Jimi Hendrixโ€˜s former press officer Tony Garland has spoken exclusively to Uncut about the day when the star burnt his first electric guitar.

Garland witnessed Hendrix set fire to the instrument โ€“ a stage trick later used to iconic effect at the Monterey Pop Festival later that year โ€“ at Londonโ€˜s Finsbury Park Astoria in 1967.

โ€œIt was at the start of a tour that was headed by the Walker Brothers and Engelbert Humperdinck,โ€ says Garland. โ€œThey were all very unlikely bedfellows. It was the opening night of the tour. Nothing out of the ordinary โ€“ except for the burning of the guitar.โ€

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The guitar, which has since been found and restored, comes up for auction on September 4 at the Idea Generation Gallery in London, where it is expected to fetch over a million dollars.

Garland, who handled PR for Hendrix before the responsibilities passed to legendary Sinatra/Stones publicity man Leslie Perrin in 1968, was backstage when the idea to burn the guitar was hatched by Hendrixโ€˜s manager Chas Chandler.

โ€œIt was my job to do what Chas told me to do,โ€ says Garland. โ€œThey said they were going to burn it โ€“ so I nipped round the corner to buy some Ronson lighter fuel. It sounds ludicrous โ€“ but they were fairly ludicrous days. Things were done on the spur of the moment. We did lots of crazy things back then.โ€

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The Jimi Hendrix Experience, remembers Garland, made quite an impression, even before Hendrix burned his Fender Stratocaster: โ€œIt was pretty loud. It was three blokes making the kind of noise that even big bands hadnโ€™t made before.โ€

Read more about The Jimi Hendrix Experience, and the bandโ€™s 1968 tour of the United States, in the October issue of UNCUT magazine, on sale now.

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