Legend of Jimi Hendrix lives on in custom guitars crafted on Vancouver Island - Action News
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British Columbia

Legend of Jimi Hendrix lives on in custom guitars crafted on Vancouver Island

A unique piece of Pacific Northwest rock and roll history is being preserved by a guitar maker in Comox, B.C.

Comox, B.C., luthier tracks down pieces of the demolished Hendrix family home in Seattle

Reuben Forsland of JOI Guitars with some of the wood salvaged from Jimi Hendrix's childhood bedroom. (Todd MacSween Photography)

Standing at a workbench in the studio behind his home, Reuben Forsland picks up a tattered piece of wood with chipping paint.

The initials J.H. are scrawled on one end.

It may look like construction debris, but theyare pieces of Jimi Hendrix's childhood home.

Theywill soon be transformed into unique custom guitars.

"I had basically started imagining creating something more than just an instrument for sound, but an instrument that will connect with somebody in a more emotional way," said Forslandof JOI Guitars in Comox, B.C.

Reuben Forsland is hand crafting all 10 of the Harmonic Hendrix Home Guitars. He will make one extra as a gift to the Hendrix estate. (Bellaphoto Photography)

The Hendrix home

Rock and roll legend Jimi Hendrix grew up in Seattle in the 1940s and 1950s.

The family purchased a modest bungalow at 2603 26Avenue in Seattle's Central District in 1953. It has since been torn down.

"The home hadn't been in the family for many years and it had basically been quite run down and that's why they thought they would demolish it," Forsland said.

But he had heard pieces of thehome had been saved.

The idea of tracking them down intrigued him, but he didn't pursue it until he had a big break of his own.

Legend of Jimi Hendrix lives on in custom guitars crafted on Vancouver Island

6 years ago
Duration 1:33
Pieces of the Hendrix family home in Seattle have been salvaged and are being incorporated into unique guitars.

Slash's guitar

Forsland bought his first guitar at nine years old. After 15 years working as carpenter, furniture maker and woodworker, he thought he'd try building one.

Now, he's a professional luthier. His JOI Guitars are as much pieces of art as they are music makers.

A few years ago,Forsland was commissioned to make a guitar for Slash of Guns N' Roses and Velvet Revolver fame.

He wanted to make sure it was special, so he got more serious about tracking downpieces of the old Hendrix home with a plan to incorporate some of the wood into Slash's guitar.

"He's one of Slash's childhood heroesor guitar gods. It just seemed right to me. They are both just really fantastic guitar players."

Luthier Reuban Forsland has completed two of the 10 Harmonic Hendrix Home Guitars that are planned. (Todd MacSween Photography)

The search

Tracing the history of the 1920s home wasn't easy. There were times when he hit dead ends.

But by working contacts in the Seattle music scene, Forlsand confirmed pieces of the home did exist.

He tracked them to a storage locker in a community near Seattle and went to see for himself.

"It looked like lots of lumber from an old war house built in the early 1900s stacked up."

Thepaperwork for the home also checked out.

The Hendrix family purchased a modest bungalow at 2603 26 Avenue in Seattle's Central District in 1953. ( Gilbert W. Arias)

"The homeowner has the legal documentation for the home as well as many articles written and many photographs of him in front of the home."

Forlsand incorporated some of the wood from the old house into the neck of the guitar for Slash, adding the historic rock inspiration he had hoped for.

But he also realized he had some pretty unique material to work with and wanted to do more.

Wood from the Hendrix home in Forsland's workshop waiting to be transformed into guitars. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

Harmonic Hendrix Home Guitars

Forsland came up with the idea of the Harmonic Hendrix Home Guitars a series of 10 custom guitars made with salvaged and reclaimed pieces of the house.

But undertaking work in the namesake of Jimi Hendrix required permission from thefamily.

"That came with two years of discussions with the estate," he said."Lawyers to lawyers conversation and a licence agreement with Authentic Hendrix."

Authentic Hendrixmanages the legacy for and everything related to the short but influential life of Jimi Hendrix.

"I thought that was a real positive way of using the materials," saidJanie Hendrix, the CEO and Jimi's younger sister.

"True guitarists of any level that love music and love guitars, they've all been introduced to Jimi at one point or another."

Paint chips from the boards in the Hendrix home have been incorporated into the rosette of the guitars.

'Voice of the instrument'

With the legal work out of the way, Forsland set to work with thescraps of wood and metal.

"I had pretty well already figured out what I had wanted out of this pile of wood," he said.

"I knew I wanted the front of the guitar, the soundboard, the voice of the instrument, to be made out of the house."

Even the old paint chipping off the boards has been salvaged.

"I re-epoxyed it into the rosette of the instrument for my first two instruments," he said.

Nails from the old boards serve as fretmarkers.

Creating guitars from pieces of the Hendrix home required getting a licence from Authentic Hendrix, the family company that manages Jimi's legacy. (Todd MacSween Photography)

Pop culture history

So far, Forsland has finished two of the 10 guitars in the series. One has been sold.

Part of the proceeds from the project go to a new park in Seattle in memory of Jimi Hendrix.

When all of the Harmonic Hendrix Home Guitars are finished, a select group of musicians and collectors will own a piece of pop culture history.