Takes one to know one
I find what one artist has to say about another fascinating. Here's what Eric Clapton has to say about one such:
"I met the genius of that outfit, who was Richard Manuel. He was as close to genius as I've ever met in a white guy---all the other geniuses I've met have been black Blues players, like B.B. and Buddy Guy. The reason I say they're geniuses is that they do what they do effortlessly with a gift that is so powerful that they don't need to engage in any kind of thinking to pursue it."
I would add Levon Helm, Rick Danko, Garth Hudson, and even Robbie Robertson (somewhat begrudgingly ;-), the other members of The Band, to the list of geniuses. There has never been, and never again will be, a Group containing so much talent. I listen to their music every single day of my life, and have done so for years. Their debut and second album are in my Top 10 albums of all-time list. Both are available on LP and SACD from Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs. Ignore them at the cost of your own musical wealth!
@2channel8, I saw Carney when it was in the theaters, and thought Robbie did pretty good. Levon appeared in a number of movies, doing a fine job in Coal Miner's Daughter (playing Loretta Lynn's daddy) and The Right Stuff (playing the plane maintenance man, who offers Sam Shepard a piece of gum), both really good movies. Carny was not so hot. |
All of the good info (and subjective analysis) on this thread has got me digging through my vinyl this weekend. I have no Band stuff on CD and Youtube ain't cutting it. I found Stage Fright, Cahoots, Big Pink and Rock of Ages, but no BROWN ONE! I thought I had one in decent shape, but it's awol. And Big Pink has a lot of surface noise. I may have to look into the SACDs since somebody up there was raving about them. Meanwhile, I found a mint Basement Tapes and I'm spinning that. |
I still love Stagefright but it is a slightly flawed album with some wonderful songs(All the Glory for instance) and some less so. I've lifted an article some of you may have read and some may not have. Cheers. The Band delivered a classic with their self-titled second album in 1969 — but almost as quickly as they found their groove, they started falling apart. The fissures in the Band were evident with their third record, Stage Fright. Released Aug. 17, 1970, it retained the rough-hewn sound of its predecessor while continuing to highlight the group's virtuosity — each member played at least two instruments on the album — and adding a bit more of a rock feel than they had on The Band. But it was hard to miss the sense of darkness that loomed over the record as a whole — and hard not to miss the once-plentiful vocal harmonies that seemed to be less of a focus in the new songs' arrangements. Part of the change might have been a function of time, or lack thereof. As drummer Levon Helm explained to Hit Parader, their relatively leisurely pace while recording The Band may have produced a more fully realized album, but it also left a painful financial sting. "When you've had two records and you still can't pay your bills...you get to figure something ain't quite right," he pointed out. "Doing it the other way costs so much money." To avoid ending up in the hole again, the group decided to record their next album at the intimate Woodstock Playhouse in upstate New York. Initial plans called for it to be tracked as a true live album, in front of an audience, but as soon as word got out that the Band would be putting on an exclusive show, demand for tickets so far exceeded supply that they decided to do it in front of an empty theater. While plans for Stage Fright were coming together, the bonds between the Band members were being tested by a number of complicating factors, including the growing issue of songwriting credits. In his memoir This Wheel's on Fire, Helm recalls being shocked by the liner notes of The Band, realizing that guitarist Robbie Robertson had claimed sole authorship of most of the record — and although Helm admitted to being assuaged by assurances that the royalty imbalance would all be taken care of in the end, the creative tension in the group would only worsen over time. "The level of the group's collaboration declined," Helm observed, "and our creative process was severely disrupted. [...] Who wanted to pour out their souls and not get credit? [Richard Manuel] stopped writing completely after awhile, and I don't think [Garth Hudson] got much credit at all until some of the final records." But even if creative issues hadn't eroded the Band's camaraderie, there's a good chance they still might have been undone by a far less obvious culprit: their own sudden success. After spending years backing up Ronnie Hawkins and Bob Dylan, they hit the Top 30 with their 1968 debut, Music From Big Pink, and then leapfrogged into the Top 10 with The Band. Their lives — and their habits — quickly changed. "If you’ve never made a million dollars overnight, like we did, you have no concept of what it can do. We saw it ruin people — kill them! Suddenly we had all the money we needed, and people were falling over themselves to make us happy, which meant giving us all the dope we could stand," recalled Rick Danko in This Wheel's On Fire. "People wanted to turn us on for free, do us favors, and some of us were happy to be taken care of like that. There wasn’t anything real dramatic about it, because it was a fact of life, and probably still is. I’m here to tell you that it’s a crying shame to see what success can do to some people. I’m sure it wasn’t the best thing that could have happened to the band." "Mentally, healthwise, success was not the best thing for the Band," Robertson told Musician. "It confused people. It brought out where people were striving or pushing. The inspirational factor had been dampened, tampered with in a certain kind of way. The curiosity wasn't as strong. We didn't compensate for it, we didn't try. We just did what we did and, rather than it being a consistent thing for a period or something, it was not the center anymore." "The drugs were just part of the dark mood that settled upon us," countered Helm. "There were also the issues of artistic control of the Band the direction we were going in — if any." Compounding all these issues was the pressing need for product. Per the usual custom of the day, Stage Fright arrived hot on the heels of The Band — less than a year after its predecessor. Even taking into account its purposely abbreviated recording time, Fright was a record that Helm, for one, believed would have benefited from more time. Perhaps as an indication of its speedy gestation, the album was actually give a pair of parallel mixes — one by Glyn Johns, whose work made the final cut, and one by a young Todd Rundgren. Stage Fright wasn't critically savaged, but the reviews weren't as overflowing with praise as they'd been for The Band. "Glory is the operative word at this stage of the game," wrote John Burks for Rolling Stone. "What this third Band record seems to lack is the glory of the first two." That lukewarm response didn't deter fans, however; even without a strong single to propel sales, Fright peaked at a career-best No. 5 and went gold. The record's success couldn't salve the fractures between the members of the Band, however, and subsequent efforts found their creative dynamic slowly leaking out as they retreated to separate spheres — a state summed up by the title of their final studio effort, 1977's contract-fulfilling Islands. While they'd only improve as a live act over the decade to follow — achieving a transcendency later captured in The Last Waltz — Stage Fright sounded a warning that no one in the group was able or willing to heed. "It was a dark album," Helm observed in his book. "And an accurate reflection of our group's collective psychic weather. ... We all realized something was wrong, that things were beginning to slide." |
bdp24, that night Rick sang Buddy Holly’s "Raining in My Heart" and another tune which I don’t remember. There’s a good recording of him doing RIMH with Ringo’s All-Starr Band. I prefer his cover to Buddy’s original. +1 for the Band’s album of covers, Moondog Matinee. Great selection of songs and they are done very well. I’ve heard some outtakes that weren’t nearly as good, so they obviously made the right choices there. |
Great post, @tostadosunidos. I met Levon only once, at his book signing. He was the last man on Earth who would have "gotten above his raisin'". I saw him with his own band at The House Of Blues after his throat surgery (for the cancer---he was a heavy smoker---which eventually killed him), unable to sing. He had his daughter on stage with him, and she's a fine singer herself. You got to play with Rick Danko! I'm green with envy. There is a girl doing a "Friends Of Rick Danko" Facebook page, and a guy doing one for Richard. They both are posting all kinds of pictures and videos, really cool stuff. |
The first two albums are fantastic as are select songs from the later releases. Great art transports you to places you could not otherwise go to and that’s what so many of their songs do. MFBP and "the Band" LP’s are high on my list of all-time greatest releases. Squabbles about band members not getting paid for their contributions are common. Think about how much of the "Kind of Blue" album has nothing to do with Miles’ original tunes--but that’s the way it is and always has been. Legally the music is the melody and lyric, when there is one. Not the arrangement. I had heard some in the Band were unhappy that Robbie would listen to Levon’s dad’s stories and weave them into songs. Well, that’s what writers do. Robbie sat down and did the work, not the other guys. How much they contributed beyond their parts I do not know. I know that people in the studio sometimes contributed a line or two, uncredited to Beatles tunes. Mal Evans co-wrote some of the McCartney tunes on Sgt. Pepper’s and never received credit or royalties. Anyway, the guy who actually writes the melody and lyric gets the bread. Period. I wish the Band could have maintained the magic of the first two albums but it was not to be. I was fortunate enough to meet Richard once and Rick twice in later years and even got to play a couple of tunes behind Rick in a club (he sat in with our band). It’s a shame they left us too soon. I did see/hear Levon on his last tour and marveled at how strong a drummer he still was (in his 70’s). What a great voice and spirit he had. Collectively they gave us a lot of great music that still holds up. IMO it doesn’t get any better . |
Good points, one and all. onhwy61, all The Band albums are quality, but the first two get all the attention because they were so revolutionary and ground-breaking. Plus, they had no filler songs---it was all Grade A material. The last album had only eight songs, four per LP side---not a good sign from a band known, in the age of overly-long jam songs, for short, concise songs. There were some great songs on it, but some not-so-great. Some of them just meandered on, filling space. They did a fun album of the material they had played in their Bar Band days---Moondog Matinee, all 1950’s-type songs. And a great live album, plus one when they accompanied Dylan on the road in ’74. The 3rd and 4th have some fantastic songs---Richard’s duet with Van Morrison on "4% Pantomime" kills. But Richard was developing a drinking problem, and was finding himself unable to write anymore. Levon was harboring a lot of resentment towards Robbie, which affected band morale. Robbie’s lyrics were becoming self-conscious and calculated, and, just like The Beatles, it felt like they went on past their "sell by" date; it felt like the wind was no longer in their sails, they were just going through the motions. They sounded tired, which they may have been---Garth was over 40 years old, the others not much younger. Rock ’n’ Roll is a young man’s game. I’m just thankful they’re not up there making fools of themselves as are Mick and Keith ;-). They sure left a legacy, didn’t they? All the people in the Americana movement and scene acknowledge The Band as their model for how to make music. All my favorite writers, singers, and musicians work in The Band’s shadow, benefitting from their excellence. Nick Lowe said his band Brinsley Schwartz was an attempt---a poor one, in his opinion---to be England’s The Band. Neil Young’s Harvest album was an obvious attempt to make an album like The Band’s 2nd/Brown album. You also hear The Band in Workingman’s Dead; problem was, nobody in The Dead could sing! |
I think that the way music appeals to each person will always be a mystery. I remember The Band since the beginning, and I was never moved by their music, or looked at it as much more than well done and competent. Still, over the years, whenever someone brings them up, like this thread, I go back again, this time to the recommended links near the beginning of this thread, and listen carefully. I just can't feel what others are feeling in this music. Conversely, there is music that I am deeply attached to that leaves people that I am close to cold. That is a mystery to me. |
“song writing” is defined by simple melodies - that is just the way it is! Why a simple melody gets so much credit is a quirky thing about the music industry. I agree that what drummers do (especially Helm) is often essential and can be equally important. The fact that that some covers are big hits and others are long forgotten just proves how arrangements and individual playing talent is just as important. Sadly this aspect is not currently recognized commensurately on the pay check.... |
Bdp24, thanks for starting this thread. The Band deserves all the accolades heaped upon them and more. They truly were one of the greatest. However, you do them a disservice by slighting some of their later albums. "Stage Fright", "Cahoots" and "Northern Lights Southern Cross" are the equals of the first two albums. The writing and performances are terrific. You might want to re-listen. |
Lawyers are expensiveNot as expensive as not having one. When you don't get your royalty payments for two years, you ask for them nicely and if Capitol tells you to screw off, you get a good lawyer and sue them. I wouldn't wait two years. I can't understand why anyone would trade his royalties for two classic albums that he produced for a piece of some project he had nothing to do with. I find it hard to believe that John Simon could become a producer at Capitol and not know that if he gave anyone the chance to screw him, they would. Don't let me interrupt the discussion of the albums, though. We'll never really know what happened business-wise unless someone can get ahold of all the contracts. |
Robbie didn't withhold John Simon's royalty payments, Capitol Records did. It's amazing how often that happens in the music business. When The Dixie Chicks had the number one album in the world, they weren't receiving their checks from Sony. Their lawyer was told in essence "We don't pay royalties. If you want your money, you'll have to sue us to get it." So they did, and got a real nice settlement, including their own boutique label. Bands that don't have the money to fight their record company get screwed ALL THE TIME. What you don't expect, is to get screwed by another artist. John Simon hadn't seen the guys since he had done the brown album with them, seven years before The Last Waltz. He had no idea what Robertson had been doing in regards to songwriting credits, etc. Lawyers are expensive (no duh), and guys like John Simon, on the fringes of the music business, don't have a need for or the means to pay one. Guys like Robertson, savvy and selfish, know how to pull a con (a real good one can even get himself elected President of The United States ;-). It's easy to fault John Simon for letting Robbie take advantage of his naivete', but John had no reason to suspect he was being set up. |
Robbie KNEW that would be the case, and knowingly tricked, manipulated, John Simon into signing away his future royalties for what he, Robertson, knew would be very little. I'm not defending Robbie in any way, but shouldn't someone in the music business this long have a lawyer? After Robbie screwed his bandmates out of all their royalties, why would anyone trust him? |
@dragunski, I heard Music From Big Pink when it was released, but didn’t "get" it---it was over my head. It troubled me that I didn’t, as the smartest guys I knew loved it. It wasn’t until I saw and heard Dewey Martin (drummer of Buffalo Springfield) play and sing in The New Buffalo (he being the lone BS band member left) in the Summer of '69 that I had my life-changing epiphany, right as I watched he and his bandmates perform. Dewey was the first studio musician (BS enticed him away from session work) I saw and heard live, and it was a real education. I gave MFBP another listen soon after, and now understood what all the fuss was about. Halleluiah, I had seen the light! When the second Band album came out, I was primed for it. |
The Band was a great band. They should have had a better name, though. Since I was in South America, I heard the first two LPs out of order. I heard the brown one first, and it blew me away. I had heard of Big Pink, read about it somewhere, but never got a chance to hear it. Then some kid in Recife, Brazil had the brown one and let me tape it on reel to reel. I was floored. I didn't hear Big Pink until I got back to the US. It was eye-opening, too. |
@jond, isn’t "It Makes No Difference" as beautiful a song as you’ve ever heard?! I love Rick’s voice, it’s so unique. I love how he sang "Long Black Veil---a Lefty Frizzell song (Rick loved Country music)---on Music From Big Pink. As were Levon’s and Richard’s. Three lead singers! The way their voiced weave in and out amongst each others, trading verses, even lines. In The Last Waltz, Robbie cited The Staple Singers as their model for how to arrange vocals. The three singers did that, not Robbie. The Band’s roots were SO deep; Hillbilly, Country, Cajun, Blues, Rock ’n’ Roll, Gospel, Pop, Jazz, Classical (Garth was a trained musician). The five members had been playing together as an ensemble for eight years before making their first album. Most bands whole lifespan is less than that! And they were all multi-instrumentalists. Levon played not only drums, but guitar, mandolin, and harmonica. Rick bass, guitar, and tuba. Richard was a FANTASTIC drummer, almost as good as Levon. And Garth Hudson, the most unlikely person to join a Rock ’n’ Roll Band, played all keyboards, as well as sax. Robbie was (I guess still is) a wonderful guitarist. Can’t sing worth a damn, though. |
I’ll be darned, Al! John did a fantastic job producing the first two Band albums. The third (Stage Fright) was done by Todd Rundgren, an odd choice it seemed to me then and now. It was a major disappointment after the incredible first and second, and when the fourth was also not up to snuff, we all wondered if John was in actuality the 6th member of The Band! He made a solo album sometime in the 70’s, which I somehow missed. Gotta get a copy of it---Eric. |
I am a huge fan of The Band what a unique and fantastic brand of music they produced, and I am a fan of Rick Danko in particular. He played a lot of solo shows during my college days 87-91 I never got to see him myself but lots of bootlegs of his shows were around. I still have a few and listening to him sing "It Makes No Difference" always sends a chill down my spine. |
Eric (bdp24), thanks for providing the characteristically comprehensive and interesting background. It's of particular interest to me because I knew John Simon's parents and sister quite well during the 1970s, and also met John a number of times. My wife and I lived in his parent's guest cottage, adjacent to their house in Norwalk, Connecticut, from when we were married in 1970 until we moved out of town in 1980. His father was a medical doctor, and also an amateur violinist, and for a number of years was president of the local classical orchestra, the Norwalk Symphony. A fine family. Best regards, -- Al |
@onhwy61, I agree about a band sharing songwriting credits, even though it’s a rather Communist idea ;-). The Ramones did it, I’m sure there are others. Levon Helm’s argument was that the instrumental parts he and the others created for The Band’s songs, and his and the other’s ideas for arrangements (listen to the out-takes of their albums to hear how the songs developed and changed in the studio) were just as much a part of the song as were the chords and melody. Levon’s drum parts are chock full of signature "hooks", parts without which the songs were incomplete. I don’t begrudge Robertson being a business man; more power to him. What I do find objectionable is the way he deliberately mislead and manipulated both the other members of The Band and John Simon, producer of the first two Band albums. Robertson came to Simon and asked him to write charts for the horn section The Band wanted for The Last Waltz. Simon hadn’t received a royalty check from Capitol Records for years, and told Robbie he was not doing any more work for which he would receive no compensation. Robertson said he would look into the matter, and came back to John with an offer: if he agreed to forfeit all future royalties from the sale of the two Band albums he produced, Capitol would pay all past royalties due him. Simon balked at that idea, but Robbie, according to John, told him that he would make a lot more money from The Last Waltz album and movie than he would from future sales of the first two Band albums. John said okay. What John and the other members of The Band didn’t know was that Robbie was signing agreements with the company that was financing the movie, agreements making Robbie an executive producer of movie. All the producers made money off the top of the movie’s grosses, The Band members and John Simon off the net. After all production costs, advertising, etc., there was very little left. Robertson ended up making a small fortune off the movie, John Simon and The Band a pittance. Robbie KNEW that would be the case, and knowingly tricked, manipulated, John Simon into signing away his future royalties for what he, Robertson, knew would be very little. All to make himself as much money as possible, at the cost of Simon and The Band. When Robbie said "I did what I had to do", he is admitting as much. |
For a member of a successful band/group to go on to have a successful solo career is very rare. A group benefits from the members’ combined talents, no one of them having enough talent on his own to make for a solo career. After The Beatles changed the world, bands/groups were expected to write, sing, and play---three separate talents. Before them, the best songwriters did just that---only. The best singers did that---only. The best players did that---only. In the group dynamic, you didn’t necessarily get all three. Along comes The Band. Not only were they as good as any group around, but their individual talents were as good as any of the professionals doing only one of the above. Richard Manuel was as good a singer as any solo artist, Levon Helm as good a drummer as the guys in the L.A., New York, Memphis, and Nashville studios, Rick Danko a brilliant bass player, Robbie Robertson a very tasteful song-part guitar player, and Garth Hudson maybe the best keyboardist in the history of Rock ’n’ Roll. After hearing Levon’s drumming, Ringo sounded flat-footed (compare his playing in The Last Waltz to that of Levon’s). After hearing Richard Manuel sing, John Lennon sounded weak and thin, McCartney lacking gravitas. Paul sounded almost like an average bass player after hearing Rick Danko’s inventive style. Rick Danko, a farm boy from Canada, was as good as the best in the world---James Jamerson, Motown’s bass player. By the time of the Band’s debut, The Beatles writing had lost it’s "magic". For me, anyway. The Band had raised the bar so high, they were so brilliant in every way, that I now found the mediocrity in most other groups to be killing my interest in them. I now looked for songs written by the "best" songwriters, singing by the best singers, and playing by the best musicians (by that I mean those who were the best ensemble players, not virtuosos). Funny, for me it was now back to how it was before The Beatles. They had changed everything---no more producer putting a singer in a studio to record a song written by a pro writer and played by studio musicians. Except now, it was the vision of the solo songwriter/singer, not the producer, I was interested in. And so it has remained all these years. I seek out music by the best songwriters, sung in the "best" way (best having nothing to do with range, pitch control, etc.), and accompanied by the best musicians. All my current music acquisitions are albums by solo artists, not groups. My favorite songwriters are rarely a member of a group/band, my favorite singers rarely in a group/band. If the songwriter and/or singer in a group was a "better" writer or singer, he wouldn’t need to be in a group. Ironically, all the result of The Band---the ultimate group! |
I've always felt that Levon's last records before passing are the most 'Band-ish' sounding. I'm sure all you Band fans have them but I most highly recommend Dirt Farmer and Electric Dirt to anyone that hasn't. Outstanding music! His live 'Ramble At The Ryman' features tunes from those 2 plus a few Band numbers and should be considered one of the great 'Live' records, but I never see it mentioned! |
IIRC, Robbie was married or seriously involved with someone during the Big Pink days. He did not live at Big Pink. This helped him remain more sober and grounded while the others, except Garth, were into excess of every kind. Drugs, drink. women, smashing cars on the winding roads, etc. If you read Robbie's version of the story, he frequently urged the others to write. If you read Levon's version, Robbie took all credit for songs that they had worked out together. No telling what the truth is but the others should have confronted Robbie sooner rather than waiting till the money stopped rolling in. Levon was very bitter about it but Rick Danko and Garth never complained that much about it that I'm aware of. |
One of the best business decisions a band can make is to give writing credits to everyone in the band. Check out the early Van Halen. Do you really think David Lee Roth co-wrote "Eruption"? The entire band credit is not a cure all, but it removes a serious money issue for bandmates. For The Band it was a key and divisive issue. A similar situation was The Who. Townsend, as the songwriter, made the serious money and other members would have to beg him to tour so that they could make money too. Pete Brown, the lyricist, made more money than Clapton or Baker did with Cream. Think about what it must be like to have been a member of the Kinks or the Rolling Stones and not be Jagger/Richards or Ray Davies. They have estates in France and Switzerland and drive exotic sports cars, and you got a weekly check. When push comes to shove it's a business. Do you really begrudge Robertson for being both talented and smart? |
Thanks everyone for joining me in celebrating this most unusual and amazing group of writers, singers, and players. I added the joke about Robbie against my better judgment; the subject of his actions is a matter of great contention, and if it weren’t for the fact that they played a major role in the contributing to The Band’s downward spiral (both professionally and personally) I could let it go. I won’t go into it here, but one ends up taking either Levon’s side of the story, or Robbie’s. I haven’t read Robbie’s book, but I have a copy of Levon’s, autographed by he on the day of it’s release at the book release event held at Book Soup on Sunset Blvd. Ringo was there too, and got his copy autographed as well. In response to the claims made by Levon, John Simon (producer of the first two albums, and writer of the horn arrangements for The Last Waltz), and others, Robbie made this statement: "I did what I had to do." ’Bout says it all, don’t it? |
I’ll defer to input from bdp here. From what I’ve read, at a point in their lives when the other members were struggling financially, Robbie came around and bought their individual rights to The Band’s music "for a pittance" as the expression goes. Kind of the old Jacob stealing Esau’s birthright story in a different form. Though no one forced them to sell, Robbie is seen as taking advantage of them. At least some of the bitterness towards him stems from that. On top of this, I think Levon had his own issues with Robbie over group "ownership and leadership" conflicts. Robbie did write a lot of The Band lyrics. Seems like he was well read (and gifted)...leastways that is my impression; consequently, lotta grist for the mill. According to Wikipedia, the lyric of Whispering Pines is a case in point. Richard wrote that beautiful music, Robbie contributed lyrics that, to my mind, are a mirror on Richard’s soul and that ain’t no simple parlor trick. There are many, many others too, like the excellent Acadian Driftwood and one of my favorites, below... I tend to think...maybe more than working with Dylan, it was during their time with Ronnie Hawkins when they really learned their chops (not to take anything away from time with Dylan, of course). http://theband.hiof.no/history/part_2.html @bdp24 - Like yourself, Levon also expressed great admiration for Richard’s singing (as well as his drumming!). Anyway, this isn’t meant as "one ups manship" at all because, while I love those 2 songs by Richard, for me from a singing/performance point of view, this is the one that always knocks me out. It’s Rick from Live in Japan. Just put this on repeat. What a fantastic song. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSHzODm-Ik8 If you want to turn this into some kind of "The Band for Aficionados", I’m there. Okay...done (for) now. :-) |
@bdp24 I just read the testimony of the book about Robbie Robertson's life. It gave the impression that he was the driving creative force behind the lyric song writing of the band. He definitely portrays that all members were equal in the creating of the actual song melodies and rhythm but often mentions that he wrote such and such song for so-and-so and so on… He mentions that he gave writing credits to others often even though they didn't actually help him write the lyrics. I don't profess to be an expert on the band so is this not correct?Also you mentioned or someone mentioned they be grudgingly gave Robbie Robertson on the title of genius. I have ran across this before, others not liking him. Why is that? |
Thanks for starting this thread, bdp24!!! My all time favorite band. I ask rhetorically how could they NOT be great? The work they did with Dylan, before they went out on their own shaped their song writing and their sound. Anyone remember they were on the cover of Time Magazine? The first two albums are just so great. I can’t think of a debut album that surpasses Big Pink. And the Brown Album is even better than the first, IMO. Every song is a masterpiece. Garth’s synth work on songs like Whispering Pines is evocative of wind in the woods, and on King Harvest underscore the desperation in the narrators'/singers' words and voices. And what happened to Richard and Rick Danko after 1977, due to drug abuse, is awful. Like many musicians and bands of the time, they were casualties of the era. |
All respect to Eric (and bdp for posting)... For me, these two pretty much tell the full story about Richard...always have, always will. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXhj45urx3Y https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlUkTxCBAg8 |