Janis Joplin/Jimi Hendrix on "Biography"

cloudy

Alabama Slammer
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I'm watching A & E's biography on Janis Joplin, and am fascinated. I'm just a little young to have been a true fan, but love most of her music.

The next hour will be Jimi Hendrix, and I expect I will be just as glued to the television as I've been now. Forget cooking supper - they can eat leftovers tonite. ;)

http://www.hotshotdigital.com/WellAlwaysRemember.2/JanisJoplinImages/janis2.jpg

"I'll tell you 'bout Texas Radio and the Big Beat... I'll tell you 'bout the hopeless night Wandering the Western dream Tell you 'bout the maiden with raw iron soul" -- Jim Morrison, "The Wasp"

The Cosmic Giggle must have been in full-tilt hysterics on January 19, 1943 when the oil refinery seaport of Port Arthur, Texas, won the heavenly crapshoot as the birthplace of rock & roll's first female superstar, Janis Joplin. In retrospect, Port Arthur's most famous daughter both defied and defined the Texas town that raised, rejected, reviled, then ultimately rejoiced in her brief, mad existence. In a way that she never would have admitted then (but might now), Port Arthur made Janis Joplin what she was -- a more tolerant, nurturing atmosphere might have diluted the fire that burned within her.

And that fire is what everyone knows about Joplin: her incendiary stage performances, her masochistic tango with the bottle, her tumultuous love life, and her fatal dalliance with drugs. Joplin's musical legacy is also a part of Austin's history -- how the disheveled folkie/UT student playing at west campus hootenannies and Kenneth Threadgill's bar on North Lamar took off for San Francisco with some other Texans in the Sixties and changed the history of rock & roll.

On the surface, she seemed the perfect icon for stardom in the late Sixties: She fit no standard of beauty yet exuded a raw sensuality that mirrored a movement which rejected societal standards by creating its own. When Joplin arrived in San Francisco, in 1966, the year before the Summer of Love, its music scene was already in a nascent, post-Beat hippie whirl. Young people flocked to the Bay area as if to Mecca by the thousands, searching for identity, reason, justification, maybe just something as simple as acceptance. This is the irony of all the great Sixties icons -- Joplin included: that their desire for acceptance was at the heart of their rebellion, and that their ultimate embrace by the masses came about because of this rebellion. The sad part about rebellion, however, is that it usually follows rejection, and that was something Janis Joplin knew deep down in her soul.

The Janis Joplin of legend set the standard for the blues mama image of white female singers. Blues mamas have to be hard-livin', hard-lovin' and, of course, hard drinking. But life in the Gulf Coast town was not exactly hard; like much of the town's population, Janis' father, Seth, worked at the Texaco refinery and the Joplins resided comfortably.

By all accounts, Janis had a happy childhood, but her entrée into womanhood was less than graceful. As a teenager, she tended to gain weight, her soft child-blond hair turned brown and unruly, and she developed acne that would scar as well as shape her looks and personality. She became an unwilling member of an elite club of misfits, a woman who avoided mirrors because of pitted reflections, knowing that the scars underneath caused by the ones on the surface are the most painfully inflicted. Rejected and made fun of by most of her peers, she sought and found solace in the works of other outcasts -- writers, musicians, artists. When your society rejects you, you do the obvious: You reject it.

Joplin felt like an ugly duckling because she didn't fit anyone's notion of beauty. Port Arthur was a one-high-school town, and to be rejected by the school was to be rejected by the town. A culture that puts a premium on marketable feminine beauty has no use for the Janis Joplins of the world, and why should it? Her kind of beauty can only be captured in its natural state -- candidly or in performance. Look at the posed shots of Joplin and you'd swear her eyes plead with you to like her, really like her. Now, look at the performance photos, where she's recklessly lost in song, or examine the candid shots of her, where Joplin's face is soft and vulnerable in repose. In front of the photographer's camera in a studio she was naked to the world, but in front of an audience, she came alive, transforming into a vibrant and seductive entertainer who channeled every honker and shouter she ever heard on the Texas radio in the thick, black night.

For kids in East Texas' "Golden Triangle" -- Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Orange -- the promised land of booze and blues lay just across the Louisiana border. While the big-city sound of Bobby Bland and gritty rhythm of Lightnin' Hopkins filtered in from Houston, 90 miles away, Slim Harpo, Clifton Chenier, and swamp pop royalty like Tommy McLain, Rod Bernard, and Dale & Grace reigned in the roadhouses and dance halls of Cajun and swamp country that ran off Highway 90 between Lafayette and the Lone Star border. From the moment it crossed the Sabine River, that highway was lined with clubs and juke joints with names like the Big Oaks, Buster's, the Stateline -- joints that attracted the locals as well as nearby Texans.

Clandestine forays over the border -- called going "on the line" -- were a rite of passage, in those days, and one that Joplin was exposed to early on because she ran with the boys in high school. On weekends, they would load up and drive across the state line where the brass-heavy bands were tearing up the clubs. Gulf Coast bands like the Boogie Kings and Jerry LaCroix & the Counts specialized in the hits of the day and infused their sets with raucous dirty dancing and hip-grinding ballads. These bands might be dismissed as cover bands today but back then they functioned not only as living jukeboxes, but also as keepers of the flame. At this strip of clubs across the border, American rock & roll resonated endlessly in the night, its bluesy beats and frantic rhythms greased by the free-flowing booze; Texas drinking age was 21, Louisiana's 18.

The rowdy blues Joplin saw live in Louisiana were a marked contrast to the classical music she was raised on in Port Arthur and the omnipresent country music found in Texas. Jazzmeisters like Dave Brubeck and folksingers like Odetta were cultivated by her circle of friends, who likewise found the question-authority philosophy of the Beats palatable. Her knowledge and quest for understanding inspired her to not just appreciate but to learn the music, taking up guitar as well as singing. By the time she graduated Thomas Jefferson High School in 1960, she was imbued with an unusually well-rounded knowledge of music as well as a desire to explore its core.

What happened to Joplin after she graduated high school is well known: College courses at Lamar Tech; a lifestyle-expanding trip to Venice, California; more college courses back in Port Arthur where she played coffeehouses; a mid-summer 1962 trip to Austin resulting in her move here. From Austin, her life is even better documented. She played the folk circuit for a while locally but left Austin for San Francisco and, briefly, New York. Burnt out and drug-weary, she returned to Port Arthur briefly in the summer of 1965 and tried unsuccessfully to conform to the straight life. Her rebellious nature reared its head during a trip to Austin that fall; she stayed and never returned home to Port Arthur. Seven months later, she left for San Francisco. It was June 1966. Janis Joplin had finally gotten out.

On October 4, 1970, four years and four months after she bolted from Austin, Janis Joplin overdosed in her room at the Landmark Hotel in Los Angeles, having scored a particularly pure batch of heroin. Her career had been virtually meteoric, but her ascent as the first goddess of rock was doused by her sad, lonely death, which followed that of Jimi Hendrix, who'd died two weeks earlier. Jim Morrison would die within a year, and whatever glow the Sixties had was finally dimmed for good.

What would Janis have been like today, Undoubtably mellower; likely dried out and cleaned up, because if she wasn't alcoholic at the time, she surely would have been soon. The toll would not have shown well on her face, but blues mamas are supposed to look the part, anyway. By dying young, she is frozen at the pinnacle of her success -- brilliant and shimmering in the easy grace of audience acceptance and approval. She is, forever, raw iron soul.

by Margaret Moser
 
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http://www.vh1.com/sitewide/flipbooks/img/shows/all_access/hot_sexy_forever/2046.jpg

In his brief four-year reign as a superstar, Jimi Hendrix expanded the vocabulary of the electric rock guitar more than anyone before or since.


Hendrix was a master at coaxing all manner of unforeseen sonics from his instrument, often with innovative amplification experiments that produced astral-quality feedback and roaring distortion. His frequent hurricane blasts of noise and dazzling showmanship -- he could and would play behind his back and with his teeth and set his guitar on fire -- has sometimes obscured his considerable gifts as a songwriter, singer, and master of a gamut of blues, R&B, and rock styles.

When Hendrix became an international superstar in 1967, it seemed as if he'd dropped out of a Martian spaceship, but in fact he'd served his apprenticeship the long, mundane way in numerous R&B acts on the chitlin circuit. During the early and mid-'60s, he worked with such R&B/soul greats as Little Richard, the Isley Brothers, and King Curtis as a backup guitarist. Occasionally he recorded as a session man (the Isley Brothers' 1964 single "Testify" is the only one of these early tracks that offers even a glimpse of his future genius). But the stars didn't appreciate his show-stealing showmanship, and Hendrix was straight-jacketed by sideman roles that didn't allow him to develop as a soloist. The logical step was for Hendrix to go out on his own, which he did in New York in the mid-'60s, playing with various musicians in local clubs, and joining white blues-rock singer John Hammond Jr.'s band for a while.

It was in a New York club that Hendrix was spotted by Animals bassist Chas Chandler. The first lineup of the Animals was about to split, and Chandler, looking to move into management, convinced Hendrix to move to London and record as a solo act in England. There a group was built around Jimi, also featuring Mitch Mitchell on drums and Noel Redding on bass, that was dubbed the Jimi Hendrix Experience. The trio became stars with astonishing speed in the U.K., where "Hey Joe," "Purple Haze," and "The Wind Cries Mary" all made the Top Ten in the first half of 1967. These tracks were also featured on their debut album, Are You Experienced?, a psychedelic meisterwerk that became a huge hit in the U.S. after Hendrix created a sensation at the Monterey Pop Festival in June of 1967.

Are You Experienced? was an astonishing debut, particularly from a young R&B veteran who had rarely sung, and apparently never written his own material, before the Experience formed. What caught most people's attention at first was his virtuosic guitar playing, which employed an arsenal of devices, including wah-wah pedals, buzzing feedback solos, crunching distorted riffs, and lightning, liquid runs up and down the scales. But Hendrix was also a first-rate songwriter, melding cosmic imagery with some surprisingly pop-savvy hooks and tender sentiments. He was also an excellent blues interpreter and passionate, engaging singer (although his gruff, throaty vocal pipes were not nearly as great assets as his instrumental skills). Are You Experienced? was psychedelia at its most eclectic, synthesizing mod pop, soul, R&B, Dylan, and the electric guitar innovations of British pioneers like Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend, and Eric Clapton.

Amazingly, Hendrix would only record three fully conceived studio albums in his lifetime. Axis: Bold as Love and the double-LP Electric Ladyland were more diffuse and experimental than Are You Experienced? On Electric Ladyland in particular, Hendrix pioneered the use of the studio itself as a recording instrument, manipulating electronics and devising overdub techniques (with the help of engineer Eddie Kramer in particular) to plot uncharted sonic territory. Not that these albums were perfect, as impressive as they were; the instrumental breaks could meander, and Hendrix's songwriting was occasionally half-baked, never matching the consistency of Are You Experienced? (although he exercised greater creative control over the later albums).

The final two years of Hendrix's life were turbulent ones musically, financially, and personally. He was embroiled in enough complicated management and record company disputes (some dating from ill-advised contracts he'd signed before the Experience formed) to keep the lawyers busy for years. He disbanded the Experience in 1969, forming the Band of Gypsies with drummer Buddy Miles and bassist Billy Cox to pursue funkier directions. He closed Woodstock with a sprawling, shaky set, redeemed by his famous machine-gun interpretation of "The Star Spangled Banner." The rhythm section of Mitchell and Redding were underrated keys to Jimi's best work, and the Band of Gypsies ultimately couldn't measure up to the same standard, although Hendrix did record an erratic live album with them. In early 1970, the Experience re-formed again -- and disbanded again shortly afterward. At the same time, Hendrix felt torn in many directions by various fellow musicians, record-company expectations, and management pressures, all of whom had their own ideas of what Hendrix should be doing. Coming up on two years after Electric Ladyland, a new studio album had yet to appear, although Hendrix was recording constantly during the period.

While outside parties did contribute to bogging down Hendrix's studio work, it also seems likely that Jimi himself was partly responsible for the stalemate, unable to form a permanent lineup of musicians, unable to decide what musical direction to pursue, unable to bring himself to complete another album despite jamming endlessly. A few months into 1970, Mitchell -- Hendrix's most valuable musical collaborator -- came back into the fold, replacing Miles in the drum chair, although Cox stayed in place. It was this trio that toured the world during Hendrix's final months.

It's extremely difficult to separate the facts of Hendrix's life from rumors and speculation. Everyone who knew him well, or claimed to know him well, has different versions of his state of mind in 1970. Critics have variously mused that he was going to go into jazz, that he was going to get deeper into the blues, that he was going to continue doing what he was doing, or that he was too confused to know what he was doing at all. The same confusion holds true for his death: contradictory versions of his final days have been given by his closest acquaintances of the time. He'd been working intermittently on a new album, tentatively titled First Ray of the New Rising Sun, when he died in London on September 18, 1970, from drug-related complications.

Hendrix recorded a massive amount of unreleased studio material during his lifetime. Much of this (as well as entire live concerts) was issued posthumously; several of the live concerts were excellent, but the studio tapes have been the focus of enormous controversy for over 20 years. These initially came out in haphazard drabs and drubs (the first, The Cry of Love, was easily the most outstanding of the lot). In the mid-'70s, producer Alan Douglas took control of these projects, posthumously overdubbing many of Hendrix's tapes with additional parts by studio musicians. In the eyes of many Hendrix fans, this was sacrilege, destroying the integrity of the work of a musician known to exercise meticulous care over the final production of his studio recordings. Even as late as 1995, Douglas was having ex-Knack drummer Bruce Gary record new parts for the typically misbegotten compilation Voodoo Soup. After a lengthy legal dispute, the rights to Hendrix's estate, including all of his recordings, returned to Al Hendrix, the guitarist's father, in July of 1995.

With the help of Jimi's step-sister Janie, Al set up Experience Hendrix to begin to get Jimi's legacy in order. They began by hiring John McDermott and Jimi's original engineer, Eddie Kramer to oversee the remastering process. They were able to find all the original master tapes, which had never been used for previous CD releases, and in April of 1997, Hendrix's first three albums were reissued with drastically improved sound. Accompanying those reissues was a posthumous compilation album (based on Jimi's handwritten track listings) called First Rays of the New Rising Sun, made up of tracks from the Cry of Love, Rainbow Bridge and War Heroes.

Later in 1997, another compilation called South Saturn Delta showed up, collecting more tracks from posthumous LPs like Crash Landing, War Heroes, and Rainbow Bridge (without the terrible '70s overdubs), along with a handful of never-before-heard material that Chas Chandler had withheld from Alan Douglas for all those years.

More archival material followed; Radio One was basically expanded to the two-disc BBC Sessions (released in 1998), and 1999 saw the release of the full show from Woodstock as well as additional concert recordings from the Band of Gypsies shows entitled Live at the Fillmore East. 2000 saw the release of the Jimi Hendrix Experience four-disc box set, which compiled remaining tracks from In the West, Crash Landing and Rainbow Bridge along with more rarities and alternates from the Chandler cache.

The family also launched Dagger Records, essentially an authorized bootleg label to supply harcore Hendrix fans with material that would be of limited commercial appeal. Dagger Records has released several live concerts (of shows in Oakland, Ottawa and Clark University in Massachusetts) and a collection of studio jams and demos called Morning Symphony Ideas. ~ Richie Unterberger & Sean Westergaard, All Music Guide
 
Woof. I graduated in 1970, Cloudy; I bought the music fresh and came unglued hearing it.

Both astounding people. Thanks.
 
I loved Jimi Hendrix from the very first time I heard him, although he was long gone by then.

Janis Joplin was more of an acquired taste for me, but she was a smart, gutsy woman for her time, and her music has certainly grown on me.
 
I can barely even begin here about Hendrix. He was and is still the greatest ever on guitar. He didn't just play the guitar with a few effects like the wah-wah, not really; he played the amps, the wah-wah and everything as one instrument all together. He also applied the techniques of playing other instruments to the guitar and simply trying to imitate a few sounds other instruments could make. The latter technique didn't always work, but usually produced interesting results that he made use of. No one has ever been able to just think as inventively as he did with any instrument. It may literally be centuries before anyone ever does again.

His songwriting was truly superb at times and quite varied. There are actually two "Voodoo Child" songs on Electric Ladyland. "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" was his signature song. The slow, moody "Voodoo Chile", which featured an unusal playing style even for him, sounds like a shamanic journey. "Ezy Rider" showed that he was growing up. His war-time rendition of the "Star-Spangled Banner" is just as meaningful now as it was then. Many other songs revealed a history of low self-esteem and depression. And his live performances were often mind-bogglingly spectacular displays of his expertise.

His singing wasn't great at first, but he was encouraged by the success of the likes of Bob Dylan (who's voice was described in *favorable* review as sounding like a dog with it's leg tangled in barbed wire). However, he was learning how to use his voice and his singing was improving greatly.

To say I'm a fan of his is an understatement. He almost has the status of a patron demi-god to me, or a patron saint in Christian terms. I understand his songs, what he was obviously feeling. His lyrics also reveal a keen insight into human behavior, but like most people suffering from depression, that didn't help him much. I know how bad depression can be and he was fighting it as hard as he could with little help. Hence, many of his songs are a comfort to me when depression strikes me yet again. Even when not, I still listen to his songs. He composed so many songs on so many different subjects and moods that I can listen everyday and never get bored with it. And it's always overwhelming and incredible. If his music were water, I'd drown myself in it.

We miss you. I won't be late, I promise.

:rose:
 
I saw Henrix live in Madison Wisconsin. No one knew who he was at the time, and it was a small room. It was the first time any of us had seen stacked amps, and he just blew us away. No one had ever heard anything like it. It was like he came from the planet Zirkon or something.

As I recall, Hendrix played a right-handed guitar left-handed. That is, he played it upside down with the bass strings on the bottom and the high strings on top. Supposedly that's one of the ways he achieved his style. Look at that picture and you'll see what I mean. That's a right-handed strat being played upside down.

Noel Redding, his original bass player, just died not long ago.

There were a lot of great bands and some good guitarists around then, but Jimi Hendrix reinvented the very idea of the guitar. Endless sustain, overdriving, wah-wah, and that kind of creepy voodoo lyricism were all his inventions, and they came just at the right time, when psychedelics had been introduced and people were looking for a new kind of expression. Hendrix hit the nail right on the fucking head. For that alone he earns the name of genius.


---dr.M.
 
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Great taste in music :) As a teen I had a huge poster of Jimi on the back of my bedroom door...sort of became my altar I think....my mother decided one day it was not complementary to her pink decorating and destroyed it. Many years later and into grandmother phase, my lovely daughter replaced it for me with a large purple and black silk poster of his beautifulness.:cool: Pays to raise your children with a different outlook to the one you endured from your own parents, and we can even appreciate Marilyn Manson together.:D

Catalina :rose:
 
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That's a great Hendrix story, Doc.

My favorite is told by Eric Clapton. One day Pete Townsend called and invited him to a movie. This surprised Clapton because they knew each other but weren't good friends. Curious, Clapton went along.

I can't remember the film, but it involved a lot of Hendrix. As Clapton sat, open mouthed, Townsend leaned over and said, "That's the guy who's going to take out jobs."

The other thing I remember about Hendrix is his death. I was in NYC at the time and it seend like everybody in rock was dying. Joplin, Hendrix, Morrison all left the stage at about the same time.

Rumple Foreskin :cool:
 
Weirdness Warning!

I've been thinking. The only person who has ever managed to truly imitate the sounds Hendrix could make on the guitar was Michael Winslow, the guy who could vocally imiate any sound on the Police Academy movies. So... maybe that what's Hendrix was doing. Maybe the guitar was just a prop!

Just kidding. I think.
 
My brother, who was born in 1951, was a great Hendrix fan. He was a lefty too, and played upside down trying to imitate him.

The guy was, like Elvis in his time, a filthy-dirty, sexy and seriously subversive teen icon. Every guy wanted to be him, every girl wanted to fuck him. (A considerable number of them got their wish).

What would he have gone on to do?

Miles Davis, fresh from "Bitches Brew" was desperate to collaborate with him, but Hendrix died before anything happened.

I think he might have tightened up his sound and ended up doing something similar to Parliament or Prince.

Hendrix was incredibly original and creative, not just in his playing, but also vocally, harmonically, and melodically in his songs. He was also wrote some extraordinary lyrics: A sample from my favorite album, "Cry of Love".

WELL I'M LOOKING THROUGH HARLEM
MY STOMACH SQUEAL JUST A LITTLE MORE
A STAGECOACH FULL OF FEATHERS AND FOOTPRINTS
PULLS UP TO MY SOAP-BOX DOOR
NOW A LADY WITH A PEARL-HANDLED NECKTIE
TIED TO THE DRIVER'S FENCE
BREATHES IN MY FACE
BOURBON AND COKE POSSESED WORDS
HAVEN'T I SEEN YOU SOMEWHERE IN HELL
OR WAS IT JUST AN ACCIDENT?

BEFORE I COULD ASK WAS IT THE EAST OR WEST SIDE?
MY FEET THEY HOWLED IN PAIN
THE WHEELS OF A BANDWAGON CUT VERY DEEP
BUT NOT AS DEEP IN MY MIND AS THE RAIN
AND AS THEY PULLED AWAY I COULD SEE HER WORDS
STAGGER AND FALLIN' ON MY MUDDY TENT
WELL I PICKED THEM UP BRUSHED THEM OFF
TO SEE WHAT THEY SAY
AND YOU WOULDN'T BELIEVE IT:

'COME AROUND TO MY ROOM WITH THE TOOTH IN THE MIDDLE
AND BRING ALONG THE BOTTLE AND A PRESIDENT'

AND SOMETIMES IT'S NOT SO EASY
SPECIALLY WHEN YOUR ONLY FRIEND
TALKS, SEES, LOOKS AND FEELS LIKE YOU
AND YOU DO JUST THE SAME AS HIM

Mitch Mitchell, his superb, jazzy drummer, is alive and well and playing pub gigs in Ireland. He doesn't need the money.
 
dr_mabeuse said:
As I recall, Hendrix played a right-handed guitar left-handed. That is, he played it upside down with the bass strings on the bottom and the high strings on top. Supposedly that's one of the ways he achieved his style. Look at that picture and you'll see what I mean. That's a right-handed strat being played upside down.

---dr.M.

Glad you mentioned this Mab. From my little bit of research (watching footage and blowing up web pages {attached}) it seems that this is one of those urban myths, right alongside the playing with his teeth. (Picking with his right hand)

Not to take anything away from the guy though. He was the most inovative electric guitarist ever, as well as the inspiration for my favourite guitarist ever. One of the first singles I bought (and still have, on vinyl) was "Gyspsy Eyes".

Gauche
 
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gauchecritic said:
Glad you mentioned this Mab. From my little bit of research (watching footage and blowing up web pages {attached}) it seems that this is one of those urban myths, right alongside the playing with his teeth. (Picking with his right hand)

Huh? Hendrix did play left-handed; the pic you attached shows that. The guitar is pointed the opposite direction. :confused: However he could, and sometimes did, play right-handed: pic page

And he did play with his teeth (something I could never do, my teeth are too sensitive - ouch!). I've seen it in the Woodstock footage, and Monterey too, IIRC. Also see: pic
 
You can't believe everything you see!

pagan switch said:
Huh? Hendrix did play left-handed; the pic you attached shows that. The guitar is pointed the opposite direction. :confused: However he could, and sometimes did, play right-handed: pic page

And he did play with his teeth (something I could never do, my teeth are too sensitive - ouch!). I've seen it in the Woodstock footage, and Monterey too, IIRC. Also see: pic

The first pic, supposedly showing him playing right handed is simply a reverse print screwup by the magazine, as they do often.
How do I know? If it wasn't, the tuning pegs would be on TOP, not on the bottom, as they were when he played LEFT handed!

How was it strung? I'm checking with an expert and will report back.

He was call "The master of distortion" back then. It didn't fully appreciate him until after be died, then I wanted more.
"The Star Spangled Banner" and other songs he played at Woodstock were absolutely great tunes. And if you ever catch the movie, it was sad that he was the last person who played there and he performed to only hundreds or a thousand people!

Many people tried to make wierd sounds using all methods, but most came out sounding like noise.
When Jimi played, his sounded like music, not noise.
No one has ever made the sounds that he made.

And, yes, he did play with his teeth, and behind his back, and other ways. Some other musician who hung around with him back then for a while, and it was some famous one, like Bob Dylan or the Beatles, or Clapton, someone like that (Can't remember) reported how he would walk around all day in the house wearing his guitar and playing it, ALL day and night, never putting it down. I believe this because it is the only way he could come up with those sounds without them being garbage.
 
Yes he did play it left handed but strung with the base at the top as normal, not upside down. Strumming up (or on reversed strings) gives you ska, I don't think he's credited with that too.

If you look at your picture again (and I've never seen any pictures or footage with a proper view) you see he has the guitar up to his face, but that's all. A friend of mine used to do exactly the same trick, picking with the fret hand.

Gauche
 
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