Raw Tomatos, Vol. 1Little Feat
Release Date: 06/18/2002
Original Release:
2002
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 456106_CD
UPC # 606673020323
Label: Hot Tomato Records
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Little Feat
Artist: Sonny Landreth; Bonnie Raitt Engineer: Gil Morales Distributor: Redeye Music Distribution Notes: Little Feat: Lowell George, Paul Barrere (vocals, guitar); Fred Tackett (guitar, mandolin, trumpet, background vocals); Craig Fuller (guitar, mandolin, background vocals); Bill Payne (keyboards, background vocals); Roy Estrada, Kenny Gradney (bass, background vocals); Richie Hayward (drums, background vocals); Sam Clayton, Shaun Murphy (percussion, background vocals). Additional personnel: Bonnie Raitt, Sonny Landreth. Compilation producers: Paul Barrere, Bill Payne. Recorded between 1971 and 2001. Includes liner notes by Paul Barrere. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Personnel: Fred Tackett (vocals, guitar, mandolin, trumpet); Craig Fuller (vocals, guitar, mandolin); Lowell George, Paul Barr�re (vocals, guitar); Bill Payne (vocals, keyboards); Kenny Gradney, Roy Estrada (vocals, bass guitar); Richard Hayward (vocals, drums); Sam Clayton, Shaun Murphy (vocals, percussion). Recording information: Studio L'Boudiour. Photographers: Linda Gibbon; Bruce Polonsky; Paul Barr�re. This is what Little Feat fans have been waiting years for: a series dedicated to live and rare recordings. Problem is, there are two kinds of Little Feat fans -- those who love the band unconditionally, soaking up recordings made in the '80s and '90s as easily as those from the '70s, and those who love the band, but only when Lowell George is around. The first group will treasure Raw Tomatos, Vol. 1, along with its companion, Ripe Tomatos, Vol. 1, while the latter will grudgingly accept both volumes, since the Lowell recordings are spread among the two double-disc sets. It's hard not to think they'd have a point, since each volume flows identically, with about half-a-disc of vintage George material, before leading to a disc-and-a-half of post-reunion recordings. If this were one volume, sequenced this way, it'd be easy to accept and cherish anything you've been given, since there has been no archival Little Feat release prior to this. Simultaneous releases, sequenced similarly, however, make you wonder why all the George-era recordings were on one stellar disc, and the rest put to another series. Even if you're a fan wondering this, you will purchase it anyway, because the George material is so good -- a spare, funky "Crack in Your Door" with great piano by Bill Payne; a demo of "Trouble"; a nasty "Apolitical Blues"; an addictive lo-fi demo of "Fat Man in the Bathtub" with different lyrics; Bonnie Raitt singing on "Sailin' Shoes"; and a wonderful throwaway "Ass for Days," which runs less than a minute. The rest of the material is uniformly good, sometimes delightfully so ("Those Feat'll Steer Ya Wrong Sometimes," a gritty version of "Strawberry Flats"), but never surprising, like the best of their '70s recordings. This is all very good music, but the George stuff is genius -- and while you grab genius where you can, it's hard not to wish it was distilled for those that just wanted to hear that, instead of everything else. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Uncut (3/03, p.112) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...Rare '70s material. RAW TOMATOS is the pick of the vine..."
Los Angeles' Little Feat served up a polymorphic gumbo of New Orleans funk, southern boogie, and blues rock with the soulful slide guitar, worn voice, and tremendous country-tinged songwriting of leader Lowell George as its main ingredients. Founded by George and pianist Bill Payne in 1969, Little Feat released a couple of straighter blues rock albums before embracing an infectious, Meters-like groove in their rhythm section (Roy Estrada and Richie Hayward of the Mothers of Invention). Despite a run of critically acclaimed albums throughout the '70s--and George's continuing excellence as a songwriter--the band broke up in 1979 shortly after George died. Reformed versions of Little Feat continued to release records and tour in the ensuing decades.
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