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Rainbow Bridge is a 1971 film directed by Chuck Wein centering on the late 1960s counterculture on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Filmed in summer 1970 with non-professional actors and without a script, it features largely improvised scenes with a variety of characters.
Rainbow Bridge (subtitled Original Motion Picture Sound Track) is a posthumous album by the American musician Jimi Hendrix. It was released in October 1971 through Reprise Records, and was produced by Mitch Mitchell, Eddie Kramer, and John Jansen, with Hendrix receiving a production credit as well. The album was the second released after ...
Live in Maui is an album by the Jimi Hendrix Experience documenting their performance outdoors on Maui, Hawaii, on July 30, 1970.It marks the first official release of Hendrix's two full sets recorded during the filming of Rainbow Bridge (1971). [1]
The doc will also be paired with a new album called Live in Maui. New Jimi Hendrix Documentary Explores Infamous Rainbow Bridge Film and 1970 Concert in Maui Meagan Fredette
"Dolly Dagger" is a song written and recorded by Jimi Hendrix. On October 9, 1971, it was released on the posthumous album Rainbow Bridge , followed by a single on October 23. Backed with a multi-tracked studio solo rendition of the " Star Spangled Banner ", the single peaked at number 74 on the Billboard Hot 100 , making it the last Hendrix ...
Jimi Hendrix (1942–1970) was an American guitarist and singer-songwriter whose career spanned from 1962 to 1970. [2] He appeared in several commercially released films of concerts and documentaries about his career, including two popular 1960s music festival films – Monterey Pop (1968) [3] and Woodstock (1970). [4]
July 30, 1970 – Filming for Rainbow Bridge (first set), Maui, Hawaii: [47] The Jimi Hendrix Experience (box set, 2000); in the film Rainbow Bridge, Hendrix performs a medley of "Hey Baby" and "In from the Storm" from the first set and the intro only from the second set before a fade; [48] neither appears on the Rainbow Bridge album. [29]
"The bridge itself was full of so much love," Emily Lauren, a photographer in Virginia, tells Southern Living. "You could tell a lot of thought and love went into the entire place.