Little Feat : Chinese Work Songs

CD [Cover Art for Little Feat / Chinese Work Songs]

Rate or comment on this item


Sale Price: $8.27 (Regular Price: $ 9.00)
Customer Rating: with 6 responses
Availability: In Stock
Sell date: 6/2000
Label: Sanctuary Records Group
Mfg's Catalog#: 86295
CDC Part#: 445516
Add to Basket Add to Basket

 
 Notes & Reviews
 
'Gimme A Stone' is almost worth the whole album. If you collect Little Feat, k collecting this one. If you're looking for an introduction, =Let It Roll= may be more for you.
- David Warhol, 08/08/2001, USA

Wonderful new compositions and inventive covers.
- Vincent Tseng, 07/29/2000

Full title is: Chinese Work Songs

Length: 61:23


Some fans of Little Feat's classic 1970s recordings argue that the band should have lost the right to use that name when Lowell George died in 1979; as they see it, the band heard on 2000's Chinese Work Songs isn't really Little Feat. If this band can get away with calling itself Little Feat, the argument goes, why shouldn't Bob Weir assemble a band without the late Jerry Garcia and call it the Grateful Dead ? You have no doubt heard those arguments, and while it's true that Little Feat recorded its best work in the 1970s, the lineup heard on Chinese Work Songs isn't half bad. In its 2000 incarnation, Little Feat's lineup ranges from 1970s members Bill Payne (keyboards), Richie Hayward (drums), Paul Barrere (guitar), Kenny Gradney (bass), and Sam Clayton (percussion) to more recent additions like guitarist Fred Tackett and female singer Shaun Murphy. The addition of Murphy in the 1990s proved to be a plus for the band, and her whiskey-voiced, Bonnie Raitt -influenced belting is a definite asset on this CD. Chinese Work Songs isn't in a class with 1973's Dixie Chicken or 1974's Feats Don't Fail Me Now, but it's a decent, if uneven, outing, and the 2000 lineup is faithful to the band's roots rock-Southern rock history on original material as well as covers of Bob Dylan's 'It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry,' the Band's 'Rag Mama Rag,' the Hooters' 'Gimme a Stone,' and Phish's 'Sample in a Jar.' Although not essential and not recommended to casual listeners -- who would be better off with a collection of Little Feat's 1970s recordings for Warner Brothers -- diehard Feat fans will find that Chinese Work Songs, despite its imperfections, is enjoyable more often than not. ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide

 
 Tracks and Sound Clips   Click here for the Windows Media player
 
Rag Mama Rag - 4:38 Play the Windows Media clip
Evla - 4:26 Play the Windows Media clip
Bed of Roses - 4:48 Play the Windows Media clip
Sample in a Jar - 4:54 Play the Windows Media clip
Just Another Sunday - 7:52 Play the Windows Media clip
Gimme a Stone - 5:06 Play the Windows Media clip
Rio Esperenza - 4:54 Play the Windows Media clip
Tattoo Heart - 6:55 Play the Windows Media clip
Marginal Creatures - 5:16 Play the Windows Media clip
Chinese Work Songs - 6:27 Play the Windows Media clip
It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry - Little Fear - 6:07 Play the Windows Media clip
 Recommendations

People who buy little feat CDS may also enjoy, in order of descending probability, the works of Allman Brothers Band, Band, Jeff Beck, Traffic, Grateful Dead, Faces, Humble Pie, Allman Brothers, Jackson Browne, Lowell George, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Hot Tuna, Neil Young, Jefferson Airplane.

To link directly to this page:
http://www.cdconnection.com/details/Little_Feat__Chinese_Work_Songs/445516