The Mystery Behind Hendrix's Death

The Mystery Behind Hendrix's Death

Published: September 17, 2009 @ 1:08 pm
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By David Comfort

James Marshall Hendrix, hailed as “the greatest guitarist who ever lived,” died September 18, 1970. On the thirty-ninth anniversary of his passing, the tragedy remains a mystery.

Or does it?

Like many short-lived rock icons -- John Lennon, Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain -- Jimi heard his train coming early on. "I’m not sure I will live to be twenty-eight years old,” he'd told friends. “He kept repeating that he was going to die before he was thirty,” recalled his lover, Colette Mimram.

The guitarist’s last days were ominous. He left the states for a European tour in August, 1970, saying, “New York is killing me at the moment.” Indeed, he was caught in a crossfire between his mafia-connected manager and his Black Panther bodyguards.

A year before, just after headlining Woodstock, he had been kidnapped at gunpoint and held captive for three days.

Matters went from bad to worse for what was to be his last performance, the Love and Peace Festival on the German Isle of Fehmarn.

It was raining torrentially, the fans were in a foul mood, and the Hell’s Angels securitymen -- two-fisting booze, leapers and creepers a la Altamont -- were not feeling the love either.

During a break in the storm, Jimi did a quick set, kicking it off with Killin’ Floor, then managed a getaway in a taxi before the Angels torched the stage, shot one of his roadies, and shanked his tour manager with a nail-studded plank.

Bassist Billy Cox freaked, convinced that they would return home in body bags.

“We’re gonna die!” he kept sobbing hysterically on the plane from Hamburg.

“Nobody’s gonna die,” Jimi kept telling his old army buddy.

But, on arriving in England where he had launched his career three years before, he told another friend, “I’m circled by wolves.”

Who were these wolves? Stalking lovers, lawyers on his tail for paternity suits, music producers trying to extort him. The real predator, however, was his very own manager whom he was about to fire for mismanagement and the embezzlement of millions.

Mike Jeffery was the Machiavellian Al Capone of rock managers. He’d cut his teeth as a demolition expert and assassin for the British MI6. Retiring to civilian life, he became the understudy of Don Arden himself, the self-described “English Godfather of Rock” (and father of Sharon Osbourne, Ozzie’s future wife).

Arden, who later managed Black Sabbath, the Small Faces, and ELO, negotiated and protected contracts with brass knuckles, Lugers and German shepherds.

Proving himself a precocious student, Jeffery went independent after stealing “Mr. Big’s” golden goose, the Animals, and living to boast about it.

He then bought up rock clubs, torched them for the insurance, built bigger clubs, bankrupted the Animals and opened numbered accounts in Majorca and the Caymans. Finally, he usurped Hendrix’s management from the Animals’ bass player, Chas Chandler.

After relentlessly touring and bleeding the Hendrix Experience for two years, the former spy became a multi-millionaire. By contrast, Jimi was too drugged out to realize he remained a pauper except for Stratocasters, totaled Corvettes, and mountains of coke and acid.

Tags: Jimi Hendrix, rock star
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David Comfort is the author of three popular Simon & Schuster titles, and the recipient of numerous literary awards. His latest title from Citadel/Kensington, "The Rock and Roll Book of the Dead: The Fatal Journeys of Rock’s Seven Immortals," is an in-depth study of the traumatic childhoods, tormented relationships, addictions, and tragic ends of Elvis, Lennon, Janis, Morrison, Hendrix, Cobain, and Garcia.
For details see: http://www.rockandrollbookofthedead.com.
 

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