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The Band - Moondog Matinee [1973] [h33t] [Robbie60] [FLAC] [EAC]

Infohash:

52EDC4744CDCD7A3F755C2EBBE5E39F2CDEB2FA4

Type:

Audio Lossless

Title:

The Band - Moondog Matinee [1973] [Robbie60] [FLAC] [EAC]

Category:

Audio/FLAC

Uploaded:

2011-03-05 (by Robbie6ty)

Description:

The Band Moondog Matinee Label: Capitol Released: 1973 Source: Original CD Size Torrent: 193 MB Format: FLAC 1973 found The Band unable or unwilling to release an album of original material. The same situation in 1972 produced the excellent live album, Rock Of Ages. They would travel a different journey in 1973 and release an album of cover songs. Moondog Matinee would take its name from an old Alan Freed radio show. The original intent was to return to their early rock ‘n’ roll days when they were known as Levon and The Hawks. Unfortunately, it did not reach fruition as they were now far from the sound of those days. What did result was an excellent album of unique covers by one of the best rock bands in the world. The instrumental expertise of Robbie Robertson and Garth Hudson drive the album’s music along. Robertson was an under the radar guitarist who was improving with each release. His solos were now confident as well as creative. Garth Hudson was one of the best keyboardists in rock music and his use of an organ sound to enhance, and at times, dominate a rock band was both unique and inspirational. While The Band had four exquisite voices, it was Richard Manuel that came closest to being the lead singer. The Platters classic hit, “The Great Pretender,” is given a soulful vocal by Manuel. He was one of those rare singers who could take a song and make it a personal experience for the listener. The Leiber and Stoller tune, “Saved,” is taken in a gospel like direction by Manuel. He explores the textures of this song with just his vocal instrument. The Band pays tribute to former contributor Allen Toussaint by giving his song, “Holy Cow,” a work-out. Rick Danko’s vocal leads the assault on this track. Danko also shows an ability to translate a straight rhythm & blues song, “A Change Is Gonna Come,” into a rock setting. I have always thought the old movie song, “The Third Man Theme,” was an odd and ultimately brilliant choice for inclusion on the album. The original featured a zither. Here, Garth Hudson, turns his organ loose with interesting results. Other songs of note include a rocking version of Chuck Berry’s, “The Promised Land,” a unique take on the old Elvis song, “Mystery Train,” which appears with some new lyrics and a funky “Ain’t Got No Home” with Levon Helm as the frog. Moondog Matinee may have found The Band in a holding pattern in 1973, but the album proved a nice place to visit. It would end up as a unique release in The Band’s catalogue and remains interesting and very listenable today. Personnel Rick Danko - bass, rhythm guitar, vocals Levon Helm - drums, bass, rhythm guitar, vocals Garth Hudson - organ, piano, accordion, synthesizer, clavinet, tenor saxophone Richard Manuel - acoustic and electric pianos, drums, vocals Robbie Robertson - guitars Billy Mundi - drums on "Ain't Got No Home" and "Mystery Train" Ben Keith - pedal steel on "The Promised Land" Track Listing 01. "Ain't Got No Home" 3:20 (Clarence "Frogman" Henry) 02. "Holy Cow" 3:15 (Allen Toussaint) 03. "Share Your Love (With Me)" 2:50 (Deadric Malone, Alfred Braggs) 04. "Mystery Train" 5:35 (H. Parker, Jr., Sam Phillips, adaptation by Robbie Robertson) 05. "Third Man Theme" 2:43 (Anton Karas, W. Lord) 06. "The Promised Land" 3:00 (Chuck Berry) 07. "The Great Pretender" 3:07 (Buck Ram) 08. "I'm Ready" 3:22 (Fats Domino, Al Lewis, Sylvester Bradford) 09. "Saved" 3:42 (Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller) 10. "A Change Is Gonna Come" 4:15 (Sam Cooke)

Files count:

1

Size:

193.92 Mb

Trackers:

udp://tracker.openbittorrent.com:80
udp://open.demonii.com:1337
udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969
udp://exodus.desync.com:6969

Comments:

1sub (2012-01-28)

The review is insightful. I would add that this album is a nice shout out to some of their influences. The selections lead one to areas of music to explore and discover. To start out with Clarence "Frogman" Henry, is to instantly raise your musical IQ measurably. Thanks so much for this. Contrary to music industry claims, I am not stealing this music. This just saves me a trip to my garage to retrieve the CD and upgrade it to lossless format, as other parts of the music industry had lead me to encode it in a lossly format. Anyone out there listening?

nerdturd (2012-04-24)

Thanks for posting. Just heard something from this today while driving a taxi last night in San Francisco while listening to Rockin' Jim's Grinders Grooveyard from KPFA 94.1 Berkeley. He was playing some stuff in honor of Levon Helm.