Jimi hendrix's early recordings as a sideman to get proper release

Jimi hendrix's early recordings as a sideman to get proper release


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The rights to 88 studio recordings that Jimi Hendrix made between 1965 and 1967 during his stint with the R&B group Curtis Knight and the Squires now belong to his family’s music


company, Experience Hendrix LLC, and Sony Music’s catalog division, Legacy Recordings. The buyout ends decades of litigation the Hendrix family had been entwined in with PPX Enterprises and


Ed Chalpin, who had recorded the tracks, and means the recordings are now set for a proper release. The Best Jimi Hendrix Songs, as Chosen by Rolling Stone Readers The masters include a live


performance recorded in Hackensack, New Jersey in December 1965, as well as Curtis Knight and the Squires’ recordings with Hendrix in 1967 after the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s debut, _Are


You Experienced_, came out. Legacy and Experience Hendrix plan on releasing properly mixed, mastered and annotated versions of these recordings in new editions under the direction of


longtime Hendrix engineer Eddie Kramer over the next three years. Prior to rising to fame, in a period that will be partially chronicled in the forthcoming biopic _All Is by My Side_, the


guitarist had played as a sideman to artists like the Isley Brothers, Little Richard and Curtis Knight. Chalpin had signed Hendrix and Knight to a three-year recording contract for his


company PPX, which created backing tracks for movies, paying him a meager $1 and a 1 percent royalty. Jimi Hendrix as a Member of Curtis Knight and the Squires and More Photos The contract


proved challenging when Hendrix went out on his own. Hendrix’s manager Chas Chandler was able to buy Hendrix out of every deal at the time with the exception of PPX. After Hendrix became a


hit, the company issued a number of Curtis Knight recordings with covers that made it look as though Hendrix was the key member. TRENDING STORIES Hendrix was not a fan of these recordings.


In February 1968, Capitol issued a record called _Jimi Hendrix Plays, Curtis Knight Sings_, which _Rolling Stone _called “an embarrassment” at the time. An A&R man for the label told _RS


_at the time that “the record’s selling well, and nobody is bitching but a few San Francisco types.” One month later, British record label Decca attempted to put out a Curtis Knight record


titled _Got That Feeling_, featuring Hendrix as the lead member of the group on the jacket, but its release was barred by the London High Court. Hendrix called the record “musically


worthless…a confetti of tapes hastily thrown together.” EDITOR’S PICKS Disputes over the contract stretched into the 21st century. In 2001, a High Court in the U.K. enforced a 1973 consent


decree that limited Chalpin’s rights to Hendrix’s Curtis Knight recordings to 33 masters, and the next year a London High Court barred the company from releasing anything Hendrix played on.


In 2003, Hendrix’s brother, Leon (who does not work for Experience Hendrix LLC), planned on releasing the PPX tapes but a New York court upheld the British court’s decision. Four years after


that, Experience Hendrix LLC secured a nearly $1 million court order against Chalpin.