Mad Dogs & Englishmen [Deluxe Edition]

Joe Cocker
Release Date: 10/18/2005
Original Release:  1970
# of Discs:   2
J&R Item # 602890_CD
UPC # 602498860069
Label: A&M Records (USA)
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Disc: 1
1. Honky Tonk Woman sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. She Came in Through the Bathroom Window sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Weight, The - (previously unreleased) sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Sticks and Stones sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Bird on a Wire sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Cry Me a River sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. Superstar - (featuring Rita Coolidge) sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. Feelin' Alright sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. Something - (previously unreleased) sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Darling Be Home Soon - (previously unreleased) sound samples  real  |  windows media
11. Let It Be - (featuring Claudia Lennear) sound samples  real  |  windows media
12. Further on Up the Road - (previously unreleased, featuring Don Preston) sound samples  real  |  windows media

Disc: 2
1. Let's Go Get Stoned sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. Space Captain sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Hummingbird - (previously unreleased, featuring Leon Russell) sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Dixie Lullaby: I'll Drown In My Own Tears / When Something Is Wrong With My Baby / I've Been Loving You Too Long - (previously unreleased, featuring Leon Russell) sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Letter, The sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Delta Lady sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. Give Peace a Chance sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. Blue Medley: I'll Drown in My Own Tears/When Something Is Wrong ...: I'll Drown In My Own Tears / When Something Is Wrong With My Baby / I've Been Loving You Too Long sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. With a Little Help from My Friends - (previously unreleased) sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Girl from the North Country sound samples  real  |  windows media
11. Warm-Up Jam: Under My Thumb - (previously unreleased, featuring Leon Russell/The Shelter People) sound samples  real  |  windows media
12. Letter, The - (Stereo Mix, studio single version, featuring Leon Russell/The Shelter People) sound samples  real  |  windows media
13. Space Captain - (Stereo Mix, studio single version, featuring Leon Russell/The Shelter People) sound samples  real  |  windows media
14. Ballad of Mad Dogs and Englishmen, The - (featuring Leon Russell) sound samples  real  |  windows media

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Performer: Joe Cocker
Artist: Leon Russell; Don Preston; Don Preston; Rita Coolidge; Jim Keltner; Claudia Lennear; The Shelter People
Engineer: Edwin H. Kramer; Glyn Johns
Producer: Denny Cordell; Glyn Johns; Leon Russell; Denny Cordell; Leon Russell; Bill Levenson (Compilation)
Distributor: Universal Distribution

Notes: Ultradiscs are mastered from the original master tapes using Mobile Fidelity's proprietary mastering technique, then plated with 24 karat gold and housed in a stress-resistant lift-lock jewel box. Previously released as a 2-CD set. Personnel: Joe Cocker (vocals); Leon Russell (guitar, piano); Don Preston (guitar, background vocals); Bobby Keys (tenor saxophone); Jim Price (trumpet); Chris Stainton (piano, organ); Carl Radle (bass); Chuck Blackwell (drums, percussion); Jim Gordon, Jim Keltner (drums); Bobby Torres (congas); Sandy Konikoff (percussion); Rita Coolidge, Claudia Linnear, Daniel Moore, Donna Wiess, Pamela Polland, Matthew Moore, Donna Washburn, Nicole Barclay, Bobby Jones (background vocals). Recorded live at The Fillmore East, New York, New York on March 27 & 28, 1970. Includes liner notes by John Mendelsohn. Personnel: Joe Cocker (vocals); Don Preston (guitar); Carl Radle (bass instrument); Sanford Konikoff (percussion); Donna Weiss, Matthew Moore, Pamela Polland, Rita Coolidge, Daniel Moore, Bobby Jones , Claudia Lennear, Donna Washburn, Nickey Barclay (background vocals); Leon Russell (guitar, piano); Bobby Keys (tenor saxophone); Jim Price (trumpet); Chris Stainton (piano, organ); Chuck Blackwell (drums, percussion); Jim Gordon , Jim Keltner (drums); Bobby Torres (congas). Audio Mixer: Suha Gur. Liner Note Author: John Mendelsohn. Recording information: A&M Studios, Hollywood, CA (03/17/1970-04/17/1970); Fillmore East, New York, NY (03/17/1970-04/17/1970); Gold Star Studios (03/17/1970-04/17/1970); Santa Monica Civic Auditorium (03/17/1970-04/17/1970). Illustrator: Ron Wolin. Photographers: Jim McCrary; Cosmina Andee Cohen. Arrangers: Leon Russell; Chris Stainton. One of the first classic post-Woodstock albums, MAD DOGS AND ENGLISHMEN was recorded at precisely the moment that Cocker and his bandleader Leon Russell found themselves, however briefly, at the epicenter of the rock & roll universe. The big hits here--the juiced-up version of Traffic's "Feelin' Alright," the Memphis soul revamp of the Box Tops "The Letter"--have been ubiquitous for years, and remain as potent as ever. Some of the less familiar tracks are equally rewarding though, particularly the Cocker/Russell duet on Dylan's "Girl From the North Country" (with the composer in attendance), and the obscure early Ray Charles raver "Sticks and Stones." This one shot ensemble (including veteran British musicians and the cream of then current L.A. sessioneers) was a great band, however unwieldy (twenty-one members!) and we're lucky to have this document of its only tour. One of the first classic post-Woodstock albums, MAD DOGS AND ENGLISHMEN was recorded at precisely the moment that Cocker and his bandleader Leon Russell found themselves, however briefly, at the epicenter of the rock & roll universe. The big hits of this dynamic live set--the juiced-up version of Traffic's "Feelin' Alright," the Memphis soul revamp of the Box Tops "The Letter"--have been ubiquitous for years, and remain as potent as ever. Some of the less familiar tracks are equally rewarding though, particularly the Cocker/Russell duet on Dylan's "Girl From the North Country" (with the composer in attendance), and the obscure early Ray Charles raver "Sticks and Stones." This one-shot ensemble (including veteran British musicians and the cream of then current L.A. sessioneers) was a great band, however unwieldy (21 members!) and we're lucky to have this document of its only tour. Listening to this CD brings back a lot of memories. Mad Dogs & Englishmen was just about the most elaborate album that A&M Records had ever released, back in 1971, a double LP in a three-panel, fold-out, gatefold sleeve, with almost 80 minutes of music inside and a ton of photos, graphics, and annotation wrapping around it. A live recording done in tandem with a killer documentary film of the same U.S. tour, it was recorded at the Fillmore East, where the movie was a cross-country affair, and the two were, thus, completely separate entities -- also, as people couldn't "buy" the film in those days, the double LP has lingered longer in the memory, by virtue of its being on shelves, and also being taken off those shelves to be played. Unlike a lot of other "coffee table"-type rock releases of the era, such as Woodstock and The Concert for Bangladesh, people actually listened to Mad Dogs & Englishmen -- most of its content was exciting, and its sound, a veritable definition of big-band rock with three dozen players working behind the singer, was unique. The CD offers a seriously good sound, whether it's just Joe Cocker and a pianist and organist in the opening of "Bird on a Wire," or the entire band going full-tilt on "Cry Me a River"; the remastering was set at a high volume level and there was a decent amount of care taken to get the detail right, so you can appreciate the presence of the multiple drummers, and the legion of guitarists and singers, plus the multiple keyboard players. The lead guitar and solo piano on "Feelin' Alright," for example, come through, but so do the 34 other players and singers behind the lead. This record was also just as much a showcase for Leon Russell as it was for Joe Cocker, which A&M probably didn't mind a bit, as Russell was selling millions of records at the time. As is now known, and it's recounted in the new notes, the tour from which this album was drawn all but wiped out Joe Cocker -- on a psychic level -- because the music was presented on such a vast scale (and there is a moment in the movie where he mentions breaking up his former backing group, the Grease Band, with a hint of regret in his voice) and his own contribution was so muted by Russell's work as arranger and bandleader. He may well have been the "victim" of a "hijacking" of sorts, but the musical results, apart from the dubious "Give Peace a Chance," are difficult to argue about upon hearing this record anew, decades after the fact -- it's almost all bracing and beautiful. [In 2005 Mad Dogs & Englishmen was reissued in a two-CD deluxe edition with eight previously unreleased live performances inserted throughout the discs and four rare studio recordings tacked onto the end. The new live performances are longer and looser and Russell plays an even bigger role. They're excellent, as are the stereo studio mixes of "The Letter" and "Space Captain," available for the first time here.] ~ Bruce Eder
Rolling Stone (p.98) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "When Cocker scores in the late shows with the Beatles's 'With a Little Help From My Friends,' it is with the grateful howl of a man who knows how lucky he is." Q (4/97, p.142) - 5 Stars (out of 5) - "...there's an organised abandonment and sense of spiritual pilgrimage in this set that remains virtually unrivalled." Q (4/97, p.142) - 5 Stars (out of 5) - "...there's an organised abandonment and sense of spiritual pilgrimage in this set that remains virtually unrivalled." Mojo (Publisher) (p.146) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "MAD DOGS finds a heroically knackered Cocker rising to the occasion; by turns stenorian and vulnerable -- often both -- against the swaggering rock big band."
The purveyor of the most blood-curdling scream in pop music history (on his epochal cover of the Beatles "A Little Help From My Friends"), the deeply soulful Joe Cocker is also one of rock's most gifted interpretive singers, with a live show that is the stuff of legend. Cocker's stage trademark is a heaving, herky-jerky style, one cribbed from Ray Charles's passionate motions at the piano. After a breakthrough performance at Woodstock, he enjoyed a wave of success in the 1970s, peaking with the aching ballad (and eventual wedding standard) "You Are So Beautiful." After a brief hiatus, Cocker reemerged, duetting with Jennifer Warnes on "Up Where We Belong," the theme from AN OFFICER & A GENTLEMAN, one of the biggest hits of 1982.
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