Classic Or Dud: The Band

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The Band s/t without king harvest is surely a crime. haha so right re manuel and danko vocal duel.

di smith (lucylurex), Wednesday, 15 January 2003 10:23 (twenty-one years ago) link

I like the Band fine though I don't know their stuff as well as I might. (Need to get the 2nd alb obv) still just have to say I fucking HATE The Last Waltz. saw it in a theater last summer and was like, "THIS? This is considered the great rock concert film?!" 90% of the guests dead in the fucking water, Robertson preening like his life depends on it, everyone looks coked-out and miserable (and miserably smug)...boy what a disappointment.

M Matos (M Matos), Wednesday, 15 January 2003 15:12 (twenty-one years ago) link

three months pass...
this is an interesting thread.

Jody Beth Pinefox (Jody Beth Rosen), Friday, 25 April 2003 21:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

< /pinefox>

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Friday, 25 April 2003 21:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

The Night they Drove Old Dixie Down

the jel (the jel), Friday, 25 April 2003 21:43 (twenty-one 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 (twenty-one years ago) link

Avalanches mixed in "Life is a Carnival" into one of their sets. It's a really smug California cocaine meets Jimmy Buffett, but somehow it's extreme silliness worked in the mix.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 25 April 2003 22:08 (twenty-one years ago) link

The first two Band albums are great tho the 2nd is terribly over-rated. The importance of The Band (as I think somebody else pointed out) was that they came after the psychedelic era and promised some sort of return to less gimmicky, more "heartfelt" music - in fact, The Band are much more sophisticated musically than most of the bands who followed their lead.

I love Rick Danko and Richard Manuel's voices but I can't abide Levon Helm and all that hokey downhome shit-kickin' good ole boy stuff. Plus I HATE "The Weight"! Instrumentally they were all great but special marks go to Rick Danko who was one of the funkiest rock bassists of all time.

Dadaismus (Dada), Saturday, 26 April 2003 16:10 (twenty-one years ago) link

Avalanches mixed in "Life is a Carnival" into one of their sets. It's a really smug California cocaine meets Jimmy Buffett, but somehow it's extreme silliness worked in the mix.

California? New Orleans!

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Saturday, 26 April 2003 22:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

i think the posts above may be appreciating the band not in the most important context. making comparisons to overseas bands like roxy music is interesting but the band sort of established, or at least gave a focus and visibility to, a whole new paradigm of recording rock music. robertson has said many times re. their second album that "you can hear the wood on that record"--so the album is a kind of retro that to that point was generally unheard of (certainly didn't make the cover of Time Magazine as the Band did), not a retro of grand gestures but of small ones--the way a trap is built, what sort of amplifier to use, etc. the remarkable thing about the band is how "old" and authentic they sound while making music that couldn't possibly have been made before the late '60s. i hear something new in those first two or three records all the time. the remasters really help here.

amateurist (amateurist), Saturday, 26 April 2003 22:13 (twenty-one years ago) link

i mean i think the band can be "blamed" for much of the roots-rock sound that's come in their wake. even if i don't warm up to most of that stuff i can see how important a shift it was. ccr was important in this regard too, but they didn't have that overt woodshedding quality the Band did.

amateurist (amateurist), Saturday, 26 April 2003 22:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

They can be blamed for the bland country/roots-rock that the Band inspired, but they can hardly be faulted for every successive band's common Achilles heel: lead-footed rhythm sections. Yeah, Robbie Rob was a great songwriter (obv), but those albums would've never worked if it weren't for Danko & Helm.

(is all lower-case the new hard n' ghetto amateurist?)

Yanc3y (ystrickler), Saturday, 26 April 2003 22:22 (twenty-one years ago) link

Music From Big Pink is the best album ever recorded.


yep!

colin m., Saturday, 26 April 2003 23:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

down style for real.

amateurist (amateurist), Sunday, 27 April 2003 00:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

[/bad editors' joke]

amateurist (amateurist), Sunday, 27 April 2003 00:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

one year passes...
i love the roxy music/band comparison upthread. really.

cutty (mcutt), Sunday, 27 February 2005 05:28 (nineteen years ago) link

The Band is a group I have to confess I probably say I like more than I actually like. They have a handful of great songs, but even Big Pink I don't find to be a consistently good album. Search: Tears of Rage, I Shall Be Released (both Dylan songs), Up on Cripple Creek, The Night The Drove Old Dixie Down, This Wheel's On Fire, Chest Fever, The Weight, and actually, the extra tracks on Big Pink are fucking great.

Hurting (Hurting), Sunday, 27 February 2005 16:11 (nineteen years ago) link

I like the *way* they did what they did; I find a lot of the songs really mannered. I think their version of "This Wheel's on Fire" is by far the best. I don't like the whole movement they spawned--Little Feat comes to mind. They already sounded so weary on that first album. There's something just so hidden and aggrieved about them; I find their music attractive, but vexing. I found my old LP of the first album recently and listened to it attentively for the first time in years. I quite liked "We Can Talk about It" and "Caledonia Mission." J. R. Robertson's guitar solo in "To Kingdom Come" is pretty great. I like the second one too but it's kinda like Steely Dan to me--I just can't get in the state of mind I once had to really love it any more. Even though I do love both of them, in a way. I think Greil Marcus is way over the top in his "Mystery Train" book when it comes to them. And later on, as in that Scorcese film, their smugness about how they are the only ones with access to the Real Truth about the Blues is a turn-off. Still, as a textbook example of a certain way to play that music, they can't be dismissed, so maybe what I'm objecting to is the nostalgia and insularity that lies underneath even their best music.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Sunday, 27 February 2005 22:58 (nineteen years ago) link

"Jawbone", "When we Awake", "Unfaithful Servant" are all great songs.

Bumfluff, Sunday, 27 February 2005 23:08 (nineteen years ago) link

I forgot "Rockin' Chair" ! That's my favourite!

Bumfluff, Sunday, 27 February 2005 23:11 (nineteen years ago) link

I hadn't thought much about the Band in years, until we discussed Levon Helm a while back. There's an expanded version of that first album -- with Basement Tapes type stuff -- on Rhapsody that I've listened to a few times. "Yazoo Steet Scandal" "Orange Juice Blues" "Katie's Been Gone" "Lonesome Susie," a version of "Key to the Highway" fit right in and flesh out the well-worn classix. You're dead right about "the nostalgia and insularity" but for me the offhand weirdness of the BT tracks cuts through the smugness.

Isn't "going over the top" pretty much what Greil Marcus DOES?

And hey, maybe I was wrong about Levon Helm's drumming.

lovebug starski (lovebug starski), Sunday, 27 February 2005 23:18 (nineteen years ago) link

four months pass...
Classic for the first two (or three) albums.

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).

Anyway, they're great for their feel, just like a good jazz band, but they were also tight, like a good soul band. And that also kept the Grateful Dead styled noodling out of the music. At the least, Rick Danko played bass like few others, as did Levon and Garth with their respective instruments.

Also interesting was how nearly all the band members were multi-instrumentalists, and that included horns.

Josh in Chicago (Josh in Chicago), Monday, 11 July 2005 12:17 (eighteen years ago) link

four weeks pass...
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


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