A.O.O.F.C
recommends
Mizar6

babydancing




Get this crazy baby off my head!

6.3.10

Little Feat




Little Feat - Live From The Ram’s Head - 2002 - Hot Tomato

Little Feat are now releasing top quality 'live' archival material on their own Hot Tomato label (look out for 2002 double albums Ripe Tomatoes and Raw Tomatoes) . It's a clever move and a good deal. Little Feat fans have been taping and trading Feat stuff for years with approval of the Feat themselves, on the understanding that if a legal release is available, the trading of that gig's bootleg ceases! And it does - Feat fans are a loyal and knowledgeable lot with a hunger for anything with the Feat imprint. Maybe that's why, with this album, there are only the briefest of liner notes. The latest Hot Tomato offering is a double album, recorded at the Rams Head, Annapolis, USA. It's the full band's first semi-acoustic live recording. 'Acoustic' they call it but that's not a synonym for 'sensitive' - there's nearly two and a half hours of their southern rock 'n' boogie, driven by that powerhouse rhythm section Ken Gradney, Sam Clayton, Richie Hayward). Add the keyboards of Bill Payne, guitars and mandolin of Paul Barrere and Fred Tackett and rich bluesy vocals (and tambourine) of Shaun Murphy and you've got musical dynamite guaranteed to blow your hat off. The Feat have always been comfortable with their entire 30-year back-catalogue and easily change their set list each night of a tour. So it's some old favourites (Rocket in my pocket, Honest Man, Oh Atlanta, Easy to slip, Willin', Spanish moon, Feats don't fail me now) interspersed with later material for the Rams Head set - featuring brilliant solos, so-smooth segues and extended jams with the band musically tight and together as a high-performance racer. Although it can't compare to possibly the best live albums ever, Little Feat's 1978's Waiting For Columbus or 1996's Live From Neon Park, it's a testament to a great hard-working band who give their 'all' at every performance. There will always be those who said 'goodbye' to the band when Lowell George died in 1979 but there are just as many who relish its tireless continuation. God bless'em! Sue Cavendish http://www.netrhythms.co.uk/reviewsl.html#littlefeat

"Live From The Ram’s Head" is a 21 track collection by Little Feat, recorded from six shows played in three nights at the 200-seat Rams Head club in Annapolis, Maryland, in May 2001. This Little Feat line-up features original members Richie Hayward and Bill Payne plus other longstanding band members, including vocalist, Shaun Murphy who joined LF in 1995. The Rams Head gigs are called "an acoustic evening with Little Feat," which would suit a 200-seater venue appropriate to the tiny venue. However the album is not strictly an "unplugged" recording. The guitarists played acoustic instruments, but Bill Payne played an electric synth. Little Feat used similar instrumental set-ups for concerts in far bigger venues during the late nineties and early 2000's. There has been some strong criticism of the album, relating to no new material being played, and also the fact that LF played the old tracks, especially "Willin'" in an "uninterested" and lacklustre fashion. The truth behind many of these "criticisms" is that there are still many people who still cannot accept Little Feat without the great Lowell George who died in 1979. Little Feat's music was given a brilliant description by one reviewer, who called it "a freewheeling fusion of California rock and Dixie-inflected funk-boogie. In the mix as well are strains of folk, blues, rockabilly, country and jazz, inventing a hybrid sound that is truly Little Feat’s own". Little Feat have produced some of the greatest rock music of the last forty years, and "Live From The Ram’s Head" is a wonderful example of the staying power, and talent of this great band who have undergone countless personnel changes over the last five decades. There is a great cross section here of LF's unique music, and the band can still "pull out all the stops". LFTRH is HR by A.O.O.F.C. There is an unofficial recording available, entitled "Little Feat Live at Rams Head Tavern on 2009-05-25", but it is a soundboard recording, and audio quality is only average. Listen to Little Feat's sublime "The Last Record Album" album. It is more jazz orientated than any other LF album, but it is a masterpiece of rock music. Listen to the Little Feat Jukebox @ http://www.littlefeat.net/index.php?page=audio You can find out everything about this great band @ http://www.littlefeat.net/

"Onomatopoetry symmetry in motion. They heard about that girl clear across the ocean. To love her is a thrill, so tell me it's for real. She'll break away and leave you crying at some stop sign, down below the borderline" - From Little Feat's "Down Below The Borderline", written by Lowell George, from the band's stupendous recording, "The Last Record Album".



TRACKS / COMPOSERS

CD 1

1."Hate to Lose Your Lovin'" (Barrère, Fuller) – 4:35
2."Rocket in My Pocket" (George) – 7:13
3."Honest Man" (George, Tackett) – 6:49
4."Oh Atlanta" (Payne) – 7:30
5."Calling the Children Home" (Barrère, Payne, Tackett) – 8:46
6."Rag Mama Rag" (J. R. Robertson) – 6:50
7."Shake Me Up" (Barrère, Fuller, Kibbee, Payne) – 4:44
8."Easy to Slip/I Know You Rider" (George, Martin, Traditional) – 8:01
9."Bed of Roses" (Murphy, Payne) – 4:52
10."One Clear Moment" (Barrère, Fuller, Payne) – 4:48
11."Willin'" (George) – 6:15

CD 2

1."Gringo" (Payne) – 8:35
2."Cajun Rage" (Barrère, Kibbee, Wray) – 6:20
3."Cadillac Hotel" (Payne, Wray) – 6:33
4."Spanish Moon" (George) – 8:36
5."Skin It Back" (Barrère) – 7:34
6."Hoy Hoy" (Barrère, Murphy, Payne, Tackett) – 5:32
7."Let It Roll" (Barrère, Payne) – 10:00
8."On Your Way Down" (Toussaint) – 8:18
9."Cajun Girl" (Payne) – 7:29
10."Feats Don't Fail Me Now" (George, Martin) – 5:04

MUSICIANS

Paul Barrère - guitar, vocals
Sam Clayton - percussion, vocals
Kenny Gradney - bass, vocals
Richard Hayward - drums, vocals
Shaun Murphy - vocals, percussion
Bill Payne - keyboards, vocals
Fred Tackett - guitar, mandolin, trumpet, vocals
Ron Holloway (Special guest) - tenor saxophone on "Feats Don't Fail Me Now"

BIO

In his preface to a recent Little Feat retrospective compilation, the band’s Paul Barrere wrote, ”It’s almost 33 years ago exactly since Mr. [Lowell] George came to the front door of the Laurel Canyon house I was livin’ in, with that beautiful white ”p“ bass in hand, and asked if I wanted to try out as bass player for his new band. As most who know the story’s end can tell you, as a bassist I make an excellent guitarist, and 3 years later-- when I finally began my stint in Little Feat-- I would never have guessed that I would be here writing these liner notes to yet another chapter in the now storied life of a band that has been my life, and a true labor of love.“ Truth is, there really is no story’s end yet, and Little Feat have indeed led a storied life ever since they formed in 1969. From then on, their unconventional signature of earthy, organic appeal and polished, first-rate musicianship wrapped around eclectic and memorable songs--clearly delivered as an authentic labor of love--has been a lasting fixture on the musical landscape. As American as apple pie--and rock ‘n roll itself--Feat’s music transcends boundaries, a freewheeling fusion of California rock and Dixie-inflected funk-boogie. In the mix as well are strains of folk, blues, rockabilly, country and jazz, inventing a hybrid sound that is truly Little Feat’s own. That story is about to add a major new chapter – the 2008 release of Join the Band, a very special project in Feat’s history. Keyboardist Bill Payne came up with the idea of a CD that included many things, but featured major Little Feat hit songs as played by a band that included Feat and some very special friends. When you have friends like Jimmy Buffett, Dave Matthews, Emmylou Harris, Bob Seger, Bela Fleck, Brooks and Dunn, Chris Robinson (Black Crowes), Vince Gill, Mike Gordon (Phish), and Inara George (band founder Lowell’s daughter) – you have musical treasure in your hands. Join the Band is going to make some noise. Easily one of the hardest working bands in show biz, today’s Little Feat is a seven-member powerhouse that ably carries on the group’s tradition in both the recording and touring arenas. Their most recent studio album is Kickin’ It At The Barn, produced by Feat-ers Paul Barrere, Bill Payne and Fred Tackett. It’s named after the place it was recorded throughout 2003, Tackett’s barn-come-studio in Topanga Canyon, which Bill Payne has called ”Little Feat’s version of The Band’s ‘Big Pink’,“ and which lent an invaluable ambience to the undertaking. In his liner notes, faithful Feat scribe Paul Barrere writes, ”If music is a conversation between the players, then we are talking like never before…this has been truly one of the most memorable recording projects we’ve done. We started with an idea to write songs on acoustic guitar and piano, like the old days before computers and samples, and then let the band interpret the music.“ Feat’s story began in 1969 when songwriter, performer, multi-instrumentalist, and all around colorful character Lowell George, formerly of Frank Zappa’s Mothers of Invention, set out to form his own band -- at Zappa’s suggestion. The brilliant and often idiosyncratic George connected with keyboard master Bill Payne, and, along with drummer Richie Hayward and Roy Estrada, founded Little Feat. They were soon signed to Warner Bros., where Little Feat, in various configurations, would remain for twelve of their sixteen albums. This initial line-up recorded the band’s first two LPs--their rootsy, 1971 self-titled debut, featuring the classic cut ”Willin,“ and its follow-up, Sailin’ Shoes, which added ”Easy To Slip,“ ”Trouble,“ ”Tripe Face Boogie,“ ”Cold Cold Cold“ and the infectious title track to their repertoire. Upon Estrada’s departure in 1972, Paul Barrere, Sam Clayton and Kenny Gradney (all still in Feat today) signed on, and the rest, as they say, is history…and many more great albums. Next up was Dixie Chicken (’73), a New Orleans-influenced gumbo of greatness that offered up the signature title track and ”Fat Man In The Bathtub,“ among other delights. The two LPs that followed, Feats Don’t Fail Me Now (’74) and The Last Record Album (’75) served up ”Rock & Roll Doctor,“ ”Oh, Atlanta,“ and ”All That You Dream,“ respectively, while 1977’s Time Loves a Hero offered up, in fine Feats fashion, another unforgettable title track. That same year delivered the aforementioned Waiting For Columbus, forever memorializing their legendary stage prowess. During Little Feat’s recording of their eighth album as a group, 1979’s Down On The Farm, founding member Lowell George—who had already been veering towards solo work-- met a tragic and untimely passing. Except for Hoy, Hoy, a 1981 full-length assemblage of rarities, live performances, previously overlooked tracks, and a new song apiece from Payne and Barrere, Little Feat disbanded until the mid-‘80s. At that point, their own lyrics from ”Hangin’ On To The Good Times Here,“ ”…although we went our own ways, we couldn’t escape from where we came, so we find ourselves back at the table again, telling stories of survivors and friends,“ proved very telling. Barrere and Payne remember that a chance jam session in 1986 brought them together again, when they were reminded of how deeply Little Feat’s music was ingrained in them. In 1988, the reformed band—with new members Craig Fuller (handling George’s vocal duties) and Fred Tackett--rekindled Feat’s magic for fans old and new alike. That year, they released the lively reunion album Let It Roll, and the singles ”Hate To Lose Your Lovin’,“ and, of course, the title track. The 1989 follow-up, Representing The Mambo, would prove to be their last for Warner Bros. Next came 1991’s Shake Me Up (on Morgan Creek), after which Fuller departed the band. Little Feat added a new lead singer, Shaun Murphy, in 1993, and released an acclaimed studio album, Ain’t Had Enough Fun in 1995 (this time on Zoo). Shaun was with Little Feat from 1993 to 2009. Shaun’s feminine energy and powerful, seasoned, bluesy vocalizations certainly upped the fun quotient for a recharged Little Feat. This incarnation of the band was captured live to great effect on ‘96’s Live From Neon Park, a two-CD set culling performances from multiple concert venues including San Francisco’s fabled Fillmore Auditorium, Portland, Oregon’s Roseland Ballroom, and House of Blues Sunset Strip. Named after the renowned album cover artist whose striking images gracing Little Feat’s releases was a time-honored tradition (until his death from ALS in 1993), this live-fest featured all the band’s best-loved songs as well as their contemporary material. The collection proved how vital they remained after all the changes time had wrought. In 1998, Little Feat released Under The Radar, their first album on CMC International. Spotlighting a confident and well-oiled configuration of first-rate talents, Under The Radar delivered a consistently strong set of songs including new Feat favorites ”Home Ground,“ ”Eden’s Wall,“ and ”Calling The Children Home.“ With 2000’s Chinese Work Songs, also on CMC, Little Feat’s ever-evolving repertoire grew even more, featuring original compositions including ”Marginal Creatures,“ ”Eula,“ and ”Another Sunday,“ as well as vibrant covers of Bob Dylan, The Band and Phish songs. Released in October 2003, Kickin’ It At The Barn adds to the ever-growing repertoire on the band’s very own Hot Tomato Records. ”It’s something we’ve talked about doing for a long time,“ says founding Feat-er Payne of launching the label, adding, ”it gives us the chance to do what we want, and it’s there for everybody in the band… and when it’s really up and running, for other artists too.“ In a perfect synergy of saluting their vibrant past and christening the untold future, Hot Tomato kicked-off in June ’02 with the inaugural releases Raw Tomatos and Ripe Tomatos, each a double-CD collection of live rarities spanning over three decades. Tracks were culled from a wealth of tapes amassed over the years from both fans and band sources alike, with each collection boasting well over two hours of music—they are only the first in what promises to be a Hot Tomato tradition of creatively mining the band’s inexhaustible archives. Other Hot Tomato releases include the 2002 two-CD set Live From The Ram’s Head, capturing a 2001 acoustic show recorded in Annapolis, MD, and ‘03’s Down Upon The Suwannee, a live recording captured at the Magnolia Festival in Live Oak, Florida. The title, which is also a tip of the hat to Stephen Foster, refers to the Suwannee River, which flows through the concert site. Fred Tackett’s solo album In A Town Like This came out in 2003 as well, and plans are in the works to release discs from various band members in the future, including a second Paul Barrere/Fred Tackett album, among other projects. Bill Payne finally got on the solo bandwagon with 2004’s Cielo Norte (Northern Sky), a marriage of the various types of keyboard, from synthesizers to acoustic piano, that is at times atmospheric, impassioned, and lyrical, and always intimate. Any CD that takes its inspiration from Yo Yo Ma,, Bill Evans, and John Fahey covers an elegant span of musical territory. Yet another present day acknowledgement of Little Feat’s rich legacy is Rhino’s deluxe 25th anniversary edition of the band’s monumental concert LP Waiting for Columbus, released in 2002 as an expanded two-CD set with extensive new liner notes and rare photos. When it first came out in 1977, Waiting For Columbus instantly became one of the all-time great live rock ‘n roll albums, serving up bringin’-down-the-house versions of a host of Feat favorites including ”Dixie Chicken,“ ”Fat Man In the Bathtub,“ ”Time Loves A Hero,“ ”Sailin’ Shoes,“ ”Oh Atlanta,“ and ”Willin’.“ The new package restores the full 17-song sequence of the original concert, and adds seven previously unreleased outtakes. In October 2002, Little Feat commemorated Rhino’s re-release--and the unforgettable musical event that inspired it-- with a benefit concert at Washington, D.C.’s Lisner Auditorium, one of the two venues where Waiting For Columbus was recorded. An all-star guest line-up including Jackson Browne, Stephen Bruton, Joe Ely, Bela Fleck, Levon Helm, Sonny Landreth, and Billy Bob Thornton helped the band celebrate. Rhino/Warner Bros. also saluted Little Feat’s accumulated musical history with the comprehensive retrospective Hotcakes & Outtakes: 30 Years of Little Feat, a project initiated and co-produced by Bill Payne and Paul Barrere. Released in 2000, the deluxe 4-CD, 83-track boxed set features hits from all of Little Feat’s classic albums as well as fan favorites, alternate takes and hand-picked rarities from the band’s eventful past. Time has loved these musical heroes for more than three decades now, as have legions of fans and countless fellow musicians, many of whom they’ve played with over the years. Feat’s fabled collaborators have included Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Beck, Brian Wilson, Bonnie Raitt, Robert Plant, John Lee Hooker, Johnny Lang, and Leftover Salmon (for whom Bill Payne recently produced an album). With the success of Hot Tomato Records, an endeavor powered by an inspired band of musicians continuing to create exciting new material both individually and as a group, Little Feat will no doubt be sailin’ into the future with no end in sight. [Website content © Little Feat © http://www.littlefeat.net/index.php?page=history

7 comments:

stompkins said...

Thanks for all your posts. Any chance of reposting this one?
Will you be loading some of the others, like raw tomatos, ripe tomatos, Down upon the suwanee river, or the barnstormin volumes?

stompkins said...

Thanks for all your work!!

Are you able to repost this?

Will you be posting Raw tomatos, Ripe tomatos, Down upon the suwannee river, or the Barnstormin' volumes?

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hi,stompkins. I'll repost Ram's Head album within 4 days. Not possible to post the others. Thanks for comment/request. Check back soon

A.O.O.F.C said...

LINK Pt 1
LINK Pt 2

p/w if needed is

aoofc

bullfrog said...

hi, a.o.o.f.c., Bullfrog's back, healthy and well, after a long time. Pay-back time is coming for all those years we lived at maximum speed, thinking nothing can happen to us. But the demon is beaten back. A friend of mine. Walter is starting now his fight, i wish him all the luck and courage. Oh boy, how i missed this blog the last (lost) monthes. Thanks a lot mate. you're doing a hell of a job. Respect from Bullfrog.

bullfrog said...

Hi, A.O.O.F.C., Bullfrog's back, healthy and well, at least for the moment. Pay-back time is coming for all those years we lived on maximum speed, thinking nothing can happen to us. But the demon is beaten back. A friend of mine, Walter is starting his fight now, i wish him all the luck and courage, he will need it. Oh boy, how i missed this blog the last (lost) monthes. Thanks a lot mate, you're doing a hell of a job, it makes life worth living. greets from Bullfrog. See you.

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hi,bullfrog. Great to hear from you. I hope all is on the up for you, and Walter. Life in the fast lane can mean a big speeding fine! Thanks a million, & TTU soon....P