*** Welcome to piglix ***

Foxy Lady

"Foxy Lady"
Foxy Lady cover.jpg
German single picture sleeve
Single by The Jimi Hendrix Experience
from the album Are You Experienced
B-side "Hey Joe"
Released December 13, 1967 (1967-12-13) (U.S.)
Format 7-inch 45 rpm
Recorded CBS Studios, London, December 13, 1966
Genre Psychedelic rock, hard rock
Length 3:19
Label Reprise Records (no. 0641)
Writer(s) Jimi Hendrix
Producer(s) Chas Chandler
The Jimi Hendrix Experience American chronology
"Purple Haze"
(1967)
"Foxy Lady"
(1967)
"Up from the Skies"
(1968)

"Foxy Lady" (or alternatively "Foxey Lady") is a song by the Jimi Hendrix Experience. It first appeared on their 1967 debut album Are You Experienced and was later issued as their third single in the U.S. with the alternate spelling. It is one of Hendrix's best-known songs and was frequently performed in concerts throughout his career. Rolling Stone magazine placed the song at number 153 on its list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".

Music critic Thomas Ward points out "if one song could be said to encapsulate Hendrix’s entire oeuvre, 'Foxey Lady' is certainly closer than most." The song opens with a fingered note "shaken in a wide exaggerated vibrato" so the adjacent strings are sounded. After the amplifier is allowed to feed back, Hendrix slides down to the rhythm figure, which uses a dominant seventh sharp ninth chord, a jazz and rhythm and blues-style chord, often referred to as the "Hendrix chord". According to biographer Keith Shadwick,

[Hendrix] casts the whole solo in the blues vernacular, using bent notes and glisses, or slides, between the notes primarily within the blues or pentatonic scales. To that he adds the new melodicism he had been hearing on recent British rock records.

Prior to the recording, the group had not worked out an ending for the song and bassist Noel Redding claimed that using the last IV chord was his idea. Hendrix biographer Harry Shapiro suggests that song's lyrics were inspired by Heather Taylor, who later married Roger Daltrey of the Who. Hendrix later commented that he did not approach women in such a straightforward manner as the lyrics suggested. Lithofayne "Faye" Pridgon, Hendrix's girlfriend in the mid 1960s, has also been suggested as the inspiration for the song.


...
Wikipedia

...