News > Jimi Hendrix

Jimi Hendrix’s Neptune Experience

By Johnny Firecloud
Monday, January 11, 2010
 

Jimi Hendrix fans have one final blast of guitar-god greatness to look forward to from the legendary musician in the form of Valleys Of Neptune, an album of 12 full studio recordings that never saw proper official release. That’s 60 minutes of brand new music from a legend who’s been dead 40 years.

Set to drop on March 9, Valleys Of Neptune will include 12 tracks recorded at various studios during Jimi’s final recording sessions while working on his ambitious double LP First Rays Of The Rising Sun. The title track, Valleys Of Neptune, which was never released commercially will also be released as a single on February 2nd.

The majority of the tracks that were recorded during a significantly turbulent four-month period in 1969 make their way onto the release, serving as Jimi Hendrix Experience’s final studio recordings. The group was building the foundation for its follow-up to Electric Ladyland, and Jimi had his sights on the opening of his own Electric Lady Studios in Greenwich Village, which would happen the following year.

Also featured on the album are blazing studio covers of Elmore James’ Bleeding Heart and Cream’s classic Sunshine Of Your Love, as well as debut renditions of original Hendrix tunes like Ships Passing Through The Night, Lullaby For The Summer and the original un-dubbed Jimi Hendrix Experience take on Hear My Train A’ Comin’. Also included in Valleys Of Neptune is Mr. Bad Luck, a Jimi Hendrix Experience track, produced by Chas Chandler during the 1967 Axis: Bold As Love sessions. The rest of Valleys Of Neptune is produced by Janie Hendrix, John McDermott and Eddie Kramer.

“My brother Jimi was at home in the studio,” explained Janie Hendrix, CEO of Experience Hendrix LLC. “Valleys Of Neptune offers deep insight into his mastery of the recording process and demonstrates the fact that he was as unparalleled a recording innovator as he was a guitarist. His brilliance shines through on every one of these precious tracks.”

Head to Antimusic for the details on each track.

 
 
 

6 Comments

  • Henridv says:

    I’m looking forward to this. I really love Hear My Train A’ Comin’. This is a very cool video about this song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCQBbgb_Lvo

  • Peter says:

    Hell Yeah ! I would love to hear that anybody knows release date ? 2010 starts great :D

  • Ajay says:

    This is sad, his estate(sister) is just milking his name for what its worth. All of these recordings have been around for ages, they’re just repackaging them.

  • Some of these tracks have been around, indeed, but these versions seem to be different. I’ve had both the acoustic and electric Hear My Train A’ Comin’ on CD for like 10 years, but the electric was overdubbed with some unnecessary new instruments. The version on this CD that’s coming out has the original Noel Redding bass.

    And is Antimusic like the opposite of Antiquiet?

  • Nah, AntiMusic’s pretty badass. We’re fans.

  • Peter says:

    You like AntiMusic ? how Cool is that ! Love the site , they have quality reviews, but sometimes their rating is flawed, they write that album si great etc and than give it 3/5 rating and other way around.

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