Jimi In Texas 1969
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Jimi In Dallas, Texas April 20, 1969

The following interview was conducted by John McDermott for Experience Hendrix Magazine issue Winter 2000.

Rick Vittenson has chosen to share his recollections of a special meeting with Jimi Hendrix in Dallas, Texas on April 20, 1969.

EH: When did you first see Jimi Hendrix?

RICK VITTENSON: I spent the summer of 1968 in New York  and I saw him twice there. Jimi performed at the Singer Bowl in New York In August 1968.  I also saw the Jeff Beck Group perform at Steve Paul's Scene Club. Jimi showed up and played bass with them.

EH: What was  your background at the time?

RICK VITTENSON: At that time, I was writing as a stringer for the University Of Oklahoma's daily newspaper. I was a student at the university. I was a kid with a 35mm camera  and I wanted to see all the shows free and meet all of the rock stars that I could.  There really hadn't been any music reviews or anything like that in the paper previously. The first assignment we had was to cover The Jeff Beck Group concert in Tulsa. The next thing we did was to drive down to  Dallas because we had heard that Jimi was going to play there.

EH: How did you come to meet Jimi in Dallas 1969?

RICK VITTENSON: There were three of us who drove to Dallas.  We found out where Jimi was staying, went to the front desk and just asked where Jimi was.  In those days you could do things like that!  With Jimi's room number from the front desk we went up and knocked on the door. Noel Redding answered and we told him we were looking for Jimi. He told us that Jimi's room was down the hall. We went to the room that Noel directed us to and the door was slightly ajar. We knocked and Jimi opened the door with a smile on his face and said, "Come in, Come in."  I'll never forget that.  He didn't know who we were or why we were there but he asked us to come in. It was wonderful. JImi was alone in the room and told us that he had been watching roller derby on television.  He had just ordered his lunch, which was a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken and some Heineken Beer.

EH: Did you introduce yourselves as Journalists?

RICK VITTENSON: We told him who we were and just sat down with him. We were more like guest's in somebody's home then interviewers.  To be real honest, we were absolutely star-struck.  At one point while we were talking, Jimi turned to us and said, "Are you guys really interviewing me? This doesn't feel like a real interview."  We couldn't help it.  We were awestruck by the man.  It was more like having a conversation than doing an interview. He was fascinating.

EH: What types of things did you discuss with him?

RICK VITTENSON: We talked about him and his music. He was unbelievably childlike and innocent when he was talking to us. The thing that I remember most about the interview was that it was like sitting and talking with a friend. It was a conversation more than anything else. He told us about when he was a kid, people would make fun  of the size of his feet. 

He mentioned that he was disappointed that black people at that time were not a bigger part of his fan base.  He wasn't angry, but just a bit disappointed that he was mostly playing for white kids and that he was not considered part of whatever was going on in the black music scene at that time.

 I remember real clearly that he had a stereo cassette player. It was the first one I had ever seen in my life.  It was a Sony. He played us a couple of songs he had recorded at one of his concerts.  He played us "Sunshine Of Your Love" which I had never heard him perform live before. I was blown away.

EH: Did you record the interview?

RICK VITTENSON: Oh yeah, but I have no idea where the tape went to.

EH: Did you go to the concert that night?

RICK VITTENSON: Yes. At some point while we were talking to Jimi, someone came to the room and said that it was time to go to the show.  We had our own car and did not travel  with them but when we got there we were let backstage immediately.  We sat there and watched Jimi  tune up and play through a little amplifier backstage.  He wasn't talking much,  just practicing.

When it was time for him to perform,  Jimi made sure we were ushered to the front row  so that we would have an unobstructed view to take pictures.  The show was wonderful.  There was a point when he was playing with his teeth that he gave us a sly little wink  and smile.

EH: When did you next see Jimi?

RICK VITTENSON: I saw him in Norman, Oklahoma 1970. I was no longer  a student at the university.  I had transferred to the University Of Illinois at Chicago. I was on spring break.  I was heading to Tuscon, Arizona to pick up some friends and go to California. I needed a place to stay overnight on the way so I drove down to Norman.  I didn't  know that Jimi was playing there, but at that  time I had my press credentials.  I had become the Midwest editor of Crawdaddy magazine. I went backstage at the field house and the  Jimi I saw was different than the man I had met in Dallas the year before. We only spoke for a minute or two. It was off to the side of the stage in a small room with subdued lighting. He didn't remember me offhand from Dallas.

EH: Which performance did you see that night?

RICK VITTENSON: I saw the first show. The music seemed more bluesy than the Dallas show. It was a whole different show. He had gotten away from the pop Jimi of 1967 and 1968.  It was very different but brilliant nonetheless. The crowd loved his performance. It was a very big deal  for Oklahoma to have him play there.  Oklahoma did not  always get  major talent to come and perform.  Jimi Hendrix performing in Norman, Oklahoma was a huge deal.

EH: Was that the last time you saw him perform?

RICK VITTENSON: Yes. I never saw him again.

EH: Was your interview ever published?

RICK VITTENSON: It never did get published which was the funniest thing. I can't remember why it wasn't. I wasn't writing for Crawdaddy at the time of the Dallas concert. The only postscript on that was  that I had interviewed  Ray Davies for Crawdaddy and it was supposed to be the cover story. That was cancelled when we learned Jimi had died.

Photo By Rick Vittenson