Bill Payne's "Oh Atlanta!" and Paul Barrere's "Skin it Back" are two more brilliant rockers that repay multiple hearings. Listen for the combination of surprise and inevitability in the chord changes alone, for example. Of course, the band's performance on these songs (and the rest of the album) deserves close listening as well. Every member of this group had his own style and yet knew how to make it work for the collective. The great bassist Kenny Gradney, in discussing this quality, once called Little Feat a "baseball team band". To which I would add that there aren't many groups, to this day, that could go nine innings with them.
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Little Feat's "Feats Don't Fail Me Now" (1974) may have the strongest opening three songs I've heard on any album, and the coolest thing is that each one was written by a different member of the band. "Rock and Roll Doctor", co-written by Lowell George and Fred Martin, is astonishing in its complexity. Its form, rhythms and harmonic content are all at very high levels of sophistication - the song quite literally doesn't repeat itself in any way, and yet it remains a unified, coherent whole. My theory on what George was trying to achieve with the piece is that he wanted to show that rock and roll can be as multi-faceted as jazz, classical or any other type of music - and it makes you want to dance on top of it. He might as well have been writing about himself when he wrote: "Two degrees in bebop/ A Ph.D. in swing/ He's a master of rhythm/ He's a rock and roll king."
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