Classic Or Dud: The Band

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Rather an un-FT thing for me to like, perhaps, but I was playing "The Band" this morning and remembering how good it is.

Tom, Tuesday, 23 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

While not particularly well-versed in their catalog (oh how I fail to live up to my hippie roots), Music from Big Pink is a good listen, I'd say.

Otis Wheeler, Tuesday, 23 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

The only Band I have is backing Dylan. Basement Tapes is a bit overrated, but has an album's worth of good songs. Before The Flood is awful. Still can't weigh in on The Band sans Dylan, but this topic looked lonely.

Mark Richardson, Wednesday, 24 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I've been trying to figure what's supposed to be so good about The Band on & off for 10 years, & pretty much nothing has ever stuck to the wall...I figure now that their rep. is kind of due to having happened along at the right time, i.e when lots of the rock audience were getting burned out on taking psychedelics all the time and just kind of wanted to get back home and go to sleep. There's a lot of bands kind of re-living this "return to boringness" movement right now.

Duane Zarakov, Thursday, 25 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

one year passes...
Now that ILM has gone all rock and now I've dug that album out again and decided it's one of my favourites ever I think it's time this sad little thread was brought back.

Tom, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

They were much better as a backing band than on their own.

J Blount, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

I decided last night they were the North American Roxy Music.

Tom, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Tom, time to reverse that decision. Or explain why you think that. I know it's warped but I can't really like'em as much as I should because of Greil Marcus' chapter in Mystery Train. It set up these high expectations and then I listened... and by GOD Greil must have been smoking some great shit. Oh hell no, they are just completely utterly dud. They just make me think of Bourgeois guys wanting to be rootsy. Which is not necessarily a bad thing though. But somehow it works better with Roxy Music - or at least for a while it did. Bryan Ferry - working class man - wanting to be suave, escpaing his surroundings. Maybe that what reminds you of Roxy Music in a way? I am not making sense at all.

cuba libre (nathalie), Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

(This post reads as though I think RM is country rock. hahaha)

cuba libre (nathalie), Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

actual real american successors to the band = pere ubu (who rocked a lot harder when they chose to) (and b4 they hired c.cutler har har)

(i assume GM had seen the band on-stage a lot more than most of his readers)

mark s, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

GM > General Motors. It all makes so much sense.

cuba libre (nathalie), Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

"prairie rose" = country!!

mark s, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Peter Laughner = Robbie Robertson?!? My head hurts.

cuba libre (nathalie), Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

peter laughner = ronnie hawkins

mark s, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Can't really see the RM/Band connection - maybe I'm being too literal - always thought that the Band have a lot in common w/ Steely Dan, tho'.

It's funny how the Band seem to inspire so much loathing in 'non- believers' - is it the singing/vocal harmonising that puts ppl off? I love the blend of their voices, they way they play together so tightly/perfectly but w/out ever 'showing off'. How many other groups have TWO great keyboardists, a drummer who could sing AND swing (Phil Collins my arse), a 'mathematical guitar genius', a bassist who wouldn't sound out of place on a Meters rec. etc. etc. Plus I'm sorta surprised by Duane, 'cos the Band often remind me of the Dead, only w/out the terrible covers/jams/singing/hippy bs etc.

Robbie's splintery gtr solo on the live version of 'Unfaithful Servant' - one of the greatest evah. In fact that whole alb, w/ the Toussaint horns, is outstanding (apart from Garth's solo organ 'fantasia', obv.)

Andrew L, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

taking sides: the band vs brand x

mark s, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

taking sides= roots vs carrots.

cuba libre (nathalie), Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

*munch munch*

I don't get the Roxy comparison either. "Prairie Rose" and "End of the Line" are defintely both country, though.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

I love The Band. I saw the latest reissue of "The Last Waltz" in the theater, and was in seventh heaven as soon as they broke into "Don't Do It". "Up on Cripple Creek" and "Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" both rock a lot more live than on the studio tracks. "Such a Night", "Evangeline" (w/Emmylou), "The Weight" (w/The Staples)...I daresay there is not a weak song performance (the interviews, I admit, are a totally different story) on that film.

Also, "It Makes No Difference" is still one of my all-time faves. Just pure sadness and sweetness. Man, I miss Rick Danko (who looks appropriately like a gunfighter from Tombstone on LW).

Levon Helm looks like Warren Oates behind a drumkit, so double- classic. Garth Hudson vs. Rick Wakeman: FITE!

Joe, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Though I will also must say the Greil Marcus portion of the DVD commentary, fawning over Muddy Waters ("You're not even paying attention to anyone else on stage, you're asking: 'Who IS this GOD?!") as bemused deity playing with the white kids and holding back because they can't 'access' the blues to his level = cringe-inducing DUD.

Joe, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Oooh and and Neil Young w/the Band doing 'Helpess'!! Pity abt Joni M and Rubbish Ronnie, tho'.

Andrew L, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

I could never get into it to be honest although "Whispering pines" is one of the greatest songs ever.

michael bourke, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Maybe their just bad actors.

michael bourke, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Big Pink: yeah!
The Band: hell yeah!
Stage Fright: hold up a sec
Cahoots: No, not really
Rock of Ages: meh
Moondog: not really
Northern Lights: no
Islands: pass
Last Waltz: pass

There is only one way for The Band not be classic, and that is if they followed up their two classic albums with 6 or 7 straight duds. That, they may have done. But I still say classic.

dleone, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Does 'Rubbish Ronnie' refer to Ronnie Hawkins?

Joe, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Roxy Music comparison = their rock culture's (US or UK) first knowingly retro band - taking older styles of playing/singing and re- interpreting them in a slightly mannered and highly self-aware fashion. Also they're the two bands of that era with the biggest emotional kick, for me, at least since I 'got' Roxy.

Tom, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Tom, the Roxy Music comparison is completely right on & very satisying to me since I love both bands a lot. (The Band somewhat more. Bring it on Dave Q.) I think the extremely strict formalism of both is what weds them: musically and lyrically. Why they didn't just hand all the vocal duties over to Levon Helm is a total mystery to me, though.

John Darnielle, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

'Cos Richard Manuel was the best singer!!

Andrew L, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

"Sweetheart of the Rodeo" takes older styles of playing/singing and re-interprets them in a slightly mannered and highly self-aware fashion. I think.

Tim, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

'Music From Big Pink' issued in Aug '68, 'Sweetheart' Sep '68 - so pretty goddamm close! What abt all those 'bluesy' Butterfield/Bloomfield/Kooper/Blood,Sweat and Tears types?

Andrew L, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Butterfield/Bloomfield/Kooper/Blood,Sweat and Tears

I think of those bands as actually being retro, but desperately wanting to be current.

dleone, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

days of future past! actually, first retroistes =vanilla fudge, who "interpret" classic 60s pop (beatles/superemes) as ornate proto-metal

mark s, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Don't forget Creedence Clearwater Revival, it's in the name even. July 68.

Billy D, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Beatles "Lady Madonna" single, spring of '68.

Curt, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Smiley Smile beats them in the Spring of '67. Wait, does 'stripped down' equal 'retro'?

dleone, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Actually, the "Wild Honey" single or album, end of '67, is totally 'retro' and still comes first.

Curt, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

'John Wesley Harding' (not retro as such, but v.stripped down) - Dec 67 and beats 'Wild Honey' by not being rub.

'Smiley Smile' is not really stripped-down. It's just sketchy and unfinished.

N., Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

It's just sketchy and unfinished.

I vote stripped down, because there were finished versions of "Wonderful", "Vegetables" and "Windchimes" that Brian just threw away in favor of drastically starker arrangements.

dleone, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

CCR and The Band are the only successful N. american rock n roll bands of their era that sounded as if the Beatles never made it across the Atlantic. They weren't built on american sounds boomeranged back by the British Invasion. You can hear just about all their tricks on The Sun Sessions, and none of them on Revolver.

(I'm not sure if or how this fits with Tom's Roxy analogy.)

fritz, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

OK, I'm conflating several things here. I don't think it fits into the late 60s back to basics movement cause that wasn't the original intent behind it and... he's singing about Vegetables. Also, it has 'Good Vibrations' and 'Heroes and Villains' on it, for heaven's sake.

N., Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

unless smiley smile counts (which it doesn't obv), vanilla fudge win: the beat goes on is a A CONCEPT ALBUM CHARTING THE COMPLETE HISTORY OF ALL MUSIC EVAH!!

mark s, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Eh, I still don't buy the Roxy comparison. Part of it was the trappings of Roxy, obviously, but it seems that the Band were all about a (potentially stultifying) 'authenticity' whereas Roxy were not. Admittedly this may also have something to do with the fact that at best I admire the Band, but I unreservedly love Roxy, so I'm biased to start with -- the Band are a very hard group for me to imagine anyone getting really obsessed with.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Well, I don't think it's necessarily retro either, which is why I questioned my own post originally. But I do think it was a very early example of 60s artists placing themselves in check during a time when zealous pursuit of the newest in news and highest in highs was something of a passtime. I don't know if The Band were trying to be non-pretensious by being retro (if so, it of course made them double-pretensious), but if so, I think that relates to Brian pulling back the reigns on his biggest project.

dleone, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

sod it

mark s, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

The Band = more British than the Beatles, discuss.

Tracer Hand, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'd say the Band were the American Kraftwerk. Both, romantically longing for some idealised past (or future). Both rejecting the counter culture orthodoxy by embracing an antagonistically sober image and celebrating both work and the working (class) man. The difference being The Band were celebrating a rural, agrarian utopia while Kraftwerk are city boys dazzled by chrome and motorways.

Billy D, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

But how can they be the American Kraftwerk if they're BRITISH??

Tracer Hand, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Canadian, except for Arkansas' own Helm.

dleone, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

the band and neil young are proof that canadians are better at being american than americans

fritz, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

neil young

Yeah, but the Southern man don't need him 'round anyhow.

dleone, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

this is so great

Jams Murphy (ystrickler), Tuesday, 9 August 2005 16:39 (eighteen years ago) link

one year passes...

<i>Question: is it hokey to sing and play like you're a bunch of backwoods weirdo yokels if you really are a bunch of backwoods weirdo yokels? Save Robertson, the rest of the Band sometimes barely seemed housetrained. We're talking alcoholics, manic depressives, even narcoleptics (!) - musical geniuses all. These are the types of guys I imagine losing their checks on payday (assuming RR even had them paid).</i>

I'm rereading Across the Great Divide by Barney Hoskyns, and I think this view of them is inaccurate...Obviously, Robbie was a smart guy and was definitely the most well spoken and maybe "cultured" of the group, but that was encouraged a bit by Albert Goldman who sort of took Robbie under his wing and promoted him to leader...gave him books, etc etc...But yeah in the early days Robbie's just as naive as anyone, and for all his "aw shucks" demeanor, which I think he used as a bit of a shield against the press, Levon Helm is certainly no dummy...Perhaps Rick was just pretty much a farmboy, and Manuel was a sad sad case of alcoholism, they were both great musicians, and honestly I think one of the tragedies – and the BIGGEST reason for the Band's decline on record after Stage Fright - was the fact that Manuel's drinking (and I think a bit of Robbie's increasing dictatorial control over things) robbed the Band of Manuel's songwriting, which I think was often less "studied" and more raw than some of Robbie's more pretentious and labored stuff....

Also, to call Garth Hudson a "yokel" is just wrong, he was by FAR the most trained and skilled musician in the bunch, could play classical, jazz for real, not just fake his way through it....he'd been studying music in college before he joined, and actually helped Robbie a lot out with composition and chord voicings, etc...

But anyway, yeah I fucking love the band...Listening to Stage Fright right now, and honestly I think the songs on the whole are just as strong as Big Pink...if this were recorded in the same manner I think it would be a universal classic as well...but...you can definitely here a creeping professionalism and slickness...I've always blamed Todd Rungren cuz he mixed it and he bugs the fuck out of me for some reason...but damn some of these songs like "Sleeping" or "Time to Kill" or "The Shape I'm In"...wow...such a great band.

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 15:59 (sixteen years ago) link

I think one of the tragedies – and the BIGGEST reason for the Band's decline on record after Stage Fright - was the fact that Manuel's drinking (and I think a bit of Robbie's increasing dictatorial control over things) robbed the Band of Manuel's songwriting

OTM. All of Richard Manuel's songs and co-written songs are great.

Tom D., Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:07 (sixteen years ago) link

So Albert Goldman is to blame for Robbie Robertson too!?!

James Redd and the Blecchs, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:16 (sixteen years ago) link

haha not totally but the book gives the impression that - like he did w/Dylan - goldman sort of played into Robbie's ego and help sort of isolate him from the rest of the band, and maybe helped encourage Robbie's douchiest tendencies...

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:20 (sixteen years ago) link

I find it interesting that although they're harking back to the country at much the same time as contemporary Brit acts like Traffic, the experience seems much more difficult and trying for them. No bucolic, sun dappled idylls as enjoyed by the Brit crowd it's dirt, disease and poverty all the way. Maybe thats why I like them so much.

Billy Dods, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:26 (sixteen years ago) link

Well, Traffic moved to the country, but they didn't really sing about it - apart from "Berkshire Poppies", and that's just a joke track really. Fairport seem a closer comparison.

Tom D., Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:32 (sixteen years ago) link

<i>Eh, I still don't buy the Roxy comparison. Part of it was the trappings of Roxy, obviously, but it seems that the Band were all about a (potentially stultifying) 'authenticity' whereas Roxy were not. Admittedly this may also have something to do with the fact that at best I admire the Band, but I unreservedly love Roxy, so I'm biased to start with -- the Band are a very hard group for me to imagine anyone getting really obsessed with.

-- Ned Raggett, Friday, May 24, 2002 12:00 AM (5 years ago) Bookmark Link</i>

I don't really buy the stultifying authenticity thing...for all their R&B , country, and blues influences, they certainly weren't playing it or writing songs that sound like trad stuff...I mean, shit King Harvest or Daniel and the Sacred Harp are a pretentious in their own way as Bowie or Queen....

...they got to the core of what's great about american roots music without sounding like anyone but themselves...

..plus it goes with out saying that their backwoods Southern image, with the possible exception of Levon who was really from the South, was as much a fantasy for these Canadian boys as glam rock was for people in the UK...same with CCR...people never seem to recognize that fantasies about rural stuff or being authentic are just as much fantasy as imagining yourself as a German computer or gay spaceman.

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:49 (sixteen years ago) link

I've been listening to Stage Fright non-stop. I think it might be my favorite.

will, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 16:56 (sixteen years ago) link

Also, to call Garth Hudson a "yokel" is just wrong, he was by FAR the most trained and skilled musician in the bunch

Check out that Rhino DVD about the making of <i>The Band</i>. It isn't very good, but Hudson plays his solos without the band, and they are totally far out avant-garde organ freakery. Amazing.

I don't really buy the stultifying authenticity thing...for all their R&B , country, and blues influences, they certainly weren't playing it or writing songs that sound like trad stuff...I mean, shit King Harvest or Daniel and the Sacred Harp are a pretentious in their own way as Bowie or Queen....

What's so overly authentic about fusing Curtis Mayfield, Dylan, the blues, and a little Wild-Honey-era Beach Boys. Sure, they didn't dress like Rick Wakeman or Roy Wood, but the Band was modern.

QuantumNoise, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:13 (sixteen years ago) link

Wait, M@tt, it's Grossman, not Goldman you mean, I think.

James Redd and the Blecchs, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:27 (sixteen years ago) link

same with CCR

well CCR weren't southern but believe it or not there WERE green rivers and bayous in norCal. And Lodi is pretty much exactly as the song describes it...

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:35 (sixteen years ago) link

yes that's it haha yeah both assholes i guess i got em mixed up

quantum i really want to check out that DVD...some of the garth's stuff like on chest fever or the genetic method on rock of ages it totally strange....

<i>well CCR weren't southern but believe it or not there WERE green rivers and bayous in norCal. And Lodi is pretty much exactly as the song describes it...

-- Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, June 19, 2007 5:35 PM (51 seconds ago) Bookmark Link</i>

that's probably a fair point, i know shit abt northern cali, but honestly you don't think there's at least a bit of playacting going on in CCR (a great band btw)

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:36 (sixteen years ago) link

there definitely is, primarily of the white-guys-imitating-black-blues variety.

CCR is a weird case cuz there hasn't been a ton of biographical info on them - Fogerty hates the press, Saul Zaentz, the rest of the band, etc. and seems to have very little interest in contributing to (or refuting) any mythologizing. The only book I've ever found on them that was any good and felt anything like the truth was the "Off-the-Record"/quote assemblage-style bio "Around the Bend"... I do tend to defend them against claims of "inauthenticity" tho, because to some extent I think the "they're from CALIFORNIA, not Mississippi" angle gets overplayed on occasion, and overlooks how rural/country a lot of noCal and the central valley are (and were - even moreso back in the 50s when the Fogertys were growing up)

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:46 (sixteen years ago) link

Green River, for example, might as well be the Russian River (altho I'm not sure what the "cody's camp" in the lyrics specifically is referring to - wouldn't be surprised if it was an actual place)

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:48 (sixteen years ago) link

(sorry didn't mean to derail thread - I like the Band!)

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:48 (sixteen years ago) link

i wasn't referring to the fantasy/role-playing elements of the band or CCR (which i guess is my own perception, maybe i'm more wrong than I think w/r/t CCR) as BAD thing though, sometimes I think it helps, it captures the authentic feel but maybe makes it more grand and romantic than it really was/is....

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:54 (sixteen years ago) link

well CCR weren't southern but believe it or not there WERE green rivers and bayous in norCal.

...and one huge delta!

I was in Asheville, NC (awesome town) a couple months back, and I thought I was in Northern California, kinda. Of course this is all generalization. But even though the South/southern Appalachia is geographically closer to, say, the Northeast, it feels closer to California in many respects. It's hard for me to really explain. (Obviously, California is filled with prarie culture: Oklahoma, northern texas, missouri, etc.)

QuantumNoise, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 17:57 (sixteen years ago) link

sometimes I think it helps, it captures the authentic feel but maybe makes it more grand and romantic than it really was/is....

oh yeah no argument there

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 18:00 (sixteen years ago) link

I mean shit the vast majority of country music is based around that approach

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 18:04 (sixteen years ago) link

weird thing about the remastered CD of stage fright:

i actually prefer all the bonus tracks (alternate take of daniel & the sacred harp, alternate mixes (glyn johns) of time to kill and WS walcott medicine show)....i think that's the only time that's ever happened...usually bonus tracks are kind of "oh, hey that's interesting, but i can see why they went the other way"

M@tt He1ges0n, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 19:56 (sixteen years ago) link

funny thing we're discussing Stage Fright. after years and years of absolutely worshipping the first two records, I'm finally digging Stage Fright as well. I have similar hang ups to some of you. at times, it's a little too slick/FM rock/classic/boogie/southern. but i onlt have the vinyl. i need to check out those bonus tracks.

QuantumNoise, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 20:03 (sixteen years ago) link

Not that good, although they should be credited for combining elements from some of the worst musical genres ever and actually manage to make some good songs out of it.
-- Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Friday, 25 April 2003 22:01 (4 years ago)

Did the Band combine rap and funk or something? I don't understand Geir's ire…love for him to pop in and explain…

Veronica Moser, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 22:33 (sixteen years ago) link

not enough British music hall influences I would imagine... remember Geir thinks one of the most loathsome musical forms ever is the 12-bar blues, so that should give you some kind of clue.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 22:35 (sixteen years ago) link

veronica, just remember it's always "opposite day" in norway, that makes geir's posts easy to understand.

M@tt He1ges0n, Wednesday, 20 June 2007 15:48 (sixteen years ago) link

btw

I've never heard Cahoots, Moondog Matinee, Northern Lights Southern Cross, or Islands....if anyone could give me any idea which of these are worth getting i'd appreciate it..

M@tt He1ges0n, Wednesday, 20 June 2007 16:18 (sixteen years ago) link

I've enjoyed what I've heard from Moondog, their covers lp. Altough they cheat on "Ain't Got No Home"--Levon doesn't get to sing like a girl.

C. Grisso/McCain, Wednesday, 20 June 2007 18:23 (sixteen years ago) link

Danko's "It Makes No Difference" off Northern Lights - Southern Cross is tearjerker. In fact, that's not a bad album at all: "Acadian Driftwood," "Ophelia."

QuantumNoise, Wednesday, 20 June 2007 18:52 (sixteen years ago) link

Moondog Matinee is spotty, but has some great cuts. "Mystery Train," "Share Your Love," "Great Pretender." Southern Lights, Northern Cross is always very good, never great. Cahoots and Islands are for diehards only.

The guy who just votes in polls, Wednesday, 20 June 2007 18:59 (sixteen years ago) link

"Sleeping" off Stage Fright is a real amazing, sad song.

M@tt He1ges0n, Thursday, 21 June 2007 14:33 (sixteen years ago) link

also, getting close to the end of the band book...found out that Levon and Rick play on "Revolution Blues" on On the Beach! crazy!

M@tt He1ges0n, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:37 (sixteen years ago) link

yeah i have dreams that the NY archives box sets will have more stuff from those Young/Danko/Helm sessions. even if it's just stoned wankery, i'd like to hear it all!

tylerw, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:40 (sixteen years ago) link

hahahah!

Shakey's got an interesting angle, but CCR were from El Cerrito (which hasn't changed too much maybe?!??!), not the Central Valley.

Lodi is where Fogerty played minor league baseball before becoming a fulltime musician.

Also, California has a very rich and storied country music history in case those of you reading at home didn't know that.

Steve Shasta, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:43 (sixteen years ago) link

Back to the topic at hand, I think The Band's cover of "Not Fade Away" is better than The Stones.

Steve Shasta, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:44 (sixteen years ago) link

Track down the San Francisco Snack! boot. It's a radio broadcast from '75. jamming together is dylan, young, the band, and members of crazy horse/stray gators. the sound quality isn't hot, but they do rock: are you ready for the country, ain't that a lot of love, looking for love, loving you is sweeter than ever, i want you, the weight, helpless, knockin o heaven's door...

QuantumNoise, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:45 (sixteen years ago) link

i shouldn't have brought CCR into this! different beasts, but yeah of course bakersfield and all them are huge in country.

M@tt He1ges0n, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:52 (sixteen years ago) link

Steve I know where El Cerrito is (altho yes I'm no local historian expert and I'm not sure how much or how its changed since the 50s). While El Cerrito itself isn't rural, it wasn't far from a fair amount of rural country, and CCR spent a lot of time gigging and touring in the central valley (as The Golliwogs) - I forget where Tom had to do army time but that was somewhere in the central valley too if I'm not mistaken.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 17:54 (sixteen years ago) link

http://www.creativedifferences.com/baxtercreek/frogpond.jpg
El Cerrito's frog pond circa 1930

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 18:01 (sixteen years ago) link

that's where the pharoah's maidens picked young baby fogerty out of the bullrushes

M@tt He1ges0n, Thursday, 21 June 2007 18:30 (sixteen years ago) link

perhaps here is where we should mention that the second band album was recorded in sammy davis jr.'s Hollywood Hills mansion.

tylerw, Thursday, 21 June 2007 18:45 (sixteen years ago) link

a/k/a <i>Music From Little Sammy</i>

QuantumNoise, Thursday, 21 June 2007 18:48 (sixteen years ago) link

Music From Little Sammy

there...

QuantumNoise, Thursday, 21 June 2007 18:48 (sixteen years ago) link

I've said this before, but not on this thread, apparently:

For me, the genius of The Band (and, to a lesser extent, CCR and even Little Feat) was the completely modernist invention of a mythic past that never existed but should have. Very similar (at least in my mind) to Garcia Marquez with 100 Years of Solitude -- taking a bunch of folk elements and combining them in a way that both feels like it was always there but makes sense in (and of) a modern context.

Fairport Convention or Pentangle are not so dissimilar, but they were jazzing (or bluesing) up actual traditional material, primarily, and playing it with electric guitar solos. Plenty nice, but not the same level of myth-creation that The Band did.

So, anyway, ultra-classic. Towering.

Vornado, Thursday, 21 June 2007 22:48 (sixteen years ago) link

"I'd never been anyplace. Went to Montana once. But when I was young, we used to do a lot of vacationing or whatever up near Sacramento. There's a town called Winters. And there is a Cody's Camp there. And we went there, like, every year and it was tremendous. It was exactly what Green River was all about. It was like the West Coast version of the Bayous. And that part fit together. In other words, I always thought what I had lived must have been the same thing. Because, like, it had sort of a swampy kind of deal. And there were lots of bullfrogs and the whole thing. So in that respect, I DID live it. Lot of happy memories there. I learned how to swim there. There was a rope hanging from a tree. Certainly dragonflies, bullfrogs. There was a little cabin we would say in owned by a descendant of Buffalo Bill Cody. That's the reference in the song to Cody Junior. The actual specific reference, Green River, I got from a soda-pop syrup label... My flavor was Green River, it was lime-flavored and they would empty some out over some ice and pour some soda water on it and you had yourself a Green River."
- John Fogerty 1970

THREAD DERAIL!

Shakey Mo Collier, Saturday, 23 June 2007 01:17 (sixteen years ago) link

I thought this was going to be about a newly formed band called CLASSIC OR DUD

The Real Dirty Vicar, Saturday, 23 June 2007 21:47 (sixteen years ago) link

<i>So, anyway, ultra-classic. Towering.</i>

The idea was better that the way they pulled it off, I think. Or maybe it reads better than it sounds. I've never been able to get into these guys as much as I'd think I would.

mitya, Sunday, 24 June 2007 07:06 (sixteen years ago) link

six months pass...

I think about the Band a lot these days, mainly from the perspective of their being the original Canadian Third Way; Big Pink is routinely and mistakenly labelled as untrammelled roots-revisiting though it's more like roots-rewiring - much of it is as adventurous as any '68 music, but less obviously "confrontational" since it's a tentative-masquerading-as-bold answer to the question of where "we" go from "here." But yes; without the Band, no Arcade Fire, no Broken Social Scene etc.

The Band were also rock's Art Ensemble Of Chicago - they came to prominence at roughly the same time after long apprenticeships in other set-ups, both were viewed as a way out of the noise cul-de-sac, reintroducing space and silence, both were nominally leaderless groups of multi-instrumentalists with the exception of their most readily identifiable member who stuck doggedly to the one instrument (i.e. Robbie Robertson/Lester Bowie).

Dingbod Kesterson, Friday, 18 January 2008 14:38 (sixteen years ago) link

nine years pass...

Can "Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" be understood as anything other than a romanticization of the Lost Cause narrative of the civil war? I had always pushed this into the back of my mind, but I heard the song a couple days after Charlottesville and it suddenly really rubbed me the wrong way.

joan baez version is so much better.

scott seward, Monday, 21 August 2017 06:08 (six years ago) link

I never heard it as a romanticisation of the Lost Cause so much as a song from the perspective of a kid caught up in the Confederate side of the war without any actual commitment or relation to its cause - more about the pointlessness of war and the loss of life than the Cause itself? Like, the kid doesn't care about what the war's about, he just feels he has to join the war to defend his family and his home. Which, when I type that aloud, feels like a pointed omission in 2017. I don't know - maybe I'd be less forgiving of the song if I hadn't loved it since I was kid and before I could interrogate the lyrics. I've always felt Robertson was writing in character rather than delivering his opinion of the Civil War.

not not not not yr academy (stevie), Monday, 21 August 2017 10:06 (six years ago) link


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