Posted via web from DOGMEAT
@mrjyn
February 25, 2010
Christmas elvis OR MICHAEL JACKSON OR hong OR kong OR made OR lolita OR black OR memorabilia OR scarface OR machine OR photo OR collage - Search History - Live Auctioneers
Saved Search Terms ()-
christmas elvis
Saved at Dec 21 2009 06:17 PMX
MICHAEL JACKSON vickyvectis
Saved at Sep 03 2009 03:05 PMX
hong OR kong OR made OR lolita vickyvectis
Saved at Sep 03 2009 03:02 PMX
black OR memorabilia
Saved at Aug 25 2009 07:27 PMX
scarface OR machine OR photo OR collage
Saved at Aug 25 2009 07:08 PMX
Posted via web from DOGMEAT
Jimi Hendrix And Jayne Mansfield: The Untold Story
Jimi Hendrix And Jayne Mansfield: The Untold Story San Francisco, CA -- When Jimi Hendrix sang "Foxy Lady," he may have been singing about 1960s sex symbol Jayne Mansfield.
Believe it or not, Hendrix actually played bass and lead guitar for Mansfield back in 1965 on two songs: A ballad called "As The Clouds Drift By," and a bump-and-grind number called "Suey."
According to Hendrix historian Steven Roby, author of a new book, "Black Gold: The Lost Archives Of Jimi Hendrix" (Billboard Books), the Jayne-Jimi summit took place because they had the same manager.
The songs were never actually released but Roby says "Suey" features some great Hendrix bass-playing and lyrics like "It makes my liver quiver."
Roby doesn't know if Mansfield and Hendrix collaborated on anything else but the blonde bombshell did attend one of his concerts a few years later. However, she chose to leave with Englebert Humperdinck, not Hendrix.
Posted via web from DOGMEAT
Jimi Hendrix played bass and lead guitar for Mansfield in 1965 on "As The Clouds Drift By" and "Suey"
Recordings
In addition to singing in English and German in a number of films, in 1964, Mansfield released a novelty album called Jayne Mansfield: Shakespeare, Tchaikovsky & Me, on which she recited Shakespeare's sonnets and poems by Marlowe, Browning, Wordsworth, and others against a background of Tchaikovsky's music. The album cover depicted a bouffant-coiffed Mansfield with lips pursed and breasts barely covered by a fur stole, posing between busts of the Russian composer and the Bard of Avon.[23]
The New York Times described the album as the actress reading "30-odd poems in a husky, urban, baby voice". The paper's reviewer went on to state that "Miss Mansfield is a lady with apparent charms, but reading poetry is not one of them."[24]
Jimi Hendrix played bass and lead guitar for Mansfield in 1965 on two songs, "As The Clouds Drift By" and "Suey", released together on two sides. According to Hendrix historian Steven Roby (Black Gold: The Lost Archives Of Jimi Hendrix, Billboard Books) this collaboration happened because they shared the same manager.[25][26]
Posted via web from DOGMEAT