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Jimi Hendrix - Somewhere flac album

Jimi Hendrix - Somewhere flac album
  • Performer Jimi Hendrix
  • Title Somewhere
  • Date of release 2012
  • Country Europe
  • Style Rhythm & Blues
  • Other formats VOC DXD ADX DTS FLAC MIDI DXD
  • Genre Rock / Blues
  • Size MP3 1308 mb
  • Size FLAC 1991 mb
  • Rating: 4.3
  • Votes: 877

Crash Landing is a posthumous compilation album by American guitarist Jimi Hendrix. It was released in March and August 1975 in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively. It was the first Hendrix album to be produced by Alan Douglas. Before Hendrix died in 1970, he was in the final stages of preparing what he intended to be a double studio LP, which was given various titles such as 'First Rays of the New Rising Sun', 'People, Hell & Angels', and 'Strate Ahead'.

MCA continued the series of definitive masters of the Jimi Hendrix catalogue in 2000, releasing the self-titled box set The Jimi Hendrix Experience, consisting of four discs. The material includes alternative recordings, live performances and some rarities. Although most of the material had been released in earlier compilations, some previously unreleased material (such as live versions of "Killing Floor" and "The Wind Cries Mary") was also included.

Altri album di Jimi Hendrix. The Beginning - The Making Of Electric Ladyland: The Early Takes Sampler. Both Sides of the Sky. Lover Man. Di Peraduan. Mannish Boy. Machine Gun: Live at the Fillmore East 12/31/1969 (First Show).

Jimi Hendrix was an American guitarist and singer-songwriter whose career spanned from 1962 to 1970. His discography includes the recordings released during his lifetime. Prior to his rise to fame, he recorded 24 singles as a backing guitarist with American R&B artists, such as the Isley Brothers and Little Richard. Beginning in late 1966, he recorded three best-selling studio albums and 13 singles with the Jimi Hendrix Experience

Complete your Jimi Hendrix collection. referencing Somewhere, CD, Single, 88765439532. Although listed as being previously unreleased, this version of Foxey Lady was previously issued as a bonus track on the 1991 Polydor reissue of Band Of Gypsys. Reply Notify me Helpful.

Leggi i testi delle canzoni tratte dall'album Somewhere di Jimi Hendrix e cerca il tuo brano preferito su MTV Testi e Canzoni. Album Somewhere, Jimi Hendrix. Tracking list e i testi dell'album: Somewhere Data di pubblicazione: 29 gennaio 2013. Tracking list e i testi dell'album: Somewhere. Jimi Hendrix: gli altri album.

yeahWriter/s: JIMI HENDRIX Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind. More songs from Jimi Hendrix. More songs used in TV shows. More songs with wah-wah guitar. More songs from 2012. Jimi Hendrix Artistfacts. I too am surprised why Somewhere was not on Electric Ladyland. Somewhere is one of Jimi's best songs

One of the great artifacts that came to surface on The Jimi Hendrix Experience box set of 2001, "Somewhere" is a blues-rock exercise that was cut short prior to the sessions for the Electric Ladyland album. Essentially a demo produced by Hendrix himself, the song didn't surface until after Hendrix's death. A simple but very, very heavy blues-soul guitar riff guides the song, with great support from the rest of the band

Tracklist

Somewhere 4:06
Foxey Lady 6:34

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
88765439532 Jimi Hendrix Somewhere ‎(CD, Single) Experience Hendrix, Legacy 88765439532 Europe 2013
none Jimi Hendrix Somewhere ‎(CDr, Single, Promo) Experience Hendrix, Legacy, Sony Music none UK 2012
88765439527 Jimi Hendrix Somewhere ‎(7", Single) Experience Hendrix, Legacy 88765439527 Europe 2013
88765439527SV Jimi Hendrix Somewhere ‎(7", Single, Num) Experience Hendrix, Legacy 88765439527SV US 2013
88765439532 Jimi Hendrix Somewhere ‎(CD, Single, Ltd, Num) Experience Hendrix, Legacy 88765439532 US 2013
none Jimi Hendrix Somewhere ‎(File, MP3, Single, 256) Legacy none US 2013


Talk about Jimi Hendrix - Somewhere


Cerar
Although listed as being previously unreleased, this version of Foxey Lady was previously issued as a bonus track on the 1991 Polydor reissue of Band Of Gypsys.
Kelezel
A 12"-version of this record has been announced, was listed at my record-dealer and was offered by others on eBay. Does anyone know what has happened to the 12"-version? Does it exist? Thank you.
ᴜɴɪᴄᴏʀɴ
Firstly, Jimi’s guitar work shreds on this song. However, this song has a lot of technical issues. Listening to the song carefully, especially the last half, it’s easy to notice the amateurish “cut and paste” job Eddie Kramer did on this track, and it’s disconcerting to say the least. This song was made up of several takes, and put together in shoddy fashion. During the breaks after Jimi’s verses, you can hear how his vocals were inaccurately pasted into this song. This is most noticeable at the break around 3:00, his vocals don’t match up and aren’t in time. The timing when the instrumentation comes back in after Jimi’s ending vocals is so off, it makes one wonder if Mr. Kramer has any sense of timing at all. The vocals are from an entirely different take of the song than the instrumentation, which isn’t a problem in and of itself, but Kramer’s mixing of the song is horrible. Also, you can hear how Jimi’s guitar breaks out of the field of sound field a bit in places because it was part of a studio rehearsal, not a “new studio recording,” as advertised. Not something that sounds good played loudly like most Hendrix fans enjoy. And all these issues on the lead single off the album? A version that is actually “in time” was released on the Jimi Hendrix Experience Boxed Set in 2000 in better quality, and the vocals are in time. Can’t believe the shoddy cut and paste jobs they are doing to Jimi’s work, very sad Eddie Kramer
Natety
Firstly, Jimi’s guitar work shreds on this song. However, this song has a lot of technical issues. Listening to the song carefully, especially the last half, it’s easy to notice the amateurish “cut and paste” job Eddie Kramer did on this track, and it’s disconcerting to say the least. This song was made up of several takes, and put together in shoddy fashion. During the breaks after Jimi’s verses, you can hear how his vocals were inaccurately pasted into this song. This is most noticeable at the break around 3:00, his vocals don’t match up and aren’t in time. The timing when the instrumentation comes back in after Jimi’s ending vocals is so off, it makes one wonder if Mr. Kramer has any sense of timing at all. The vocals are from an entirely different take of the song than the instrumentation, which isn’t a problem in and of itself, but Kramer’s mixing of the song is horrible. Also, you can hear how Jimi’s guitar breaks out of the field of sound field a bit in places because it was part of a studio rehearsal, not a “new studio recording,” as advertised. Not something that sounds good played loudly like most Hendrix fans enjoy. And all these issues on the lead single off the album? A version that is actually “in time” was released on the Jimi Hendrix Experience Boxed Set in 2000 in better quality, and the vocals are in time. Can’t believe the shoddy cut and paste jobs they are doing to Jimi’s work, very sad Eddie Kramer
Just_paw
Firstly, Jimi’s guitar work shreds on this song. However, this song has a lot of technical issues. Listening to the song carefully, especially the last half, it’s easy to notice the amateurish “cut and paste” job Eddie Kramer did on this track, and it’s disconcerting to say the least. This song was made up of several takes, and put together in shoddy fashion. During the breaks after Jimi’s verses, you can hear how his vocals were inaccurately pasted into this song. This is most noticeable at the break around 3:00, his vocals don’t match up and aren’t in time. The timing when the instrumentation comes back in after Jimi’s ending vocals is so off, it makes one wonder if Mr. Kramer has any sense of timing at all. The vocals are from an entirely different take of the song than the instrumentation, which isn’t a problem in and of itself, but Kramer’s mixing of the song is horrible. Also, you can hear how Jimi’s guitar breaks out of the field of sound field a bit in places because it was part of a studio rehearsal, not a “new studio recording,” as advertised. Not something that sounds good played loudly like most Hendrix fans enjoy. And all these issues on the lead single off the album? A version that is actually “in time” was released on the Jimi Hendrix Experience Boxed Set in 2000 in better quality, and the vocals are in time. Can’t believe the shoddy cut and paste jobs they are doing to Jimi’s work, very sad Eddie Kramer
Vushura
Firstly, Jimi’s guitar work shreds on this song. However, this song has a lot of technical issues. Listening to the song carefully, especially the last half, it’s easy to notice the amateurish “cut and paste” job Eddie Kramer did on this track, and it’s disconcerting to say the least. This song was made up of several takes, and put together in shoddy fashion. During the breaks after Jimi’s verses, you can hear how his vocals were inaccurately pasted into this song. This is most noticeable at the break around 3:00, his vocals don’t match up and aren’t in time. The timing when the instrumentation comes back in after Jimi’s ending vocals is so off, it makes one wonder if Mr. Kramer has any sense of timing at all. The vocals are from an entirely different take of the song than the instrumentation, which isn’t a problem in and of itself, but Kramer’s mixing of the song is horrible. Also, you can hear how Jimi’s guitar breaks out of the field of sound field a bit in places because it was part of a studio rehearsal, not a “new studio recording,” as advertised. Not something that sounds good played loudly like most Hendrix fans enjoy. And all these issues on the lead single off the album? A version that is actually “in time” was released on the Jimi Hendrix Experience Boxed Set in 2000 in better quality, and the vocals are in time. Can’t believe the shoddy cut and paste jobs they are doing to Jimi’s work, very sad Eddie Kramer