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  2. Jimi Hendrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimi_Hendrix

    Hendrix's paternal grandparents, Ross and Nora Hendrix, pre-1912. Hendrix was of African-American and alleged Cherokee descent. [nb 1] His paternal grandfather, Bertran Philander Ross Hendrix, was born in 1866 from an extramarital affair between a woman named Fanny and a grain merchant from either Urbana, Ohio or Illinois, one of the wealthiest men in the area at that time.

  3. Noel Redding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noel_Redding

    L to R: Mitchell, Redding, Hendrix. Upon his arrival in England in September 1966, Jimi Hendrix and his producer/manager Chas Chandler set about finding backing musicians. . Although Redding had played guitar up to that point, he switched to bass guitar and became the second member of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, [9] followed shortly by drummer Mitch Mitchell, to form a power

  4. Death of Jimi Hendrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Jimi_Hendrix

    [92] [nb 22] [nb 23] Stickells said he received a phone call regarding a problem with Hendrix "between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m." [89] Mitchell said he waited for Hendrix at the Speakeasy Club until they closed at 4 a.m., and a couple of hours after his hour and a half drive home, he received a phone call from Stickells, who told him Hendrix had died. [96]

  5. Charles R. Cross - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_R._Cross

    In 2004, while conducting research for the Hendrix biography, Cross discovered the gravesite of Jimi Hendrix's mother, Lucille Jeter Hendrix, in an abandoned section of Greenwood Memorial Park, where Jimi Hendrix was buried. Her gravesite was lost because the standard welfare marker of her day, an inscribed brick, was buried in decades of mud.

  6. Billy Cox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Cox

    William Cox (born October 18, 1941 [1]) is an American bassist, best known for performing with Jimi Hendrix.Cox is the only surviving musician to have regularly played with Hendrix: first when both were in the Army, then in 1969 with the experimental group that backed Hendrix at Woodstock (informally referred to as "Gypsy Sun and Rainbows"), followed by the trio with drummer Buddy Miles that ...

  7. Kathy Etchingham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathy_Etchingham

    In 1997, she was instrumental in the placement of an English Heritage blue plaque on the wall of Jimi Hendrix’s home at 23 Brook Street, Mayfair. [7] In 1998, she published a book, Through Gypsy Eyes, which Etchingham wrote with Andrew Crofts, about her life, the 1960s, and Jimi Hendrix. [1]

  8. How rock icon Jimi Hendrix inspired one of Africa’s greatest ...

    www.aol.com/rock-icon-jimi-hendrix-inspired...

    His brothers also introduced him to the music of the guitarist who would become his idol — Jimi Hendrix. “I got inspired by one album of Jimi Hendrix,” recalled Mhlanga. That album was ...

  9. Michael Jeffery (music manager) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Jeffery_(music...

    At the time of Hendrix's death, the coroner recorded an "open verdict," stating that the cause was "barbiturate intoxication and inhalation of vomit". The pathologist who did the autopsy on Hendrix, Donald Teare, reported a low blood alcohol level. [15] "Jimi Hendrix was not murdered," says Bob Levine, who was the US manager of the late ...