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New Jimi Hendrix Song, 'Valleys of Neptune,' to Premiere on Spinner

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During his short four-year term as rock royalty before his untimely death, Jimi Hendrix released only three official albums with the Experience, followed by just one live release with his newly formed Band of Gypsys in 1970. Many posthumous albums, compilations and box sets have followed but few have been quite as exciting or revealing as Monday's announcement that 12 fully-realized, previously-unreleased studio recordings are finally ready to see the light of day. The first of these tracks, 'Valley of Neptune,' will be initially released on Jan. 28 exclusively on Spinner, to be followed by a worldwide release on Feb. 2.

The complete 'Valley of Neptune' album will hit stores and digital retailers on Mar. 9. That same day, the Jimi Hendrix Catalog Project will reissue, through Legacy Recordings, new deluxe CD/DVD and vinyl editions of the Hendrix classics. The DVDs will include new documentaries by Grammy-winner Bob Smeaton.

Hendrix enthusiasts will note enthusiastically that material for 'Valley of the Sun' was taken from studio sessions that largely took place during a volatile four-month period in 1969. Hendrix was famously being torn in many different directions at that time, embattled with legal issues over various contracts on the business side of things that wouldn't be settled until years -- or even decades -- after his death.

More relevant to these actual recording sessions, this was the period in which Hendrix was just about to start phasing out the Jimi Hendrix Experience (featuring Noel Redding on bass and Mitch Mitchell on drums) in favor of Band of Gypsies, with bassist Billy Cox and drummer Buddy Miles. Some have speculated that it was a harbinger of a stylistic change to funkier, jazzier territories from the classic, if experimental, blues-rock of the Experience. We'll never know for sure. However, several of these new tracks feature Cox on bass but Mitchell on drums. Clearly, Hendrix was shifting gears at this time, manifested by an impending line-up change. The sessions took place, alternately, at both the Record Plant in New York and Olympic Studios in London and were intended to form the foundation for the follow-up to 'Electric Ladyland.' It's an exciting unearthing, no doubt.

Purists will note, happily, that 'Valley of Neptune' was mixed by Hendrix's longtime and well-trusted engineer, Eddie Kramer. Hendrix's sister Janie, who is CEO of Experience Hendrix LLC, says that the newly unlocked material reveals Jimi's talents as a studio innovator as well as a guitarist. “His brilliance shines through," she says, “on every one of these precious tracks." Well, that's the one part of this announcement that isn't surprising.

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