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Monday, 2 September 2024

"Dixie Chicken" by LITTLE FEAT – January 1973 US 3rd Studio Album on Warner Brothers (March 1973 in the UK) featuring Lowell George and Paul Barrere (Guitars and Lead Vocals), Bill Payne (Keyboards and Vocals), Kenny Gradney (Bass), Sam Clayton (Congas) and Richard Hayward (Drums and Vocals) with Guests Bonnie Bramlett, Bonnie Raitt, Gloria Jones, Stephanie Spurville, Debbie Lindsey, Trett Fure and Danny Hutton of Three Dog Night (Backing Singers), Milt Holland on Tablas, Malcolm Cecil of Tonto's Expanding Head Band on Synths and Fred Tackett (joined the band later) on Acoustic Guitar (June 2023 UK/EU Warner Records/Rhino 2CD Deluxe Edition with a New Remaster of the Album on CD1 and 16-Bonuses on CD2 – 12 of which are Previously Unreleased and the Remaining Four Period Rarities Previously Issued in 2000 and 2002 – Dan Hersch and Bill Inglot Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dixie-Chicken-Deluxe-Little-Feat/dp/B0C3GL8BVT?crid=3TA1QQO1Z3LJJ&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Mkrd2nuPQjWSrnHJvtZPWw.L_NAQFSbe_3FKRo73PC-ys9vNnT1JbNRTl9fSNFgo48&dib_tag=se&keywords=603497837465&qid=1725267724&sprefix=603497837465%2Caps%2C91&sr=8-1&linkCode=ll1&tag=mabasreofcdbl-21&linkId=b92095b1ddbde3d643a82ebef64394f7&language=en_GB&ref_=as_li_ss_tl

Presentation: *****
Remasters: *****
Extras: ****
Overall Rating: ****

"…And All The Boys There At The Bar…Began To Sing Along…"

Ever since "Dixie Chicken" appeared on digital as far back as 1987 (the American Funk-Rock band's third studio platter from early 1973 on Warner Brothers Records) - it has always felt like a sonic compromise.

The February 2014 Clamshell Box Set "Rad Gumbo: The Complete Warner Bros. Years 1971 to 1990" with its tasty 13CDs in Mini LP Artwork offered a decent version. But fans who had been treated to real Rhino Remasters on the "Hotcakes & Outtakes..." 4CD Book Set from Sep
tember 2000 (a full fourteen years earlier) knew there was room for better.

Well, at last, in June 2023, following on from the wonderful 2CD Deluxe Edition given to "Sailin' Shoes" in 2022 (50th Anniversary Version for their 1972 second platter) - we get the Remaster and market-accessible 2CD Deluxe Edition for their cracking third studio album "Dixie Chicken". The whole album has been upgraded audio-wise and finally boasting the sprinkle 'n spunk it has always deserved - and with very cool previously unreleased Alternate Versions on CD2 and an April 1973 US Radio Show that sees the six-piece band on fire - even if the audio is honestly only just above bootleg quality. 

I do want to be your Dixie Chicken and I long for your Tennessee Lamb. Lots to discuss, to the details…

UK/EU released 23 June 2023 - "Dixie Chicken" by LITTLE FEAT on Warner Records/Rhino R2 695370 – 603497837465 (Barcode 603497837465) is a 2CD Deluxe Edition Reissue and Remaster that plays out as follows:

CD1 "Dixie Chicken – 2023 Remaster" (36:39 minutes):
1. Dixie Chicken [Side 1]
2. Two Trains
3. Roll Um Easy
4. On Your Way Down
5. Kiss It Off
6. Fool Yourself [Side 2]
7. Walkin' All Night
8. Fat Man In The Bathtub
9. Juliette
10. Lafayette Railroad
Tracks 1 to 10 are their third studio album "Dixie Chicken" – released 25 January 1973 in the USA on Warner Brothers BS-2686 and March 1973 in the UK on Warner Brothers K 46200. Initially, British pressed LPs came in US artwork (BS-2686) with UK Catalogue Number Stickers pasted on the rear) and Green/Tan labels (reissued February 1975 in the UK on K 46200 but with a Burbank Label design without the Warner Bros Corp. logo). Produced by LOWELL GEORGE – did not chart in either country. 

LITTLE FEAT was:
LOWELL GEORGE – Guitars, Lead Vocals, Flute and Cowbells
PAUL BARRERE – Guitars and Lead Vocals
BILL PAYNE – Keyboards, Synths and Vocals
KENNY GRADNEY – Bass
SAM CLAYTON – Congas
RICHARD HAYWARD – Drums and Vocals

Guests:
Bonnie Bramlett, Debbie Lindsey, Trett Fure, Gloria Jones, Stephanie Spurville and Bonnie Raitt sang Backing Vocals
Danny Hutton of Three Dog Night sang Backing Vocals on "Roll Um Easy"
Milt Holland on Tablas
Malcolm Cecil of Tonto’s Expanding Head Band played and programmed Synths
Fred Tackett (later to join Little Feat) played Acoustic Guitar

CD2 "Hotcakes, Outtakes & Rarities" (68:55 minutes):
1. Two Trains (Demo)
2. Fat Man In The Bathtub (Demo)
3. Walkin' All Night (Alternate Version)
4. Roll Um Easy (Alternate Version)
5. On Your Way Down (Alternate Version)
6. Eldorado Slim
7. Juliette (Alternate Version)
8. Hi Roller (Ace In The Hole)
9. Dixie Chicken (Alternate Version)

ICEPICK ELDORADO:
Live at Paul's Mall, Boston, Massachusetts, 1 April 1973
10. Two Trains
11. Got No Shadow
12. On Your Way Down 
13. Walkin' All Night
14. Fat Man In The Bathtub
15. Willin'
16. A Apolitical Blues
NOTES on CD2:
Tracks 1, 6 and 8 originally issued September 2000 on the 4CD US and UK Book Set Compilation "Hotcakes & Outtakes" on Rhino/Warner Archives R2 79912
Track 2 is a 1972 Demo originally issued June 2002 in the USA on the 2CD Compilation "Raw Tomatos Vol One (Raw Recordings 1971-2001)" on Hot Tomato Records HTR 0203
Tracks 3, 4, 5, 7 and 9 to 16 are PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED. Tracks 3, 4, 5, 7 and 9 are outtakes from the "Dixie Chicken" sessions Recorded and Produced by Lowell George between October and December 1972 while Tracks 10 to 16 were recorded 1st of April 1973 for WBCN-FM in Boston – band was Lowell George, Bill Payne, Paul Barrere, Kenny Gradney, Sam Clayton, and Richie Hayward





With reputedly less than 60,000 LP sales in their native USA after its release in late January 1973 (their third studio flop, but first to gain that LF trademark Funk-Rock sound) – it appears the British side of Warner Brothers who put the "Dixie Chicken" LP out in March 1973 with little or no fanfare (US sleeves with British-pressed LPs) – didn't even bother trying an album teaser 45. In fact, Little Feat's first Blighty 45-single would only arrive in 1975 after August 1974's album number four - "Feats Don't Fail Me Now". In a back-dating exercise, Warners loaded up "Dixie Chicken" from 1973 on the A-side with a 1974 "Feats Don't Fail Me Now" song "Oh Atlanta" on the flip-side and put out Warner Brothers K 16524 on 28 February 1975. Perhaps the singalong nature of "Dixie Chicken" and the UK tour that saw Little Feat shine The Doobie Brothers off stage every night felt like a good time to plug the band in Britain - but again to little or no chart avail. 'Live' Little Feat were groundbreaking and unbeatable, 'studio-wise', punters were still struggling to get it. 

The 24-page booklet with a fantastically in-depth info-fest on 1972, the album's making, the post-1973 reception and aftermath is handled by DENNIS McNALLY. McNally quite rightly surmises that despite commercial failure everywhere it seems - "Feats Don't Fail Me Now" was so much more legacy-wise - because it signalled that Little Feat had found their sound – their groove as he puts it – a pre-Talking Heads Funky-Rock chug that persists to this day here in late 2024. 

Four full-page promo photos of the six-piece band pepper the text and card digipak while a further discussion takes place on Page 15 regarding Neon Parks and his signature LP artwork (the original painting used is on Page 16). Apparently, a working girl who was having it off with the band's Road Manager Ducka in an apartment just off Sunset where they were staying, was about to make too much noise during proceedings, so an Accordion was brought in to drown out the decibels – and such was a cover born. The lady is referred to as Linda and apparently the likeness is uncanny while her bracelets on both wrists in the painting may also have indicated something else used during the gigglesome rumpy-pumpy, but I'll let your imagination work that one out. From Pages 17 to 22 we get lyrics and full credits and the final rear page is a Master Tape box. 24-pages of sweetness and curated by people who care. 

DAN HERSCH and BILL INGLOT have been Remastering Warner Brothers, Atlantic and Elektra mastertapes for Rhino since before 1990 – over 35-years of Audio Transfer experience between them and straight up from Track 1 – you can hear it. The Bass, Slide Guitar, Piano plinking and Southern Belle slink-lyrics that open "Dixie Chicken" – the impact is fantastic. Give this even the slightest welly and the neighbours will be asking for an invite to the singalong party. Dig those ladies (Bonnie Bramlett and Bonnie Raitt walking together in Dixieland) but the credits still don’t advise who is playing the Harmonica. The Funk-Rock continues with another total winner – the Lowell George penned "Two Trains" – check out that great down-sliding guitar moment about 1:33 minutes in – oh so damn good (he would return to this song for his solo album in 1979 "Thanks, I'll Eat It Here" with even more what-it-is Funky results). As if the opening two weren't enough to secure the album's arrival, the gorgeous elegant-profanity ballad "Roll Um Easy" whomps with both melody and crystal-clear audio that is going to thrill newcomers. The liner notes advise that Danny Hutton of Three Dog Night had just come off tour and his voice was shredded – but George had him do the backing vocal anyway on "Roll Um Easy" precisely because of his ragged rasp. 

A huge slow keyboard-driven Funk then shuffles into your living room – sunrise and sunset – people flying high across town – Little Feat smartly covering an Allen Toussaint song "On Your Way Down". Meet up with those dudes as your whole being heads South. That guitar solo at about 2:40 minutes now has the power it has always craved – love "On Your Way Down" to bits and its very Dr. John voodoo-ambience is surely one of the greatest unsung cover versions ever in Rock (Toussaint would eventually tour with Little Feat as an opening act in the mid to late Seventies). Side 1 ends with one I'm sure fans return to as a deep album cut – the sinister milk-toasted ain't-no-peace synths of "Kiss it Off" programmed by Malcolm Cecil of Tonto's Expanding Head Band – a man that defined the Funk Sound on Stevie Wonder's "Innervisions" and "Fulfillingness' First Finale" in 1973 and 1974.

Side 2 goes more optimistic with its opener "Kiss It Off" – a song inspired by a photo of a 17-year-old Olivia Hussey in the film "Romeo And Juliet" – future bandmate Fred Tackett thought her angelic innocence so displayed in the photograph would not be long changing – hence the opening lyrics. Gorgeous audio too. Bill Payne takes Lead Vocals on "Walkin' All Night" alongside Paul Barrere – an obvious saucy love-letter to a side-street swinger that has both young men aeriated in all areas. There then follows a huge Feat fave amongst fans – the Lowell George self-deprecation anthem "Fat Man In The Bathtub" (look out Juanita). The Feat goes ever so slightly Prog and even Psych amidst the Funk with "Juliette" – George proving himself a deft-hand on Flute too. The album kind of peters out with the instrumental slink of "Lafayette Railroad" – a song you feel could have done with more work and even some cool lyrics. But at is – the bulk of "Dixie Chicken" has already woven its way into your heart. 

CD2 opens with two demos that first appeared in September 2000 on the stunning "Hotcakes & Outtakes..." 4CD Book Set - "Dixie Chicken" and "Two Trains". Sort of an audio set up with the good stuff first (to appease the iffy sounding live stuff later) – they make for a cool starter. Even stripped of instruments, the very basic beat-box Demo of "Dixie Chicken" has that killer melody aligned with those witty and knowing lyrics – so it was a winner even in embryo form. But then the real meat and potatoes pop up – five Alternate Versions sided by the outtakes "Eldorado Slim" and "Hi Roller (Ace In The Hole)". The "Roll Um Easy" outtake plays to 2:36 minutes and is lovely but missing the album polish – those guitar add-ons that lifted it up to where it needed to be. Not for the first time on CD2 does the Allen Toussaint cover version offer up Little Feat at their storming Funky-Rock best – the "On Your Way Down" Alternate Version runs to 5:56 minutes while the Live Cut might as well have been written for them – albeit let down by OK-sound. The Alternate of "Dixie Chicken" is very good but you can tell it’s a work-in-progress – again like "Roll Um Easy" needing those extra embellishments the final album version gave this great song. 

The Live Set is clearly in front of a small but highly enthusiastic audience and while the band are cooking – wowing them with hip-swaying Funk-Rock and not just heavy riffage – it is clear why this was not used before – the audio is a notch above bootleg – and in some passages – a notch or two below it. But even with compromised at times muddy audio – when they switch from "Got No Shadow" to "On Your Way Down" – I swear I can hear the audience and their palpable excitement at this new sound – a Rock Band with Funk and Wit and players firing on newly found all-sixes. The acoustic "Willin'" is lovely, but it ends on the odd stop-start syncopation of "A Apolitical Blues". CD2 is fab and disappointing at one and the same time, but you also feel that this is a great band emerging from the shadows and some lucky buggers were there in the mall in April 1973 to hear it. 

14 June 2024 saw the 3CD Deluxe Edition of album number four from 1974 - "Feats Don't Fail Me Now" – and again to huge acclaim. 2025 will undoubtedly see "The Last Record Album" from 1975 receive a similar 50th Anniversary blast and "Time Loves A Hero" from 1977 get one too in 2027. Alongside the magnificent "Waiting For Columbus" live box set of 2022 with its 8CDs of primo Little Feat on tour – you have to say that Rhino and Warner Brothers are keeping the faithful happy and their bank accounts worried. 

Would we want it any other way – Brill and then some. Recommended…

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