Midnight Lightning
Midnight Lightning is a legendary bouldering route on the south face of the Columbia Boulder in Camp 4, Yosemite National Park, California, measuring 7.62 meters (25 feet) in height and graded V8 (7B). First ascended by American climber Ron Kauk in May 1978 after over two months of effort, with assistance from John Bachar who drew the iconic chalk lightning bolt on a key hold, the route features a powerful sequence starting with polished crimps, a dynamic leap to an undercling, and a committing mantle finish over a bulge.[1][2][3] The route's fame stems from its central location in Yosemite Valley's historic Camp 4 climbing area, its aesthetic appeal highlighted by the lightning bolt motif, and its role as a milestone in bouldering history, pushing the boundaries of power and precision on granite.[4][5] Originally solved using a now-broken hold, the current version was first climbed in its harder form shortly after by John Bachar, further cementing its reputation for difficulty and requiring spotters or crash pads due to the highball nature and potential for injury on the landing.[4][1] Notable ascents include the first female send by Lynn Hill in 1998 after years of attempts, underscoring the route's enduring challenge even for elite climbers, and it has since been repeated by thousands, with the chalk bolt periodically redrawn after controversies like its scrubbing in 2013.[2][4] The problem's cultural impact extends beyond climbing, symbolizing innovation in the sport during the late 1970s Yosemite renaissance, and it remains a bucket-list objective for boulderers worldwide, often described as a test of technique, strength, and mental fortitude on impeccably smooth Yosemite granite.[3][5]Background and Recording
Original Sessions
The original recording sessions for the tracks on Midnight Lightning took place between 1968 and 1970, reflecting Jimi Hendrix's transitional phase after the dissolution of the Jimi Hendrix Experience and his exploration of new band configurations. Many sessions occurred at key studios in London and New York, where Hendrix collaborated with former Band of Gypsys members Billy Cox on bass and occasionally Buddy Miles on drums, alongside drummer Mitch Mitchell from the Experience. For instance, "Hear My Train A Comin'" was captured during a rehearsal session on February 17, 1969, at Olympic Studios in London, featuring Hendrix, Mitchell, and bassist Noel Redding in an acoustic arrangement that highlighted Hendrix's blues roots and improvisational style.[6] Similarly, "Astro Man" originated from an early 1970 session on January 7 at Record Plant Studios in New York, with Hendrix, Cox, and Miles laying down a funky, space-themed groove that showcased the Band of Gypsys' rhythmic drive. These collaborations marked Hendrix's shift toward a heavier, more groove-oriented sound in his later career, often starting with loose jams before refining ideas. A significant portion of the album's material emerged from sessions at the newly opened Electric Lady Studios in New York starting in June 1970, where Hendrix served as producer and primary engineer, fostering a creative environment for extended experimentation. Tracks like "Freedom" and "In From the Storm" were recorded on June 24, 1970, with Cox providing steady bass support while Hendrix layered guitar parts, emphasizing themes of liberation and resilience.[7] On July 1, 1970, Hendrix tackled "Drifting" and "Dolly Dagger" in the same studio, incorporating solo demos and overdubs to build atmospheric textures, with some takes evolving from earlier sketches.[8] "Midnight Lightning," inspired by thunderstorms, received initial Delta blues-inflected takes on March 23, 1970, at Record Plant Studios, where Hendrix played acoustic guitar seated, before further development.[9] Hendrix's process during this period involved solo demos to prototype ideas, followed by band integrations, allowing him to blend personal introspection with collaborative energy. These recordings were integral to Hendrix's vision for his unfinished fourth studio album, First Rays of the New Rising Sun, intended as a double-LP culmination of his artistic growth, featuring optimistic themes and innovative arrangements. Sessions utilized 8-track recording technology, enabling Hendrix to multitrack guitar layers for complex sonic landscapes, as seen in the building rhythms of tracks like "Freedom."[10] Hendrix pushed experimental guitar techniques, employing feedback for ethereal swells, the wah-wah pedal for vocal-like expressions, and the Uni-Vibe for swirling psychedelic modulation, particularly evident in the improvisational solos of "Hear My Train A Comin'" and "Midnight Lightning."[11] This approach underscored his commitment to expanding rock's boundaries through studio innovation and live-inspired spontaneity.Posthumous Production
Following Jimi Hendrix's death in 1970, producers Alan Douglas and Tony Bongiovi oversaw the posthumous production of Midnight Lightning in 1975, drawing from incomplete demo recordings and session tapes to compile the album. Douglas, who had previously produced the controversial Crash Landing earlier that year, selected material primarily from Hendrix's 1969–1970 sessions, while Bongiovi handled engineering duties; the pair worked under a contract from Depaja Inc., which had acquired rights to unreleased Hendrix material through a deal with Warner Bros. Records.[12] Overdubs were recorded at Electric Lady Studios in New York, where the producers brought in session musicians to flesh out the tracks, aiming to create polished, releasable songs from Hendrix's raw ideas.[13] The production involved extensive overdub techniques to complete the arrangements, including new guitar parts played by Jeff Mironov on several tracks such as "Midnight Lightning" and "Trash Man," and drum tracks added by Allan Schwartzberg across most of the album to replace or augment incomplete rhythm sections. Bass lines were similarly overdubbed by Bob Babbitt, resulting in a near-total reconstruction of the backing for many songs; the only preserved original rhythm element beyond Hendrix's guitar and vocals was drummer Mitch Mitchell's performance on "Hear My Train A Comin'," where Schwartzberg contributed only shakers. These additions transformed sparse demos into full band performances, but the process sparked immediate backlash from fans and critics who viewed the alterations as disrespectful to Hendrix's artistic intent.[14] The controversies surrounding Midnight Lightning centered on the ethical and artistic implications of posthumously editing and overdubbing Hendrix's work, with detractors arguing that Douglas and Bongiovi had overstepped by effectively rewriting the originals using musicians unfamiliar with Hendrix's style. Douglas defended the approach as a necessary means to salvage unusable tapes and honor Hendrix's vision, though he avoided claiming co-writing credits on this album unlike on Crash Landing, in response to prior criticism.[12] Legal debates intensified in the mid-1990s when Al Hendrix, Jimi's father, successfully sued estate manager Leo Branton and others—including Douglas—for mismanagement of the catalog, leading to a 1995 out-of-court settlement that restored control to the family; this culminated in the 1997 formation of Experience Hendrix LLC, which assumed full rights to Hendrix's recordings and effectively ended Douglas's involvement in posthumous releases.[15][16]Release
Initial Release
Midnight Lightning was first released in November 1975 by Reprise Records in the United States under catalog number MS 2229 and by Polydor Records in the United Kingdom under catalog number 2310 415. The initial format was vinyl LP in stereo, with cassette and 8-track cartridge editions made available soon after.[17] Promotion for the album leveraged the momentum from Jimi Hendrix's expanding posthumous catalog, particularly following the earlier 1975 release of Crash Landing, both overseen by producer Alan Douglas. Strategies emphasized unreleased recordings and standout tracks like "Hear My Train A Comin'" to appeal to fans seeking new material from Hendrix's archives.[14] The album achieved moderate initial commercial success, peaking at number 43 on the US Billboard 200 chart after debuting at number 96 on November 29, 1975, and remaining on the chart for 11 weeks. In the UK, it reached number 46 on the Albums Chart for one week in November 1975. US sales totaled approximately 375,000 units, though it did not receive RIAA certification.[18][19][20]Reissues and Legacy
Following the original 1975 release, Midnight Lightning saw several vinyl reissues in the late 1970s and 1980s, including a 1980 German pressing by Polydor as part of a Hendrix box set and a 1983 Brazilian edition under the Rock Story series by Warner Bros.[21][22] In 1997, Experience Hendrix L.L.C. secured control of Jimi Hendrix's master recordings through a licensing agreement with MCA Records, granting the estate creative authority over his catalog.[23] Rather than reissuing the album, which featured extensive overdubs by producer Alan Douglas and additional musicians, Experience Hendrix prioritized releasing original, overdub-free versions of its tracks; for instance, an unreleased recording of the title track appeared on the 1997 compilation South Saturn Delta.[24][25] Tracks from Midnight Lightning were further integrated into subsequent Experience Hendrix releases, such as the 2000 box set The Jimi Hendrix Experience, which included an alternate, previously unreleased take of "Hear My Train A Comin'" without the album's posthumous additions.[26] In the 2010s, select tracks received digital remastering as part of broader catalog updates, though the full album was not revived.[27] More recently, unreleased forms of songs like "Midnight Lightning / Beginnings" featured in the 2024 box set Electric Lady Studios: A Jimi Hendrix Vision, showcasing raw 1970 sessions from Electric Lady Studios.[28] The album's legacy is marked by controversy over Douglas's heavy overdubs, often criticized as an "ill-advised" alteration that transformed unfinished Hendrix demos into an inauthentic "overdubbed artifact," prompting its deletion from the official catalog shortly after 1997.[29][14] This shift influenced Experience Hendrix's archiving philosophy, emphasizing preservation of Hendrix's raw, incomplete works over posthumous embellishments to honor his artistic intent.[30] Today, the original Midnight Lightning is out of print and unavailable on major streaming platforms, but its core tracks persist in authentic forms within approved compilations and box sets, underscoring the estate's ongoing management of Hendrix's vast unreleased archive.[31]Musical Content
Track Listing
Midnight Lightning, released in 1975, features eight tracks drawn from Jimi Hendrix's unfinished recordings, primarily from sessions in 1969 and 1970, with posthumous overdubs and edits by producer Alan Douglas. The original LP divides the tracks across two sides, as follows:| Side | No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | "Trash Man" | Jimi Hendrix | 3:16 | Recorded April 1969 at Olmstead Studios, New York.[32] |
| A | 2 | "Midnight Lightning" | Jimi Hendrix | 3:52 | Composite from takes recorded in 1969–1970, including sessions at Olympic Studios (February 1969) and Record Plant (March and July 1970).[33][9] |
| A | 3 | "Hear My Train A Comin'" | Jimi Hendrix | 5:18 | Based on a 1969 studio take with overdubs. |
| A | 4 | "Gypsy Boy (New Rising Sun)" | Jimi Hendrix | 3:51 | Early version of "Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)," recorded April 1969 at Record Plant, New York.[34] |
| B | 1 | "Blue Suede Shoes" | Carl Perkins | 3:28 | Cover recorded February 1970 at Record Plant, New York.[35] |
| B | 2 | "Machine Gun" | Jimi Hendrix | 7:27 | Edited from a live performance recorded January 1970 at Madison Square Garden, New York. |
| B | 3 | "Once I Had a Woman" | Jimi Hendrix | 5:44 | Recorded March 1970 at Record Plant, New York. |
| B | 4 | "Beginnings" | Mitch Mitchell | 3:02 | Instrumental recorded 1968–1969. |