. He does song from the gut, and with a lot of feeling. There’s soul to his voice.

‘Manic depression’ was an old name for what is known today as bipolar disorder, but this song’s not about the condition. It’s a story about a man who wants to make love to music instead of women. Hendrix said so when introducing the number to a live audience. Not quite the way I’ve worded it, he said it in a more slick 60s man-of-the-times style.

My iPod #224: The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Crosstown Traffic

“Crosstown Traffic” is a track from The Jimi Hendrix Experience’s third and last album, “Electric Ladyland” in 1968. I did listen to the album. That was a while ago. Like in late 2012. So I’ll probably have to listen to it again, to see whether I like it or not.

The only reason I know “Crosstown Traffic” more than any of the other songs on the album is because it is the only one that has a music video, a video that I’ve seen at least four times on the television.

The song is a huge metaphor. Jimi travelled a lot, and was probably hit on by lot of women along the way. Probably be with one and then it would be on to the next one. So he basically compares them to traffic, because he needed to be somewhere else. To entertain the masses of fans he had.

The track is groovy, but pumping too. It sounds like a theme tune to a seventies, undercover police show. I get that feel from it, I don’t know why. Someone did go a bit crazy with the panning though, instruments move from one channel to the other multiples times. I don’t know if that’s really needed. But it’s a minor thing. The song is still good.