A shattering new biography of rock musicâs most outrageousâand tragicâgenius.
Over fifty years after his death, Jimi Hendrix (1942â1970) is celebrated as the greatest rock guitarist of all time. But before he
was setting guitars and the world aflame, James Marshall Hendrix was a shy kid in Seattle, plucking at a broken ukulele and in fear
of a father who would hit him for playing left-handed. Bringing Jimiâs story to vivid life against the backdrop of midcentury rock,
and with a wealth of new information, acclaimed music biographer Philip Norman delivers a captivating and definitive portrait of
a musical legend.
Drawing from unprecedented access to Jimiâs brother, Leon Hendrix, who provides disturbing details about their childhood, as
well as Kathy Etchingham and Linda Keith, the two women who played vital roles in Jimiâs rise to stardom, Norman traces Jimiâs
life from playing in clubs on the segregated Chitlinâ Circuit, where he encountered daily racism, to barely surviving in New Yorkâs
Greenwich Village, where he was taken up by the Animalsâ bass player Chas Chandler in 1966 and exported to Swinging London
and international stardom.
For four staggering years, from 1966 to 1970, Jimi totally rewrote the rules of rock stardom, notably at Monterey and Woodstock
(where he played his protest-infused rendition of the âStar-Spangled Bannerâ), while becoming the highest-paid musician of his
day. But it all abruptly ended in the shabby basement of a London hotel with Jimiâs too-early death. With remarkable detail, Wild
Thing finally reveals the truth behind this long-shrouded tragedy.
Normanâs exhaustive research uncovers a young man who was as shy and polite in private as he was outrageous in public, whose
insecurity about his singing voice could never be allayed by his instrumental genius, and whose unavailing efforts to please his father
left him searching for the family he felt he never truly had. Filled with insights into the greatest moments in rock history, Wild Thing
is a mesmerizing account of one of musicâs most enduring and endearing figures