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You Can't Use My Name The RSVP PPX Sessions
Curtis Knight & The Squires feat. Jimi Hendrix
You Can't Use My Name The RSVP PPX Sessions
Genres: Pop, R&B, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1

This special compilation presents Jimi Hendrix's 1965-1967 sessions with Curtis Knight & The Squires prior to his international fame leading the Jimi Hendrix Experience. — While Jimi Hendrix's intermittent tenure as a g...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Curtis Knight & The Squires feat. Jimi Hendrix
Title: You Can't Use My Name The RSVP PPX Sessions
Members Wishing: 5
Total Copies: 0
Label: Legacy
Release Date: 3/23/2015
Genres: Pop, R&B, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 888750779922

Synopsis

Product Description
This special compilation presents Jimi Hendrix's 1965-1967 sessions with Curtis Knight & The Squires prior to his international fame leading the Jimi Hendrix Experience.

While Jimi Hendrix's intermittent tenure as a guitarist for Curtis Knight & The Squires in 1965 and 1966 was relatively brief, more than 100 albums have been crafted from approximately forty studio recordings and consumer grade stage recordings by the group. Most featured low fidelity variations, remixes, edited versions, and instrumentals of the same material often with their song titles changed. These albums were poorly annotated and all too often featured cover art that depicted the guitarist at the peak of his Jimi Hendrix Experience fame (and not as 'Jimmy Hendrix,' a sideman to Curtis Knight) and thus snared unwitting fans throughout the world that were starved for new Hendrix music for decades.

Jimi Hendrix was hamstrung throughout his career by litigation over these recordings in the US and UK and these fights continued until his family ultimately prevailed in litigation. You Can't Use My Name stands as their first attempt to present this music in its original context.

You Can't Use My Name is newly mixed and prepared for release by Eddie Kramer and includes the previously unreleased 1966 recording "Station Break," the full length versions of "Knock Yourself Out [Flying On Instruments]," "No Such Animal," and the 1967 recording of "Gloomy Monday" that includes dialogue between Hendrix and producer Ed Chalpin (featuring the guitarist's request that the producer not use his name on this session because of the ongoing litigation between them).

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