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"...Turned From The Sun...Saw Everyone...Searching..."
With
two hugely influential albums already under their belt (1968's "Music From
Big Pink" and 1969's "The Band") – it was time for Americana's
pioneers to let the side down.
Some
felt they did with "Stage Fright". I didn't. I've always loved this
album. In fact it's quite probably biblically blasphemous and goat-sacrificial
to say that studio platter number three for THE BAND is 'better' in places than
its illustrious predecessors. But as Californication's Hank Moody would say to
his agent Charlie the Runkalator as they hide even more scantily clad skanky
hookers and a blizzard of cocaine from their long-suffering wives - "...I'm going
to rock out with my cock out..."
Again - I love this album and this sweet-sounding 2000 CD Remaster only hammers that affection home all of 47 years later. Here are the details and The Shape It's In...
Again - I love this album and this sweet-sounding 2000 CD Remaster only hammers that affection home all of 47 years later. Here are the details and The Shape It's In...
UK
released September 2000 (August 2000 in the USA) - "Stage Fright" by
THE BAND on Capitol 525 3952 (Barcode 724352539529) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD
Remaster with Four Bonus Tracks and breaks down as follows (71:57 minutes):
1.
Strawberry Wine
2.
Sleeping
3.
Time To Kill
4.
Just Another Whistle Stop
5.
All La Glory
6.
The Shape I'm In [Side 2]
7.
The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
8.
Daniel And The Sacred Harp
9.
Stage Fright
10.
The Rumor
Tracks
1 to 10 are their 3rd studio album "Stage Fright" - released August
1970 in the USA on Capitol Records SW-425 and October 1970 in the UK on Capitol
Records EA-SW 425. Produced by DICK HIRTHE and Engineered by TODD RUNDGREN - it
peaked at No. 5 in the USA and No. 15 in the UK LP charts.
BONUS
TRACKS:
11.
Daniel And The Sacred Harp (Alternate Take)
12.
Time To Kill (Alternate Take)
13.
The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show (Alternate Mix)
14.
Radio Commercial
THE
BAND was:
ROBBIE
ROBERTSON – Guitars and Vocals
RICHARD
MANUEL - Vocals, Piano, Drums, Baritone Sax & Mouth Harp
GARTH
HUDSON – Keyboards and Saxophones
RICK
DANKO - Vocals, Bass, Violin & Trombone
LEVON
HELM - Vocals, Drums, Mandolin & Guitar
Compiled
for CD by Cheryl Pawelski and Andrew Sandoval - the 16-page booklet has
fantastically comprehensive liner notes by ROB BOWMAN that feature interviews
stretching back twelve years (from 2000), repros of the American Promo 45 for
"Time To Kill" and "The Shape I'm In" on Capitol P-2870 as
well as two photos of The Band on sofas (one at outtake from the LP shoot).
There is discussion on Todd Rundgren's pivotal role as Producer giving the LP
the polish their 2nd album "The Band" lacked in 1969. Both Glyn Johns
and Rundgren mixed the record and this CD offers the album as it was meant to
be – differing from the original Remaster by Capitol in 1990 and the subsequent
audiophile issue by DCC in 1994. The new 24-bit remaster by ANDREW SANDOVAL and
RON McMASTER gives the album the oomph it's needed. It's a triumph to my ears.
Let's get to the music...
"Stage
Fright" is a group dealing with and being cudgelled by fame. Recording in
June 1970 over only two weeks – the ramshackle looseness (musicians and like
minds enjoying themselves) that so warmed up the first two albums was already
gone. Some felt the overall LP cold and dark and too bleakly personal in places
– and it was short too at 35 odd minutes. But the music for me is key. It opens
with "Strawberry Wine" by Levon Helm and Robbie Robertson – a
rollicking accordion song about drinking with lyrics about never getting any
peace of mine (climbing up the walls and laughing in the dark).
"Sleeping" is sad for sure - but it’s beautiful too and the remaster
has accentuated that lovely piano and Robertson's distant thinny guitar parts
(lyrics from it title this review).
Things
slide slightly with Robertson's "Time To Kill" - it's good but its
also throwaway for me and the happy-wappy vibe Danko and Manuel try to vocally
create feels forced. Nice axe work from Robbie on "Just Another Whistle
Stop" and the bass on "All La Glory" is so damn clear now - a
hymn from Robbie Robertson to his newly born daughter sung by Levon in that
utterly unique voice of his (love that keyboard break - so subtle and pretty).
"All La Glory" ends Side 1 on a high.
As
I recall the 16-days in the jailhouse tale of monetary woe that is "The
Shape I'm In" was relegated to the B-side of "Time To Kill" in
the States (October 1970) - when I can't help feeling it was an obvious A with
its pounding keyboard funk. In March 1971 the British side of Capitol got it
right and issued "The Shape I'm In" with "The Rumor" as its
flipside on Capitol CL 15675 - not that the public noticed. "The W.S.
Walcott Medicine Show" was the kind of tune that would have sounded fresh
on "Music From Big Pink" - here for some reason it feels old already.
Better is "Daniel And The Sacred Harp" - a religious procession song
sung as if its a love song to some in the Old Testament. There's beautiful
sound on it - those slides and strummed acoustic. The album's title track
"Stage Fright" remained a live staple for the band for years -
culminating in 1979's "The Last Waltz" where it seemed to come into
its own. Although some think it a downer - I've always found the very
Harvest-sounding "The Rumor" to be a huge grower - that piano and
guitar duetting and the vocals. And you can so hear today's Americana seeping
out its every pore...
"...Should
I come in there...with that back beat..." - the boys joke in some studio
banter after a false start. Amidst the bonus tracks is a thrill for Band fans -
an Alternate Mix of one of the album's strong points "Daniel And The
Sacred Heart". The audio is gorgeous - clear Bass and Acoustic Guitar -
less clutter than the finished version. I might actually prefer the new
Alternate Mix to "Time To Kill" to the released version - and again
on here with fabulous audio. Great guitar opens "The W.S. Walcott Medicine
Show" where the Alternate has more pronounced vocals and brass - and the
one-minute po-faced sounding "Radio Commercial" uses snippets from "Stage
Fright", "Strawberry Wine" and "The Shape I'm In" to
sell 'the third album from The Band on Capitol'...
I
know some see it as a four-star record but with that renewed audio and those
genuinely cool extras - "Stage Fright" is one of those occasions
where you don't have to pay through the CD nose to get that great combo of top
music, quality sound and a cheap price (their first two album outings are the
same and mots are online for less than a fiver).
"...The
storm is past...there's peace at last..." – Richard Manuel sang on the
many mood shades of "Sleeping" – lost in his music – lost in the
game. Lost or not - I've so enjoyed joining him there once again...