Little Feat - Sailin' Shoes
Facts
| Artist(s) | Little Feat |
| Studio | Warner Bros / Wea |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 075992725828 |
| Buy this item | $6.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 13:52 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Easy to Slip
- Cold Cold Cold
- Trouble
- Tripe Face Boogie - Little Feat, Payne, Bill
- Willin'
- A Apolitical Blues
- Sailin' Shoes
- Teenage Nervous Breakdown
- Got No Shadow - Little Feat, Payne, Bill
- Cat Fever - Little Feat, Payne, Bill
- Texas Rose Cafe
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Thanks! I'll eat it here! |
| I got Cat Fever |
Still playing as a four piece with George handling the bulk of the guitar work(Paul Barrere would join full time on the next album after being asked to audition as a bass player even though he was a guitar player and really wasn't all that interested in playing bass)assisted by the late, great Sneaky Pete Kleinow and Ron Elliot on three tracks of the album.
Keyboardist and co-founder Bill Payne contributes three strong songs--"Cat Fever", "Got No Shadow" and "Tripe Face Boogie" written with drummer Richie Hayward. "Willin'" (which reportedly had something to do with Zappa dismissing George from his band. Zappa told him he needed to go off and found his own band. The other reason reportedly was Zappa's "no drugs" policy which George would have rebelled against)makes another appearence in its definitive version while a couple of tracks originally written for George's previous band The Factory also show up.
"A Political Blues" one of George's most popular songs shows up here as well. "Easy to Slip" and "Texas Rose Cafe" (both of which George and the band did demos for The Doobie Brothers when Ted Templeman was looking for additional material for the band)also appear and both are terrific songs that bookend the album.
The reissued Mobile Fidelity Labs Gold Disc sounds extremely good. It comes in a gatefold sleeve replica of the original album packaging along with a booklet. As to which sounds better the MFSL version or Lee Herschberg's original CD mastering, it's a matter of taste. Both sound quite good and if you can't get one, the other will do just fine.
April 20, 2008
| Feat were a Force Majeur |
They were the most complete rock and roll band I know. The subtleties (sp) of phrasing and layers of harmony that seldom ran in a congruent, typical form is what impresses me. 6 musicians loosely playing in six different directions around a common theme is what you will hear in their best efforts. They were tight as a nun's privates. Live was as impressive as the studio - only more freeform. They shared a common musical brain.
Torque your parametric equalizer in any direction and you will hear the individual work. Layered = beauty.
They were the Bomb Diggity.
Elton John called them the Greatest Rock Band - I agree.
RBS April 12, 2007
| I GOT CAT FEEEE-VER! |
| Sweet memories.... |
*ribit*
Shut...UP! ~8)
~J-Hi
'Down East' May 1, 2005
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