A great, great talk by Robbie Robertson on all things The Band.


 

This is a 26:40 recording of Robbie Robertson talking (no video, no interviewer questions, just Robbie’s voice) about all aspects of The Band, his traveling from Canada to Arkansas at age 16 to join Levon Helm in The Hawks, his songwriting, the extreme talent of Rick Danko and Levon Helm, The Last Waltz, and many other musical matters. And his love of movies (The Band included "Third Man Theme" on their Moondog Matinee album). He puts into words better than I have ever before read or heard what made The Band the model of musical quality they were, and so respected by all the best musicians, singers, and songwriters in Rock ’n’ Roll. In Jazz too.

Even if you are sick of hearing about The Band, I do believe you will be very glad you’ve listened to this.

 

https://youtu.be/IF690sDgb6M?si=rbr7DFR7Mh7YP5OH

 

bdp24

@bdp24 

Great explanation of the financial workings of The Band.  I've read a lot of Robbie vs Levon posts and haven't read a better explanation of the issues.

What do you think of the remixed versions of the Band's catalog?

 

@bdp24 

thank you for posting this and the deets, I have loved the Band forever, (Richard Manuel was my favorite member) and knowing these kinds of things only adds to that love.

 

All good comments and valid opinions. @onhwy61, I regretfully have to agree with you on The Band without Robbie Robertson. Mick Jagger once sang a song entitled "The Singer Not The Song", Sorry Mick, you’re mistaken. Without the song there’s nothing to sing.

I’d much rather listen to an average singer sing a great song than a great singer sing an average song. When you have a great singer singing a great song, well now you’re talking! Speaking of which, at the beginning of the clip below, Kasey Chambers introduces the song she then sings by saying "This is my favorite song." It’s amongst my very favorites as well, "No Time To Cry" by Iris DeMent.

 

"https://youtu.be/boG_aCz3YEk?si=iLRfCuJINVRHlauVNo

 

Here’s Iris’ original recording, found on her second album, My Life.

 

https://youtu.be/BfyqbkuV_e8?si=WxD3s21ddj_Qv08-

 

 

@bdp24

I’d much rather listen to an average singer sing a great song than a great singer sing an average song.

Amen to that, brother!

 

RE: "No Time To Cry", what an ironic title. I’m not embarrassed to admit the mere sound of Iris’s voice makes me tear up. It’s as if she has a direct line into the very heart and soul of the human experience.

 

@stuartk: I couldn’t agree with you more about Iris, my favorite living songwriter and singer.

I made the mistake of taking her My Life album (on CD) to the CES in Vegas one year in the mid or late 90’s, and had Jerry Crosby play "No Time To Cry" on his QUAD ESL loudspeakers. I embarrassed myself by breaking down when she sang the final couplet.

 

I made it through the last verse, which goes:

 

"I sit down on the sofa, and I watch the evening news

There’s a half-a-dozen tragedies from which to pick and choose

The baby that was missing, was found in a ditch today

And there’s bombs a-flyin’, and people dyin’, not so far away."

 

But when she sang the couplet that followed (see below), I found myself with tears streaming down my face.

 

"I take a beer from the refrigerator, and go sit out in the yard

And with a cold one in my hand I'm gonna bite down and swallow hard."

 

Merle Haggard also thinks highly of the song, and this live version by him is awfully good:

 

https://youtu.be/QBOvKGsouPc?si=YWxYH2fGdh_2XCHy