Mitch Mitchell - Remembered - Page 2

Part of: Classic Eurorock

By mid 1969 Hendrix decided to move on forming The Band Of Gypsies. Mitch entered a period of being out and back in the band. He rejoined for a return of The Experience, minus Redding, replaced by Billy Cox on bass, in 1970.

After Hendrix died in London in September 1970 Mitch worked on completing some unfinished recordings which resulted in posthumous releases such as The Cry Of Love and Rainbow Bridge. He had a brief spell drumming for the short lived band, Ramatam. He also appeared with Jack Bruce, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, and Terry Reid among many others. He can also been seen playing with John & Yoko Lennon, and Keith Richards as part of The Dirty Mac on The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus of 1969.

In 1999 Mitch reunited with Billy Cox and Buddy Miles on Bruce Cameron’s Midnight Daydream album. Later he joined The Gyspy Sun Experience again alongside Billy Cox.

However it was his time with Jimi Hendrix that really caught the attention and he appeared in numerous documentaries, interviews, and biographies throughout the subsequent years. Those years alongside a true rock god secured Mitch Mitchell his own legendary status.

Mitch’s one of a kind style can be described as explosive and it needed to be playing behind such a figure as Jimi Hendrix. His interplay with Hendrix’s guitar on tracks such as “Fire”, or “Machine Gun”, two merely random examples, and his contribution to classic albums such as Electric Ladyland is immeasurable.

As brilliant a talent as Hendrix undoubtedly was he could not have achieved all that he did without a drummer of extraordinary ability behind him. Mitch Mitchell was, without doubt, that man. He will be sadly missed.

Page 1 — Page 2

Article tags

Spread the word
Bookmark and Share
Profile image for jeff-perkins

Article Author: Jeff Perkins

Jeff is a writer who lives in France. He writes CD/DVD box sets, music reviews and has had a book published about David Byron of Uriah Heep. He is 'busy' exploring the music of Europe with his wife Debbie and dog Dylan. It's Dylan that does the writing of course. …

Visit Jeff Perkins's author pageJeff Perkins's Blog

Read comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own
  • Are You Experienced Are You Experienced

    As emblematic of its time as of its sorcerer-like creator, 1967's Are You Experienced unleashed Jimi Hendrix onto a world in the midst of such cultural and musical shakeups that it really didn't seem ...

  • Axis: Bold as Love Axis: Bold as Love
  • Electric Ladyland Electric Ladyland

Article comments

  • 1 - Rob

    Nov 21, 2008 at 8:27 am

    Great post. Mitch really was one hell of a drummer, almost a bit mind boggling at times. He certainly was the right person to play alongside Jimi Hendrix and Noel Redding. One of those beautiful moments in the musical timeline when everything just meshed.

  • 2 - Alex Szczech

    Nov 21, 2008 at 4:11 pm

    Nice post on a great drummer! Just one minor correction, the penultimate paragraph mentions Mitchell's drumming on "Machine Gun". While it is true that Mitchell played this song with Hendrix' during the 1970 tour, Buddy Miles was the drummer on the definitive version that appeared on the Band of Gypsys albums.

  • 3 - Jeff

    Nov 21, 2008 at 5:53 pm

    Thanks everyone for reading this and for taking the time to add the comments. All very much appreciated. Thanks too to Alex - re Machine Gun - it was strange but when I was writing this I could see (in my mind) Mitch playing it. I'm not sure now where that came from.....sorry to Buddy. Jeff

  • 4 - Darryl

    Nov 22, 2008 at 3:44 am

    As much as I love Mitch and notwithstanding my deep sorrow over his passing, I could not have written a better eulogy. Thank you for that. More shocking still is that the entire original band are no longer among us. Mitch Mitchell had as much a seismic impact upon me as did Hendrix. Mitch inspired me to become a drummer, because I knew I'd never be able to play a guitar like Jimi. But no one has ever been able to play "Manic Depression" like Mitch, almost 40 years hence. The beat was relentless and clean and every bit a jar to the senses as was Jimi's guitar, back in the innocent days of 1967. I've heard the session tapes of the numerous takes, and Mitch was a beast. There's extended interview footage on the most recent edition of 1972's _A Film About Jimi Hendrix_ that I'll watch tonight because his recollections are still fresh, in which he talks about his life in the Jimi Hendrix Experience. There's also Mitch's out-of-print bio which I believe will soon briefly return to print, _Inside The Experience_. It's sad that they'd just wrapped 18 shows of the _Experience Hendrix_ tour in Oregon and that he was ready to go home and spend time with his wife and family back in England. Just like the Denver Pop Festival in June 1969 that signaled the death of the Experience, Mitch was tired of gigging and ready to go home. Rest in peace, John. At Monterey, they used to say that the Experience went "from myth to legend". With your passing, the band has gone from myth to legend to *immortal*.

  • 5 - Jeff

    Nov 22, 2008 at 4:01 am

    Daryl wrote:- Rest in peace, John. At Monterey, they used to say that the Experience went "from myth to legend". With your passing, the band has gone from myth to legend to *immortal*.

    Daryl,
    This is such a wonderfully appropriate comment - your comments are truly appreciated - I can't thank you enough for adding them to my article. Not only is this the passing of a fellow man, and a great musician, but it also represents the passing of a huge part of our lives. But our memories will always remain as strong as ever. So, thank you, Daryl, Immortal is exactly the right word.
    Jeff

  • 6 - Darryl

    Nov 26, 2008 at 4:08 am

    Thank you, sir! To think that Mitch won the Experience gig over Ainsley Dunbar by a *coin toss*! I cannot conceive of the Jimi Hendrix Experience without Mitch Mitchell. Mitch was my teacher, and I'm forever indebted to him, although I have yet to master "swing" drums.

  • 7 - Eric Swolgaard

    Nov 26, 2008 at 4:15 pm

    On June 25, 1967 I had the lifetime thrill of seeing the Jimi Hendrix Experience play for free in the Panhandle Park, Haight-Ashbury. I'll never forget the sights and the sounds as the group tore into songs off their first album and a tribute to Bob Dylan(Like a Rolling Stone?) Jimi even got off a joke on Mitch Mitchell by introducing him as"Bob Dylan's grandmother"!! Also laconically drawled something about "we tune because we care"...That day I also purchased the original Monterey Pop concert program from a week prior, I believe at the Psychedelic Shop. Obviously, one of my prize possessions.

  • 8 - Darryl

    Nov 27, 2008 at 5:13 am

    Eric, you were fortunate indeed to catch that show, and I thank you for your recollection, since although photographed it was neither filmed nor booted. Slight correction, though -- it was the late bassist Noel Redding whom Jimi dubbed "Bob Dylan's Grandmother". Jimi's code-name for Mitchell was "Queen Bee", but those were more innocent times then...

  • 9 - Darryl

    Nov 27, 2008 at 5:17 am

    Oh, almost forgot -- happy 66th birthday, Jimi!! Must have been some surprise to look up and find Mitch sharing your cloud again...

  • 10 - peter sabbagh

    Feb 01, 2009 at 6:24 pm

    As a guitarist, and one that admires exceptional talent it is difficult to read this story, although we all have to move on and accept that great moments in time do not last forever.... It has always been difficult for me to accept that Hendrix is no longer with us, and now Mitch further removes us from the Hendrix life changing "experience". It was also a major blow when I climbed the stairs up from the A train (subway) in NYC to 72nd street (after coming home one night from class at NYU) to be one of the 5 people standing in front of the Dakota Apartment shortly after John Lennon was shot. Breaking up is hard to do….

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed.
Please read our comment policy.
Please preview your comment.

blogcritics lists for Nov 27, 2009

fresh articles Most recent articles site-wide

fresh comments Most recent comments site-wide

most comments Most comments in 24hrs

top writers Most prolific Blogcritics for October

top commenters Most prolific Commenters in 24 hrs