Voodoo Room mix it up with their stunning Cream and Hendrix show at The Capitol

Playing tribute to Hendrix and Cream, Voodoo Room play Horsham's Capitol on Saturday, February 6.
Voodoo RoomVoodoo Room
Voodoo Room

“It’s a challenge, it’s got to be said!” laughs Pete Orr.

“As a kid, I used to listen to Disraeli Gears (the second album from the supergroup Cream, which featured Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker). I just listened to it all the time. It has always been one of my favourite albums. Great songs and great musicianship.

“When we were thinking about the band, I thought it would be great to get stuck into it, but it is a little bit harder than I thought.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“They were the cream, the best players around, and then you had Jimi Hendrix, who was very much inspired by Eric Clapton. He thought they were a fantastic band as well.

“We were thinking about that, and the whole thing just came together.

“We launched the band about four years ago. I was playing a lot of Jimi Hendrix songs for quite a while. Like most guitarists, I was very inspired by Jimi Hendrix, and I thought it would be a great idea to do a tribute, but also to combine it with Eric Clapton.

“There used to be lots of polls, and Melody Maker was always asking who the best guitarist ever was. It was always either Hendrix or Clapton.

“I thought why do one when you could do both!

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“They were both very influenced by the American blues scene, the blues artists from the ’60s that Clapton was involved with, the blues stuff that the Rolling Stones were digging out and bringing over.

“It’s odd the way Hendrix made it because he came over here and then went back to America.

“There was the race thing going on, with white Americans not really listening to black music. Even an artist like Muddy Waters was unheard of in the States, but he was a superstar when he came over here.”

For Pete, part of the fascination is that Hendrix and Clapton were very different players: “Hendrix was a very flamboyant performer. He set his stall out to be the Wildman of the electric guitar with the feedback and the crazy things on stage and all the antics, playing the guitar behind his head, playing it with his teeth.

“Clapton was more the purist blues player.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“We play three or four Hendrix songs and then swap guitars and then we go to Clapton. We mix it up a bit. We wondered whether we should do a whole set of one and then the other, but we thought we would rather keep the audience guessing.”

Tickets cost £20.

Call The Capitol box office on 01403 750220 or visit www.thecapitolhorsham.com.

Don’t miss out on all the latest breaking news where you live.

Here are four ways you can be sure you’ll be among the first to know what’s going on.

1 Make our website your homepage

2 Like our Facebook page

3 Follow us on Twitter

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

4 Register with us by clicking on ‘sign in’ (top right corner). You can then receive our daily newsletter AND add your point of view to stories that you read here.

And do share with your family and friends – so they don’t miss out!

Be part of it.