Little Feat - S&D, C/D

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When in doubt , play the feat

June Pointer’s Valentine’s Day Secret Admirer Note Author (calstars), Wednesday, 13 November 2019 23:51 (four years ago) link

I queued up the Ultrasonic Studios 1973 set about an hour ago. Damn, they were special.

EZ Snappin, Thursday, 14 November 2019 00:09 (four years ago) link

Ultrasonic is nice, no complaints here

June Pointer’s Valentine’s Day Secret Admirer Note Author (calstars), Thursday, 14 November 2019 00:34 (four years ago) link

There was a woman in Georgia

June Pointer’s Valentine’s Day Secret Admirer Note Author (calstars), Thursday, 14 November 2019 00:36 (four years ago) link

Skin it back is a backup and damn if it’s better than it’s replacing

June Pointer’s Valentine’s Day Secret Admirer Note Author (calstars), Thursday, 14 November 2019 00:43 (four years ago) link

Don't forget "Oh Atlanta"!

How nuts is it that Feats Don't...kicks off with a defining masterpiece from each of the three songwriters?

a bevy of supermodels, musicians and Lena Dunham (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 14 November 2019 01:12 (four years ago) link

I queued up the Ultrasonic Studios 1973 set about an hour ago. Damn, they were special.

The best. Great sound. A+ studio banter. What a vibe!

Mazzy Tsar (PBKR), Thursday, 14 November 2019 01:14 (four years ago) link

four months pass...

Shared by the band via Allan Jones on FB today:

Block Me If You’ve Heard This One Before

# 1 Little Feat

There were some stories that didn’t make the published version of Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down that I’ve been wondering what to do with. Thought I might post a few of them during the current quarantine. It’s something to do that isn’t a fucking jigsaw, anyway.

London, June 1976
Little Feat are due back in London to re-join The Who Put The Boot In tour, after two weeks in Europe during a break between the opening date of The Who tour at Charlton football ground and tomorrow's show in Swansea.
I'm supposed to meet them at 10.30 on a Friday morning at the Montcalm, the swanky hotel in Mable Arch much-favoured in those days by anyone signed to Warner Bros. There's no sign of them when I get there, although they were meant to be catching an early flight from Amsterdam. Eventually, someone from Warners turns up with the news that Little Feat are as we speak being held at Heathrow. The band are in custody and their impounded equipment’s being searched for drugs, flight cases and amps and the like being stripped, much like the group themselves, and thoroughly frisked. He has no idea how long they'll be held, but says if I want to wait, he'll book me a room. There's a well-stocked mini bar and food on room service if I want it.

I could, of course, go back to the Melody Maker office, where work is waiting for me. Alternatively, I could, you know, stay here and have a few drinks, some nibbles and maybe a nap. So I decide to stay and wait, trying not to take undue advantage of the record company's generosity, an intention that fails miserably, the stock of the mini bar much diminished by mid-afternoon, Little Feat still at that point being grilled at the airport.

It's early evening when they finally show up, in remarkably good humour and full of apologies for the long wait I've endured with what I hope seems to them impressive professional stoicism. Anyway, I'm here to interview them individually for a regular Melody Maker feature called Band Breakdown. To which end, they troop one by one into my room. Bassist Ken Gradney's first, followed by percussionist Sam Clayton, both veterans of Delany & Bonnie. Next up is keyboardist Bill Payne, who formed little Feat in 1970 with guitarist Lowell George and drummer Richie Heyward, their ambition, as he puts it, to sound like "a tougher version of The Band". Bill's very funny about Little Feat's early days, playing occasional gigs at strip clubs and generally so poor he ended up sleeping on the beach.

The poverty that's dogged the band ever since is something that subsequently preoccupies somewhat surly guitarist Paul Barrere, who joined them in 1972. He'd been working up to that point as a waiter - "make that a servant" - at a musicians' hang-out called The Black Rabbit Inn while playing part-time with a group called Led Enema. "For the next year and a half," he says curtly, "I made less money with Little Feat than I did as an out-of-work musician and waiter."

I don't really hit it off with Barerre who in a simmering hint of escalating tensions to come grumpily spends most of the interview complaining that Lowell gets too much credit for the band's music, which the moody Barerre clearly resents. I get on like a dream, though, with flamboyantly moustachioed Richie Heyward, who's sharp, funny and has great drugs. "We sent everything ahead of us," he says, explaining why nothing came of the airport bust. "It was all waiting for us when we arrived. Have some more,” he says, busy cutting up lines as long as a baby’s arm.

He starts off by telling me about The Factory, the band he played in with Lowell before Little Feat. "It was electric miasma music," he says. "We had a song called 'Car Crash', which was an instrumental that sounded like every violated water buffalo in the world plugged into a Marshall amp."
He then remembers The Fraternity Of Man, whose line-up also included Lowell. "I spent most of my time bailing them out of jail, where they were paying for their enjoyment of nefarious pharmaceutical pursuits and behaviour sub-standard to the ethic of The Daughters Of The American Revolution. The music was revolutionary. An incitement to riot. Anti-police state and pro-pharmacology. Inane, really."

Not long after The Fraternity Of Man split, Richie formed Little Feat with Lowell, who'd just left Frank Zappa's Mothers Of Invention, Bill Payne and former Mothers' bassist Roy Estrada, who eventually quit to join Captain Beefheart's Magic Band. "Beefheart offered Roy 350 dollars a month," Richie recalls. "Which was exactly 350 dollars a month more than Little Feat, collectively, were earning. Man, we were poor."

We suddenly realise we've been jabbering wide-eyed for hours and I still need to speak to Lowell. We go to his room, knock on the door. There's no reply. Richie suggests I meet the band the next day in Swansea, where I can interview Lowell. So the next day I spend a lot of time in Little Feat's trailer, drinking beer, smoking this and snorting that. I have a grand time, thanks for asking. But I still don't manage to get Lowell in front of a tape recorder. It's agreed with someone that I'll meet with Lowell at the sound-check for Little Feat's show on Monday at the Hammersmith Odeon, which is a gas. But Lowell disappears as soon as the sound-check's done. I don’t see him again before the gig, which turns out to be mind-blowing. There's an after-show party for the band, though, at the Zanzibar, a swish cocktail bar in Covent Garden, at which Lowell is finally cornered. We find a table and against much background rowdiness from the partying mob have to shout to make ourselves heard to each other. Lowell’s constantly distracted by a stream of well-wishers and other people he doesn't know, some of them offering him this, others that. A pretty waitress who catches Lowell's eye brings us round after round of exotic drinks, which we knock back like sailors on shore leave.

Lowell's already kind of what you might call out of it, although not as far gone as he looks like he might get. Whatever, for the next 45 minutes, he's great company. There are colourful anecdotes about his time with Zappa, The Factory, Sky Saxon and The Seeds, The Standells, The Fraternity Of Man, Stephen Stills, Peter Tork, Jimi Hendrix and, of course, Little Feat.

"We're like a Jackson Pollock painting," he says. "You know the way a Pollock painting is never really 'finished'? Pollock painted until he came to the edge of the canvas, that's when he had to stop. He then had a painting. When we're recording, we have a deadline to finish by, usually imposed by the record company. When we hit that deadline, we stop recording. It's the edge of our canvas. That's when we have a new album."

Around now, he's finaly dragged away into the seething crowd and the flashing lights, the pulsing maw of the teeming Zanzibar.

The next time I see him, it's June 1979 and I'm in New York with The Damned. The horrid little miscreants have just played a show at Hurrah's that ended with the band at war with the crowd who seemed only to be there to jeer them for not being The Sex Pistols. "You want anarchy?" Rat Scabies had shouted, a drum stick stuck up one nostril, spraying muck from the other at the audience. "You're fucking well going to get it." Captain Sensible, stripped down to his underpants, had by now swapped places with Rat and was banging on Rat’s drums. Rat played the riff from "Whole Lotta Love" on the Captain's guitar, which was probably last in tune when he bought it. Dave Vanian then reappeared, as if out of nowhere, like he'd just dropped down from the rafters. At which point they'd played "Pretty Vacant", someone rushing the stage to wrestle with Rat, who smashed him over the head with what was left of his drum kit, most of which Sensible had already thrown into the crowd, followed by an amplifier that shattered one of the club's wall-to-ceiling mirrors. A rather lively evening, all told.

Hours later, the Captain and I are in a lift at the Gramercy Park Hotel, where the band are staying. Sensible is by now wearing a fluorescent pink rabbit suit compete with ears and both of us are screeching with laughter at something or other. The lift stops at the second floor. The doors open. I look up, still shrieking with laughter, and there's Lowell George, in town for the start of his first solo tour after leaving Little Feat. Lowell steps into the lift, looks disbelievingly at Sensible in his fluorescent pink rabbit suit complete with ears. Before I have a chance to say anything to him, he backs out of the lift, looking baffled, possibly worried that he's having some kind of alarming psychedelic episode, all that acid coming back to terrify him.
Two days later, Lowell dies of a heart attack in Washington, another good man gone. As he boogies up to the Pearly Gates, I hope the last thing he remembers from a previous life isn't a man dressed as a rabbit, swearing his head off in a lift in New York at five in the morning.

a bevy of supermodels, musicians and Lena Dunham (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 26 March 2020 16:15 (four years ago) link

Led Enema lol

calstars, Thursday, 26 March 2020 17:49 (four years ago) link

six months pass...

https://youtu.be/ZimwfhiuR4M

Live Ultrasonic 1973 so good !

calstars, Sunday, 11 October 2020 23:36 (three years ago) link

four months pass...

First contact:
"Hamburger Midnight" b/w "Strawberry Flats"
Little Feat (Warner Brothers 7431)

This is the masterpiece. This is perhaps the best record I've heard in several months. As usual, Warner's has picked the wrong side as the A-side. "Hamburger Midnight" is indeed a fine song, reminiscent of Johnny Winter, crackling and sizzling through two minutes packed with incredible energy. Yet it pales against "Strawberry Flats," which must be one of thr definitive statements of "where youth is at today." Dig these {partial) lyrics:

Ripped off and run outta town/Got my git-tar burned/When I was clownin'/Haven't slept in a bed for a week/And my shoes feel like part of my feet/ Let me come down/Where I won't be burden to no-one/Let me around/Give me a hole to recline in...
Knocked on my friend's door in Mooody, Texas/Asked if he had a place for me/His hair was cut off and he was wearin' a suit/ He said,/
"Not in my house! Not in my house!"
/It seemed like part of a con-spir-a-cy.

The singer is "six hours out on Strawberry Flats" and trying to get past the school bus Texas roadblock where they're "stoppin' everybody who looks too weird." The music sounds like the Band taken one step further. and it is difficult to believe that they generate so much excitement in two minutes and 21 seconds. This anthem of the Age of Paranoia deserves to be in your collection and on every radio station in the country, although I realize as I write that it is wishful thinking. The group Little Feat seems to have ex-Mother Roy Estrada, a guy named George, and another guy named Payne in it. Warner Brothers says that they have an album coming. but they're not too sure when. Watch for it, and if you don't believe me, invest 77¢ or whatever in the single.
---Ed Ward 11-26-70
from The Rolling Stone Record Review(Pocket Book edition, August 1971)

The sub

dow, Tuesday, 2 March 2021 22:03 (three years ago) link

He didn't yet recognize "a guy named George" as another Mother. wiki sez:
Formative years

Lowell George met Bill Payne when George was a member of Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention. Payne had auditioned for the Mothers, but had not joined. They formed Little Feat along with former Mothers' bassist Roy Estrada and drummer Richie Hayward from George's previous band, The Factory. Hayward had also been a member of the Fraternity of Man whose claim to fame was the inclusion of their "Don't Bogart That Joint" on the million-selling Easy Rider film soundtrack. The name of the band came from a comment made by Mothers' drummer Jimmy Carl Black about Lowell's "little feet". The spelling of "feat" was an homage to the Beatles.

There are three stories about the genesis of Little Feat. One has it that George showed Zappa his song "Willin'," and that Zappa fired him from the Mothers of Invention, because he felt that George was too talented to merely be a member of his band, and told him he ought to go away and form his own band. The second version has Zappa firing him for playing a 15-minute guitar solo with his amplifier off. The third version says that Zappa fired him because "Willin'" contains drug references ("weed, whites and wine"). George often introduced the song as the reason he was asked to leave the band. On October 18, 1975 at the Auditorium Theater in Rochester New York while introducing the song, George commented that he was asked to leave the band for "writing a song about dope".[3]
The band in 1975

In any version, Zappa was instrumental in getting George and his new band a contract with Warner Bros. Records. The eponymous first album delivered to Warner Bros. was recorded mostly in August and September 1970, and was released in January 1971. When it came time to record "Willin'," George had hurt his hand in an accident with a model airplane, so Ry Cooder sat in and played the song's slide part.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Feat

dow, Tuesday, 2 March 2021 22:09 (three years ago) link

two weeks pass...

I can hear barrere on the composition of “feats don’t fail” it’s cool that LG sings it though

calstars, Sunday, 21 March 2021 19:27 (three years ago) link

four weeks pass...

Shared by the band on FB today: their 1972 cameo on The FBI (possibly some of the only footage of the original Feat)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DbUKPKHQA8

blue whales on ambient (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 18 April 2021 01:04 (three years ago) link

Cool
Is it just me or does the early stuff have a real stones vibe to it? LG’s voice too and the way he strains the notes could almost be a stand in for mick

calstars, Sunday, 18 April 2021 01:43 (three years ago) link

I seem to recall somewhere that the original concept behind the group was Rolling Stones + The Band, which is most obvious on the debut.

blue whales on ambient (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 18 April 2021 02:07 (three years ago) link

five months pass...

https://i.imgur.com/7OQlk6N.png

calstars, Thursday, 30 September 2021 21:58 (two years ago) link

“Closest thing to Dylan” ?

calstars, Thursday, 30 September 2021 21:59 (two years ago) link

this amazing bootleg is finally coming out officially for record store day:
https://recordstoreday.com/SpecialRelease/14416

tylerw, Thursday, 30 September 2021 22:00 (two years ago) link

Sweet!

EZ Snappin, Thursday, 30 September 2021 22:23 (two years ago) link

That looks fantastic and I really hope it gets a wider release later because those 5000 copies aren't going to go far.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 30 September 2021 22:24 (two years ago) link

Yeah, but it's gonna list for $75 or something...

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 30 September 2021 22:30 (two years ago) link

Probably true. In a perfect world it'd also get an affordable CD release in a few months time.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 30 September 2021 22:32 (two years ago) link

I heard you the biggest HOO
The biggest truck in town

calstars, Sunday, 3 October 2021 02:12 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Is every song on the first Little Feat album about long-haul truckers?

J. Sam, Thursday, 21 October 2021 21:03 (two years ago) link

"Brides of Jesus" = Jesus Was A Truck-Drivin' Messiah

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 21 October 2021 21:06 (two years ago) link

Companion Piece:

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b3/Commander_Cody_Hot_Licks.jpg

They would later cover "Willin'"

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 21 October 2021 21:08 (two years ago) link

In other news, the current lineup of Little Feat will be doing a 45th Anniversary tour doing Waiting For Columbus front-to-back next year.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Thursday, 21 October 2021 22:07 (two years ago) link

They would later cover "Willin'" Yeah, but I think Ronstadt's version is better. They certainly had their moments though. They should: they spent the 60s entertaining Ann Arbor, then, having run out of financial opportunities for professional students etc., they jumped to Berkeley, became student bar faves there, and then opening act for the Dead---especially popular because they didn't jam, I've read---and maybe encourage the Dead to play more country etc. They mixed that with rockabilly, western swing, other compatibles (incl. originals, like the one about being down to seeds and stems again. Also known for attracting a mix of hippies, old trad country fans, younger suits (so also suitable for that era of Austin, Armadillo World Headquarters and so on).
I tend to prefer some of the covers, like their Greatest Hit, "Hot Rod Lincoln," also "Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! That Cigarette." Liked most of the first two LPs, 1971's Lost In The Ozone and the next year's Hot Licks, Cold Steel and Trucker's Favorites, also some of the live album. Not so muchthe '75 s/t, which was supposed to be their major move, the punchline of an amazing book, Star-Making Machinery: Inside the Business of Rock and Roll, by the late great Geoffrey Stokes, from a lost world of music, money, dreams, and delusions---familiar elements, but mixing a strange brew, man.

dow, Thursday, 21 October 2021 23:49 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

https://i.imgur.com/OFOxCUX.jpg

Yeahhh…now I have this one and Columbus 😎

calstars, Sunday, 7 November 2021 18:09 (two years ago) link

Analog willin

calstars, Sunday, 7 November 2021 19:09 (two years ago) link

In a perfect world it'd also get an affordable CD release in a few months time.

― a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, September 30, 2021 5:32 PM (one month ago) bookmarkflaglink

Since this world is far from perfect, there's going to be a more limited edition CD version of the RSD Electrif Lycanthrope.

https://recordstoreday.com/SpecialRelease/14415

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 7 November 2021 19:22 (two years ago) link

https://www.discogs.com/release/9864342-Little-Feat-Little-Feat

calstars, Sunday, 7 November 2021 19:58 (two years ago) link

Roll right through the night

ncxkd, Sunday, 14 November 2021 23:32 (two years ago) link

I said roll

calstars, Monday, 15 November 2021 02:15 (two years ago) link

That RSD CD is already going for sick $$$ on eBay.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 27 November 2021 23:16 (two years ago) link

Let’s crowd source that shit

calstars, Saturday, 27 November 2021 23:19 (two years ago) link

there's one on discogs for a somewhat reasonable price.

please don't refer to me as (Austin), Saturday, 27 November 2021 23:35 (two years ago) link

one month passes...

Lucked out and was able to grab an Electrif Lycanthrope CD for list (plus shipping + tax) on eBay right before Xmas. Just digging in now and HOLY SHIT what a good job Rhino did on this. Sounds like you're right there in the audience. Sucks that if this were 5-10 years ago it would have been a regular release instead of this RSD bullshit.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 1 January 2022 00:28 (two years ago) link

Very nice !

calstars, Saturday, 1 January 2022 01:01 (two years ago) link

The Electrif Lycanthrope remaster is now up on streaming services.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 14 January 2022 19:49 (two years ago) link

Yasss

calstars, Friday, 14 January 2022 20:14 (two years ago) link

four months pass...

hello i just discovered Little Feat :D

seriously had never heard them before! they are great & right in my countryfied classic dadrock wheelhouse

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 28 May 2022 06:54 (one year ago) link

Welcome to the fold veg

calstars, Saturday, 28 May 2022 11:40 (one year ago) link

I was trying to find out about the Electrif Lycanthrope bootleg just recently, the title has always bothered me and I found this on a 100 Greatest Bootlegs Blog.

"Yesterday I received this e-mail from someone who wishes to remain anonymous. They used a temporary email address to protect their privacy but had difficulty posting it in the comments section. I reproduce it below:

Greetings thebasement67 and all:

To begin with, it is very, very kind of you to list 'Electrif Lycanthrope' as one of The 100 Greatest Bootlegs. This is especially delightful considering it began its Fifth Decade Of Providing Listening Joy a few years ago.
And anyone who has not followed your suggestion to get the broadcast is missing an extraordinary opportunity to get a pristine transfer of this performance.

At the time of 'Electrif Lycanthrope''s release, LITTLE FEAT were the definition of A Cult Band. Radio, even FM Radio, rarely played them. Probably more people saw them performing live during those years than ever had ever purchased 'Salin' Shoes' or 'Dixie Chicken". This would, happily, change over the next few years with the next few releases but when 'Electrif Lycanthrope' was originated and released they were far closer to A Well Treasured Secret than Indispensable To Any Record Collection.
Over the years, I have read many interpretations about the packaging. Especially the title. As you have been so very kind in your words about this work, I thought, if you do not mind, I would use this ability to comment here to answer some questions about it.

'Electrif Lycanthrope' contains no misspelled words. It appears exactly as intended. The title was inspired by a motion picture that was been broadcast as the cover was being assembled. Way back when, the US television network ABC ran movies and other odd programming late at night. This night there was a movie about a teenage werewolf that was created by Dick Clark Productions. It was a silly movie but the word "lycanthropy" was repeatedly used throughout it. I liked the overall sound of that word very much. For the cover it was changed to be a singular noun. It was used to represent the transformation we hoped would soon take place to change those who never listened to LITTLE FEAT into those who always listened to LITTLE FEAT. The word 'Electrif' was a portmanteau of two words: 'Electric", for the guitars being played, and 'Terrific', for the way LITTLE FEAT music made us all feel.

The subtitle '(Be-Bop Deluxe)' was not an error and was not listed as a reference to the English band of the same name. It was included as a reference to a genre of music, bebop, with a superlative added and was a phrase used by someone at the Anytown Office to reference any music she thought was "irresistibly cool". Its inclusion as a subtitle was the first of three clues to appear on three different LITTLE FEAT titles on Kornyfone.

The artwork on the cover of 'Electrif Lycanthrope' was from a calendar made, printed and given away by A Local Record Store. It was used because, first and foremost, it was by Neon Park and, just as importantly, the original calendar could be trimmed so that the art would fit the available space on the cover. That the art contained a Rin Tin Tin with antlers and an El Camino Real bell with a quizzical face, both entities seemingly also having transformed, just made it all the better.
It took about two hours to assemble the cover and get it camera ready. Letraset for the titles. A bottle of ink and a drafting pen, as always, for the handwritten text. The final printed piece does not have the Neon Park art in its intended position as the printer changed it after the final camera ready art was delivered. But other than that, it was printed as intended.

By the way, the seemingly nonsensical notes under the song titles, written in and around The Amazing Kornyfone Record Label ongoing mythology, do reference real places and real people. And do tell a little more about the album's creation. For example, the source for "Willin'" was supplied by someone who was, at the time, a Railroad Engineer. And the reference to Second Street was a reference to an actual Second Street and to actual people who gathered in various establishments along it to listen and, particularly, to dance to LITTLE FEAT. Girls dancing are, by definition, A Natural Wonder. And Girls dancing to LITTLE FEAT are far, far closer to Answered Prayers.

I hope this brings a little enlightenment about a few things. And, if nothing else, will answer the questions about the origin of the title once and for all. Thanks again for all of your kind words.

If It's Too Loud, You're Too Old.

Cheers,
THF"

Maresn3st, Saturday, 28 May 2022 12:16 (one year ago) link

'waiting for columbus' reissue w/three complete live shows...

https://store.rhino.com/waiting-for-columbus-8cd-7.html

Thus Sang Freud, Saturday, 28 May 2022 14:18 (one year ago) link

How much coke can you buy for $109.98

calstars, Saturday, 28 May 2022 19:45 (one year ago) link

one month passes...

Little Feat looks like the cast of a dramedy about the teachers at a boys school for the arts that aired for six episodes on CBS in 1987. pic.twitter.com/fGwp96uJPY

— Super 70s Sports (@Super70sSports) July 25, 2022

"Catch 'Hangin' On To The Good Times'...Friday Nights Before 'Dallas'!"

lol

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 08:26 (one year ago) link

special guest star this week: Meredith Baxter-Bierney

calstars, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 11:17 (one year ago) link


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