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Hendrix Used Gay Ruse to Avoid 'Nam

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer
Mon Aug 1,10:37 AM ET



SEATTLE (AP) ? Jimi Hendrix might have stayed in the Army. He might have been sent to Vietnam. Instead, he pretended he was gay. And with that, he was discharged from the 101st Airborne in 1962, launching a musical career that would redefine the guitar, leave other rock heroes of the day speechless and culminate with his headlining performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Woodstock in 1969.

Hendrix's subterfuge, contained in his military medical records, is revealed for the first time in Charles R. Cross' new biography, "Room Full of Mirrors." Publicly, Hendrix always claimed he was discharged after breaking his ankle on a parachute jump, but his medical records do not mention such an injury.

In regular visits to the base psychiatrist at Fort Campbell, Ky., in spring 1962, Hendrix complained that he was in love with one of his squad mates and that he had become addicted to masturbating, Cross writes. Finally, Capt. John Halbert recommended him for discharge, citing his "homosexual tendencies."

Hendrix's legendary appetite for women negates the notion that he might have been gay, Cross writes. Nor, Cross says, was his stunt politically motivated: Contrary to his later image, Hendrix was an avowed anti-communist who exhibited little unease about the escalating U.S. role in Vietnam.

He just wanted to escape the Army to play music ? he had enlisted to avoid jail time after being repeatedly arrested in stolen cars in Seattle, his hometown.

"Room Full of Mirrors," titled after an unreleased Hendrix tune, is being published this summer to coincide with the 35th anniversary of his Sept. 18, 1970, death from a sleeping-pill overdose. It is Cross' second biography of a popular musician who died at age 27; "Heavier Than Heaven," a 2001 bio of Nirvana's Kurt Cobain, was a New York Times best seller.

The new bio is culled from nearly four years of research, including access to Hendrix's letters and diaries, along with military records provided by a collector the author won't name. Cross focuses on Hendrix's complex personal life and psyche more than his music.

"It's not how much I know about Jimi's B-sides; it's how much I know about the emotional arc of his life," Cross said in an interview.

The portrait that emerges is similar, in many ways, to that of Cobain. Both men grew up in poverty in Washington state, dreamed from an early age of becoming rock stars, found themselves with more fame than they knew how to handle and eventually retreated into a haze of drug use.

Cross, who lives just north of Seattle, describes Hendrix's troubled childhood. Jimi's father, Al Hendrix, and mother, Lucille, both had drinking problems. Al, a landscaper, rarely found decent-paying jobs and frequently split with Lucille. Jimi and his siblings were often left by themselves, or in the care of family friends. Jimi eventually flunked out of high school.

Before Hendrix even owned a proper guitar, he played air guitar using a broom, then a beat-up hunk of wood with a single string. When he was 16, his father bought him a right-handed electric guitar that Hendrix had to restring to play lefty.

"Room Full of Mirrors" is filled with nuggets: After a show in Seattle, he had a star-struck teenager drive him around his old haunts; he allegedly had an affair with French actress Brigitte Bardot, precipitated by a chance meeting at the Paris airport; promoters at Woodstock refused to let him play an acoustic guitar. (Cross doesn't cite a source for the Bardot liaison, and says the actress didn't respond to his attempts to contact her.)

After his discharge, Hendrix formed a band with former Army pal Buddy Cox and began touring Southern clubs on the "Chitlin' Circuit." During those years, from 1963-65, Hendrix played to black audiences with the King Kasuals and as a backup to Solomon Burke, Otis Redding, Curtis Mayfield and Little Richard.

Unable to make a living in the States ? primarily because of his color ? Hendrix went to England in 1966 and took London by storm with his now-polished blend of soul, blues and rock. Within eight days of his arrival, he floored guitar gods like Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck. Hendrix remained in London for nearly a year, forming the Jimi Hendrix Experience and releasing his first album.

On his way to the Monterey Pop Festival in summer 1967, he was mistaken for a bellhop by a woman at the Chelsea Hotel during a layover in New York.

It was a cold reminder of his ethnicity, Cross writes.

Hendrix was always uneasy being one of the first black stars to attract a white audience; he wanted to be welcomed by blacks, too. Following Woodstock, his friends tried to arrange a show for him at the Apollo in Harlem, where his friends teased him about his drug of choice ? LSD ? being a "white" drug. The legendary theater refused, afraid the concert would draw too many whites.

Link
 
your title is a little different than the story indicates

Nor, Cross says, was his stunt politically motivated: Contrary to his later image, Hendrix was an avowed anti-communist who exhibited little unease about the escalating U.S. role in Vietnam.

He just wanted to escape the Army to play music ? he had enlisted to avoid jail time after being repeatedly arrested in stolen cars in Seattle, his hometown.
getting out to play music isn't the same as getting out to avoid going to Viet Nam

sounds like media bias to me
 
Originally posted by: daveymark
to bad the gay excuse doesn't work now

Since when? Unless something has changed in the last five years, if you're caught in the act, you potentially get charges and a dishonorable discharge. If you come out on your own, you get an honorable discharge (provided you've served at least two years or something).
 
Having researched quite a bit into Jimi Hendrix myself (the username is only the tip of the iceburg), I can say that this book is mostly garbage written to sell.

It is true that Jimi didn't blend well in the army, his letters home do nothing to hide that fact.

In the best tradition of MASH's Corporal Klinger, Jimmy went to see the army psychiatrist on more than one occasion, but eventually he decided on a much simpler route to freedom: 'one day, I got my ankle caught in the sky hook just as I was going to jump and I broke it. I told them I'd hurt my back too. Everytime they examined me I groaned, so they finally believed me and I got out'

He recieved his discharge in July of 62, for "medical unsuitability". In 1962, Vietnam was having some internal turmoil, but it wasn't until 1964 that the Gulf of Tonkin Incident on August 2 occurred, bringing the US into the conflict. Bombing runs started, and in 1965 the first American combat troops from the 9th Marine Expeditionary Brigade arrived in Vietnam, at Danang.

Jimi was many things, but I don't think he was able to see that 3 years in the future the US would be putting troops on the ground in Vietnam. As such, it is highly unlikely that he was trying to avoid Vietnam. While it was well known (at least in my circles) that he tried to get out with the gay route, he eventually did so because of injury, unlike this guy's assertions.

As far as Jimi not being allowed to play an acoustic guitar at Woodstock, that has to be one of the most rediculous things I have heard. Im not sure what the point is, but its pretty stupid to say it. First off, Jimi rarely played an acoustic guitar, even when by himself (home demo tapes which are plentiful). He jammed with the Gypsy Sun and Rainbows band in Shokan, NY for the entire summer leading up to Woodstock, and all those tapes show him playing his trusty strat. Jimi loved to rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. I find it impossible that he would try and play with an acoustic in concert without having rehearsed that way with his band. The band broke up in fall before the Band of Gypsys formed, because they werent "serious" enough for Jimi's tastes. Now, given all that, even if Jimi decided spur of the moment to play acoustic, nobody would have stopped him. It was tough to get Jimi to play at Woodstock because his manager, Mike Jeffreys, demanded he get his usual rate. At the time, Jimi was pulling in $100,000 per show, and Woodstock had capped the pay at $15,000 per artist. Jimi was the only artist paid more than $15k, they gave him $50k to play, and let him headline; he was the last act to go on. For all that, Im sure they would let him play an acoustic guitar, he wouldnt have been the only one at Woodstock playing an acoustic.

Jimi was playing in Nashville for some time before settling in New York. He played there for a few years and then went to England in 1966 because he got a record deal. This article hints that he went to England because he was struggling in the US. He met Chas Chandler in NY who brought him to his home country of England to create a band, it was by design.

 
Originally posted by: daveymark
to bad the gay excuse doesn't work now

Not true. I know a guy who pretended to be gay when he was told he was going to be sent to Iraq. He isn't in the Marines anymore.
 
I don't really care why Hendrix didn't go to Vietnam. I'm glad he didn't. His music has affected generations in one way or another. He's one of the few true legends of music.
 
Originally posted by: n yusef
Originally posted by: daveymark
to bad the gay excuse doesn't work now

Not true. I know a guy who pretended to be gay when he was told he was going to be sent to Iraq. He isn't in the Marines anymore.

One of my cousins is an officer in the military, and she said that they have all kinds of guys trying to get out of service by claiming they are gay, and she said that it isn't working... dunno about the accuracy of that, tho.

I know that if I were enlisted or otherwise had to be in any armed service for any reason, I'd probably try to screw every willing man on my way there, so as to try to provide evidence that I'm gay, and should not be in the army. 😛 I don't really see a problem with gays in the army, but it would be a convenient excuse for me, since I hate the army. 😛
 
Originally posted by: BoberFett
I don't really care why Hendrix didn't go to Vietnam. I'm glad he didn't. His music has affected generations in one way or another. He's one of the few true legends of music.

True that!
 
Originally posted by: BoberFett
I don't really care why Hendrix didn't go to Vietnam. I'm glad he didn't. His music has affected generations in one way or another. He's one of the few true legends of music.

:thumbsup:
 
Hendrix rocks. Although I'm sorry to see he did this.

John Fogerty (of CCR), served his country, didn't need to fake anything, and still created some great music.

Too bad for Jimi.
 
Originally posted by: yellowfiero
Hendrix rocks. Although I'm sorry to see he did this.

John Fogerty (of CCR), served his country, didn't need to fake anything, and still created some great music.

Too bad for Jimi.
As much as I love Fogerty's music (he's right up there with Jimi) he avoided Vietnam by enlisting in the Army Reserve before he could be drafted.
 
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: yellowfiero
Hendrix rocks. Although I'm sorry to see he did this.

John Fogerty (of CCR), served his country, didn't need to fake anything, and still created some great music.

Too bad for Jimi.
As much as I love Fogerty's music (he's right up there with Jimi) he avoided Vietnam by enlisting in the Army Reserve before he could be drafted.

I avoided it as well by enlisting in the Marines with a Aviation guarantee.

Does that make me a bad person?














 
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: yellowfiero
Hendrix rocks. Although I'm sorry to see he did this.

John Fogerty (of CCR), served his country, didn't need to fake anything, and still created some great music.

Too bad for Jimi.
As much as I love Fogerty's music (he's right up there with Jimi) he avoided Vietnam by enlisting in the Army Reserve before he could be drafted.

I avoided it as well by enlisting in the Marines with a Aviation guarantee.

Does that make me a bad person?

I think you misunderstood my intent. I wasn't trying to point out that Hendrix did something wrong. Just that yellowfiero's praise of Fogerty over Hendrix is ill placed. They both avoided Vietnam, and I don't blame them. I probably would have done the same.
 
Originally posted by: sandorski
Klinger spent all that time trying for a Section 8, when he just could have said he liked guys.

that would have sorta ruined the show
 
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: sandorski
Klinger spent all that time trying for a Section 8, when he just could have said he liked guys.

that would have sorta ruined the show

True enough. 😀

edit: but you'd think all that Cross Dressing would have had some effect.
 
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: daveymark
to bad the gay excuse doesn't work now

Since when? Unless something has changed in the last five years, if you're caught in the act, you potentially get charges and a dishonorable discharge. If you come out on your own, you get an honorable discharge (provided you've served at least two years or something).

They should make you prove it first though...
 
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