Voodoo Child Album ❲Popular | Tricks❳

Voodoo Child Album ❲Popular | Tricks❳

Assuming you mean the compilation (2001): Review: Voodoo Child: The Jimi Hendrix Collection (2001) Rating: 4.5/5

The remastering is crisp without losing the raw, analog heat. You can hear Hendrix’s fingers squeak on the strings, the spit in his vocals, and the controlled chaos of Mitch Mitchell’s drums. The inclusion of live cuts (“Machine Gun”) proves why he was untouchable on stage. voodoo child album

Hardcore fans will note omissions (“Bold as Love,” “Castles Made of Sand”). Also, the title Voodoo Child can be confused with the original song, so some expect a full Electric Ladyland reissue. It’s not a definitive deep-dive—more of a powerful sampler. Assuming you mean the compilation (2001): Review: Voodoo

The tracklist is incendiary. It opens with the title track’s iconic, wah-pedal growl—one of the dirtiest, most powerful riffs ever cut to tape. From there, it swaggers through “Purple Haze,” “Hey Joe,” and “Foxy Lady,” but wisely includes deeper cosmic blues like “Red House” and the psychedelic epic “1983… (A Merman I Should Turn to Be).” The sequencing flows like a proper setlist, not just a jumble of hits. Hardcore fans will note omissions (“Bold as Love,”