Little Feat Sailin' Shoes (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1972) ***** Little Feat Dixie Chicken (CD, Warner Bros Records, 1973) *****
Little Feat American Cutie (Vinyl, Let them eat vinyl Records, 2013) ***
Little Feat Feats Don't Fail Me Now (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1974) *****
Little Feat The Last Record Album (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1975) ***
Little Feat Time Loves A Hero (CD, Warner Bros Records, 1977) ***
Little Feat Waiting For Columbus (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1978) *****
Little Feat Down On The Farm (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1979) ***
Little Feat Hoy-Hoy! (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1981) *****
Little Feat Let It Roll (Vinyl, Warner Bros Records, 1988) ****
Genre: Rock
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5
Active compensatory factors: I love Little Feat. I love the idea of them.
Are you kidding me? A slide guitarist, a writer and singer like Lowell George; a pianist like Bill Payne; a natural funkiness and those quirky songs! Pure joy listening to the boys when they play.
Sailin' Shoes is their second album and a triumph. So many stone cold classic Little Feat songs on this album: Tripe Face Boogie; Willin'; Apolitical Blues; Cold Cold Cold and the title track.
Third album, Dixie Chicken is another 5-star classic album. More classic Little Feat songs: Fat Man in the Bathtub; Roll Um Easy; Two Trains, Juliet and the title track. Immense!
The change in personnel for this album (Roy Estrada replaced by Kenny Gradney, Paul Barrere and Sam Clayton in) helped create the signature funky Little Feat sound that Lowell was after. As one critic said, "It all adds up to a nearly irresistible record, filled with great songwriting, sultry grooves, and virtuosic performances that never are flashy".
American Cutie is a live document from 1973 released in 2013. It was recorded at Ebbets Field, Denver, Colorado 19th July 1973 and the quality of the sound is excellent.
Although, the performances are a bit loose as the band is in transition in 1973 with those few changes in the lineup (detailed above). Nevertheless, the versions of Willin', Dixie Chicken/ Tripe Face Boogie and Fat Man in a Bathtub are terrific.
Next studio album, Feats Don't Fail Me Now, was another classic (the streak showed no sign of ending with this album). The stage is set from the off with the pure Little Feat funk of Rock and Roll Doctor. From there it's an embarrassment of riches: Oh Atlanta; Cold Cold Cold/Tripe Face Boogie; The Fan, and the title song (again).
That streak had to end somewhere - no one outside of The Beatles has been able to sustain quality over the length of their career. The Last Record Album from 1975 was stretching their resources a bit thin, but it still contained a few dynamite songs, including Long Distance Love.
Time Loves A Hero is a weird one. There are a few strong songs - Old Folks Boogie and the title track, but Lowell is largely absent from this one - leaving it to the rest of the band. His drug ordeals are well known but he was also in disagreement about what sounds the rest of the band wanted to make.
The live album, Waiting For Columbus, is the real deal. Four sides of prime Little Feat with all their greatest songs. It's recorded during 1977 gigs and shows the band could certainly rise to the occasion in concert.
My key memory of this is playing it a lot while living on my own in the Windmill Road flat while going to Teachers' College a few streets away.
It's a lot better than the other live album from 1973 that I've featured above. The band are locked in and the arrangements are perfect. Many definitive versions of their songs like Fat Man In A Bathtub and Dixie Chicken are on display. All of the Time Loves A Hero songs now sparkle!
The album proves beyond doubt that Little Feat were one of the primo live bands of their era.
Back to the studio they went for Down On The Farm and while it's a game of two halves (side 1 is far superior to side 2) they still show they can turn it on when they have to.
Unfortunately, this album was completed after Lowell's untimely death from a heart attack. He had been distracted by recordings for his solo album, Thanks I'll Eat It Here and so wasn't too involved in Down On The Farm.
It does contain two of my favourite Little Feat songs - Six Feet Of Snow and the title track.
Hoy-Hoy! is a double compilation of various outtakes, live versions and some intriguing unreleased songs from the archives.
I love these kinds of anthologies when they are done well and Hoy-Hoy! is a superb set that came out two years after the band broke up following Lowell's death. It's great for those who know the band well, but it also serves as an excellent introduction to the joys of Little Feat.
The AllMusic critic sums it up well - 'Hoy-Hoy! is a bit scattered, a bit incoherent, a little bewildering, and wholly delightful -- a perfect summation of a group filled with quirks, character, and funk, traits which were as much a blessing as they were a curse'.
The remnants regrouped in 1988 for another go around with Craig Fuller, the founding member of Pure Prairie League, in effect taking the Lowell George role - as composer and lead singer. Fred Tackett also joins the group as a guitar foil for Paul Barrère.
It's an excellent album. Their best studio album since Feats Don't Fail Me Now. The title track is again a standout, and Hate To Lose Your Lovin' kicks off the album in spectacular fashion.
Unfortunately, they weren't able to sustain this standard post Let It Roll, so I haven't bothered with any subsequent Little Feat albums.
Where do they all belong? I'll need to add their first album to my wants list.
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