Few live performances have become as legendary as Jimi Hendrix’s interpretation of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
Performed during his unforgettable set at the Woodstock Music & Art Fair in 1969 and officially released on Woodstock: Music from the Original Soundtrack and More in 1970, Hendrix’s electrifying rendition of the United States national anthem transcended music, becoming one of the defining moments in rock history.
More than five decades later, it remains one of the most powerful and widely discussed performances ever captured on stage.
The performance reflected Hendrix’s extraordinary creativity.
Using distortion, feedback and his signature guitar techniques, Hendrix transformed Francis Scott Key’s familiar melody into something entirely new. Between recognizable passages of the anthem, he recreated the sounds of explosions, air-raid sirens and warfare, creating a performance that listeners have interpreted in many different ways over the years.
“You have to use fantasy to show different sides of reality; it’s how it can bend,” Hendrix said in a 1970 interview. “As a word reality is nothing, but each individual’s own way of thinking. Then the establishment grabs a big piece of that.”
Although some viewed it as a political protest during the Vietnam War, Hendrix consistently resisted attaching a single meaning to the performance.
“I’m an American so I played it,” Hendrix said in an interview with Dick Cavett. “They used to make me sing it in school, so it was a flashback.”
The rendition became one of the defining images of Woodstock. Performing on the festival’s final morning before a much smaller crowd than had gathered over the weekend, Hendrix closed the event with a performance that would come to symbolize not only the festival itself but an entire era of American music and culture.
Its influence has extended far beyond Woodstock.
Over the decades, Hendrix’s version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” has been preserved in the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress and has appeared on countless lists of the greatest guitar performances of all time. Musicians across rock, blues and metal have cited it as one of the most influential live performances ever recorded, while its fearless experimentation continues to inspire generations of guitarists.
In a 1968 interview, Hendrix shared essential advice for burgeoning players: “You have to stick with it. Sometimes you are going to be so frustrated you want to give up the guitar you’ll hate the guitar. But all of this is just a part of learning, because if you stick with it you’re going to be rewarded.”
More than 50 years after it was first released, Hendrix’s unforgettable interpretation remains a fixture on classic rock radio, documentaries and retrospectives celebrating the greatest moments in music history. What began as a bold reimagining of America’s national anthem ultimately became one of rock’s most enduring classics and one of the most iconic live performances ever witnessed.
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