Tax included, Shipping not included
THE NEW STUDIO RELEASE FROM JIMI rnrnYes, 12 new songs (over 60 minutes) 10 which were recorded Feb-May 1969. This release was supposed to be the follow up to Electric Ladyland but the band moved on to record Band of Gypsys instead. These 12 songs were found in the estate of Jimi's manager Chas Chandler who passed away two years ago. rn180g on 2 LPs. rnAn album of previously unreleased Jimi Hendrix studio recordings is set for release in March, kicking off a brand new exploration of the legendary guitar virtuoso's life and works in the lead-up to the 40th anniversary of his death in 1970. ''Valleys of Neptune,'' a 12-song collection that includes the final studio sessions of the original Jimi Hendrix Experience lineup and Hendrix's first recordings with bassist Billy Cox, is set for release on Mar. 9 on Sony's Legacy Recordings. The album marks the launch of the 2010 Jimi Hendrix Catalog Project, a partnership between the label and Experience Hendrix LLC, the company charged with overseeing the guitarist's music and image.rnTaken mostly from several 1969 sessions, ''Valleys of Neptune'' was originally recorded and newly mixed by Eddie Kramer, the Electric Ladyland studio engineer who worked closely with Hendrix. Kramer used both cutting-edge digital and analog equipment to restore the master tapes to the original, pristine quality.rnThe title track, much craved by Hendrix devotees, delivers on the promise of the musician's legendary trove of unreleased material: a fully realized song written and recorded by Hendrix at his creative peak in 1970 that had remained unrecovered for nearly four decades. The song will be released as a single globally on Feb. 2.rnOther highlights of the album include the only JHE studio recording of ''Hear My Train A Comin','' a Hendrix blues original that he often performed live, a searing instrumental take on Cream's ''Sunshine of Your Love,'' the extended stage arrangements of JHE classics ''Fire'' and ''Red House,'' recorded in preparation for the band's 1969 Royal Albert Hall concert recordings, and ''Mr. Bad Luck,'' one of the only original tunes the then-unknown guitarist performed in tiny Greenwich Village nightclubs in 1966.rn''It is important that everyone understand that this is not the 'lost' album,'' explains John McDermott, Experience Hendrix archivist, who wrote extensive liner notes for the release. ''It is the documentation of an important point in his career when the original JHE was making a follow up to 'Electric Ladyland' in 1969. Once Jimi started working with Billy Cox, he started making his creative transition and left this material on the shelf.'' rnHendrix died on September 18, 1970 at the age of 27, having released only four albums and a few singles in his lifetime.rnrnTENTATIVE TRACKLISTING:rnrnStone Free rnValleys of Neptune rnBleeding Heart rnHear My Train a Comin' rnMr. Bad Luck rnSunshine of Your Love rnLover Man rnShips Passing Through the Night rnFire rnRed House rnLullaby For the Summer rnCrying Blue Rain
Tracklist
Track 1
Track 2
Track 3
Track 4
Track 5
Track 6
Track 7
Track 8
Track 9
Track 10
Track 11