After a week of no updates regarding BandFuse DLC we finally have an answer, and it’s kind of a big deal. Jeff Marshall updated the BandFuse facebook page today with a post announcing that Realta has partnered with Experience Hendrix to bring fifteen signature songs from the legendary guitarist’s music catalog.
As part of this partnership players will get access to 15 signature songs from the Jimi Hendrix catalog, the first of Which will be rolled as part of the initial 10 songs for DLC on January 28th 2014! DLC will continue to launch 10 new songs a month with selected tracks Hendrix, along with a special list of songs to coincide with the Experience Hendrix Tour in March!
– Jeff Marshall (@BandFuseJeff)
Below is the PR release which also details BandFuse’s strategy for Jimi Hendrix DLC.
ALL-TIME GREATEST GUITARIST EVER JIMI HENDRIX TO ELECTRIFY BANDFUSE: ROCK LEGENDS VIDEO GAME
Exclusive Multi-Phased Partnership to Incorporate Hendrix as an In-Game Legend, Include Special Video Content and Bring 15 of His Greatest Songs to BandFuse: Rock Legends Music Store
CAMPBELL, CA – November 26, 2013 – Realta Entertainment Group and Experience Hendrix, L.L.C. announced today a multi-phased partnership that will bring the musical legacy of Jimi Hendrix to BandFuse: Rock Legends, the music video game where legendary rockers transform players into real world guitarists, bassists and vocalists.
As part of this partnership players will get access to 15 signature songs from the Jimi Hendrix catalogue, which will be rolled out starting in January 2014 as downloadable content in the BandFuse: Rock Legends Music Store.
Later in 2014, Hendrix will be integrated into the game as a rock legend, which will include interviews with present day guitar greats talking about Jimi Hendrix’s technique and experimental style paired with archival video footage from his illustrious career.
“Jimi was never afraid to go beyond the limitations of traditional guitar teachings, and when fans jump into BandFuse they will be amazed at how cool it is to learn to play guitar like Hendrix,” said Janie L. Hendrix, President/CEO of Experience Hendrix L.L.C. “The game provides players with the ability to play his exact sound, capturing the fuzz, feedback and tones that made his style legendary.”
Earlier this week BandFuse: Rock Legends was announced as the title sponsor for the eighth edition of the celebrated Experience Hendrix Tour set to launch in March 2014. These special event performances represent an ongoing tribute to the music and legacy of Jimi Hendrix.BandFuse: Rock Legends will have playable kiosks at each stop of the 20-city tour, giving attendees a hands-on experience. The tour features two of the in-game instructors from BandFuse: Rock Legends, metal legend Zakk Wylde and funk master Bootsy Collins.
“We are ecstatic to be working with the Jimi Hendrix team to bring his immensely explosive talent to BandFuse: Rock Legends,” said Jeff Marshall, Director of Artist Relations, Realta Entertainment. “He was an unparalleled musical genius whose collective guitar works continue to be relevant and influential to budding musicians and music lovers the world over.”
Seamlessly connecting real guitars, basses and microphones to game consoles, BandFuse: Rock Legends empowers players to jam to a fully unlocked library of hit songs from rock to metal and punk to funk, featuring 55 massive genre-jumping songs. BandFuse: Rock Legends features in-game guitar and bass guitar instruction by a platinum cast of musicians including master guitar instructor Slash joined by Zakk Wylde (Black Label Society), Mike Ness (Social Distortion), Bootsy Collins (Parliament/Funkadelic, Rubber Band), George Lynch (Dokken, Lynch Mob), Zoltan Bathory and Jason Hook (Five Finger Death Punch), and Alexi Laiho (Children of Bodom).
Which Jimi Hendrix songs do you expect? Could this be the first of many “big grabs” for Realta? Let us know in the comments below!

Update:
Joining @JimiHendrix in January @BandFuse DLC:@OfficialFilter @Pantera @offspring @IncubusBand @blues_traveler @yesofficial @LynardSkynard1
— Jeff Marshall (@RockStarz63) November 26, 2013
ALSO in January coming to @BandFuse DLC – the legendary band BOSTON…wouldn't fit in my last tweet 😉
— Jeff Marshall (@RockStarz63) November 26, 2013
Welp!


Not thirty seconds before I checked RiffRepeater, I was thinking, “Rocksmith could really use some Hendrix (and Zappa and Grateful Dead).” Guess I’ll be getting Bandfuse sooner rather than later.
Also that quotation is perfect–albeit obviously necessarily used out of context.
I don’t understand what you people are on about. Bandfuse is superior in terms of soung learning. None of that bogus 3-D head-on collision rainbow crap.As someone who’s played music for 6 years prior to picking up the guitar I think that development over at UBISOFT is severely lacking – why the hell are they trying to reinvent the wheel and make it 20x more difficult to acclimate to the guitar? There’s too much information to process with the notes coming AT you rather than from the side (the way humans have processed written information since…Oh, I dunno, the dawn of written language) and different colours for the strings. And the notes floating in space…what.the.hell? That steepens the learning curve to an unnecessary level.
Anyways, just realized I was ranting cause I’m drunk, but the point is. Bandfuse is better. Sidescroll notes are easier to acclimate, making it a lot EASIER to understand where the notes actually are like tab EVERY WHERE ELSE IN THE WORLD.
Also, don’t get so high and mighty about who did what first. All I give a single damn about is how am I going to learn in the most efficient way possible. Plus…Bandfuse has better songs.
Hell, if bandfuse added in some Kyuss, Elder, Baroness, some more of Zakk’s stuff, more Petrucci, Stoner Rock/Doom metal (Are you listening studio that created bandfuse?) I’d be set for life.
Again, I’m drunk. Leave me alone.
I concur, you are drunk. Those are the drunk ravings of a madman, who has taken LSD and magic mushrooms as well. Frankly, i’m surprised you’re still standing.
Do you even own RS2014 or Bandfuse or spent any time comparing the 2. Drunk or not, Don’t start making comparisons on something you haven’t even tried.
For anyone who’s played a rhythm game before–and such people make up a good portion of these games’ user base–notes scrolling at you is an easy and natural method of learning a song. My only beef is that having the notes at different elevations (because they’re on different strings), combined with the notes coming at you vertically, makes rhythms harder to convey. Rocksmith makes up for it by being very forgiving when it comes to rhythm, but that’s obviously an imperfect solution.
Then again, I’m not entirely sober either (although I’m not drunk, either :P), so what do I know.
Forgiving about rhythm my exact thought. Rocksmith has a huge flaw because if you want to learn guitar you need to be in the pocket at all times not just close. I tried same song on Bandfuse and I scored much lower on timing so it actually shows you what your skill level is like
Be prepared …
The Activision promo machine and the Activision cash machine are on ….
I don’t believe that the Bobby Kotick’s company is surfing on the success of RS1 ….
Fucking opportunist.