Background and performances Jimi Hendrix, who frequently cited Elmore James as an influence, recorded several different arrangements of "Bleeding Heart". An early performance with Hendrix on vocals and guitar, which follows James' version, was recorded with
Curtis Knight and the Squires in 1965 or 1966. In 1968, a live version of the song was recorded at a jam session at the Scene Club in New York and later released on several bootleg and gray-market albums, including
Bleeding Heart. Hendrix used some new lyrics, but the performance was marred by "a very drunken
Jim Morrison... burbling a combination of lyrics and obscenities over the jamming musicians" for half of the song. On February 24, 1969, a live version was performed by the
Jimi Hendrix Experience at the
Royal Albert Hall for possible inclusion in a concert film. The film has not been released, although "Bleeding Heart" appeared on a purported soundtrack album,
Experience. Hendrix with the
Band of Gypsys recorded a live version of "Bleeding Heart" on December 31, 1969 at the
Fillmore East in New York. It appears on
Machine Gun: The Fillmore East First Show (2016).
Studio versions In 1969, Hendrix recorded at least three different studio arrangements of "Bleeding Heart" at the
Record Plant in New York that showed Hendrix moving away from an Elmore James-style blues arrangement and using different backing musiciansa more modern blues recorded March 18 appeared on
Blues; an uptempo version recorded April 24 that is featured on his 2010 posthumous studio album
Valleys of Neptune; and a slower funk-influenced version recorded May 21 which is included on
People, Hell and Angels. With
Billy Cox and
Mitch Mitchell, the basic track for a new studio version, which moved further away from the blues, was completed March 24, 1970, at the Record Plant, with additional recording at the recently finished
Electric Lady Studios in June 1970. Further developments to the song were made, and Hendrix and engineer
Eddie Kramer prepared a rough mix. This version was later remixed by Kramer and released on the 1972 album
War Heroes and later on
South Saturn Delta in 1997.
Single and music video The
Valleys of Neptune version was released as the second single from the album on March 1 (digital download) and March 8, 2010 (7-inch single) and is backed with a previously unreleased version of the song "Peace in Mississippi." An alternative single that includes "Jam 292" from the
Dagger Records album
Hear My Music (2004) was released. The music video for "Bleeding Heart," directed by
Julien Temple, debuted on
Spotify on February 25, 2010.
Personnel Single version •
Jimi Hendrixvocals, guitars, production •
Billy Coxbass guitar • Rocky Isaacdrums • Chris Grimestambourine • Al Marks
maracas ==Notes==