Posts Tagged ‘Sam Clayton’

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The third album from Little Feat saw a subtle move towards a more groove-laden funk style. While Lowell George was still band leader, he was starting to share more in the way of songwriting duties, and the addition of new band members, Paul Barrere and Sam Clayton, saw Little Feat approach Dixie Chicken with a renewed sense of purpose, resulting in perhaps their definitive studio offering. For Little Feat, 1972 brought commercial defeat, then creative rebirth. Formed three years earlier by guitarist Lowell George and keyboard player Bill Payne, the Los Angeles quartet was a Mothers of Invention splinter group featuring alumni George and bassist Roy Estrada, sanctioned by Frank Zappa, who either invited George’s departure or demanded it, depending on conflicting reports. One version holds that the founding Mother objected to a new George song, “Willin’” celebrating “weed, whites and wine,” a sentiment that the famously anti-drug Zappa was anything but willing to have associated with the band.

In addition to new bassist Kenny Gradney, a Baton Rouge native, the band enlisted another Louisiana expat, percussionist Sam Clayton (brother to crack L.A. session vocalist Merry Clayton), along with second guitarist Paul Barrere, who Lowell George had known since both were students at Hollywood High. With that realignment, Little Feat established a more potent and flexible rhythm section that built upon an already powerful four-square foundation laid by Hayward: With Clayton adding conga, djembe and other percussion instruments, Gradney locking into Crescent City syncopations and Barrere answering George’s simmering slide leads with complementary riffs and spare rhythm guitar, Little Feat now cruised on a supple cushion of polyrhythms.

In the studio, Lowell George stepped up as producer, a leadership role strengthened by his emergence on Sailin’ Shoes as the band’s most prolific and distinctive writer. Drawing on his versatile command of blues, country, folk and now R&B, he refined the surrealistic imagery and eccentric (and often cheerfully shady) characters that were proving his stylistic hallmarks. For the third full-length, “Dixie Chicken”, released January 25th, 1973, he would dominate the set list even more than on the prior albums.

Boasting Little Feat classics like the title track, “Roll Um Easy” and “Fat Man in the Bathtub”, “Dixie Chicken” found the band’s reputation take a massive leap forward, while still keeping them on the very fringes of the mainstream. It also pointed to a future were George’s influence over the band would lessen, while Barrere and keyboard player Bill Payne would have a greater impact on the band’s creative direction. While so much Southern rock at the time focused on massed guitars and heavy jams, Little Feat are typically loose-limbed, but never so much that they lose focus, and while they do indulge their tendency to jam, but this never gets so out of hand that they travel so far down a certain groove that they lose sight of the song itself.

“Dixie Chicken” signaled the band’s polyrhythmic swagger with laid-back confidence, bass and conga bumping into a hip-swaying groove punctuated with Payne’s spare, jaunty piano filigree. Lowell George’s hearty drawl established its southern milieu as he set a romantic shaggy dog story against “the bright lights of Memphis and the Commodore Hotel.” The starry-eyed protagonist’s ill-fated courtship of a dubious “southern belle” cast its own spell over the song and the album, mapping a mythic Dixieland in a screwball narrative. On the chorus, Bonnie Bramlett added a lusty, soulful voice to George’s as he serenaded his “dixie chicken,” vowing to be her “Tennessee lamb,” only to find himself seduced and abandoned. The song’s closing verse offered the singer’s encounter with a knowing bartender back at the Commodore Hotel bar that transformed the final chorus into a killer punchline.

“Dixie Chicken” is an album which can prove to be an oddly relaxing experience, almost to the point where if you’re not careful, you can end up zoning out. It’s a comforting listen, one that encourages your thoughts away from whatever day to day rigours you may have in life. It also means that it’s an album that can prove a little elusive from time to time, as sometimes you get to the end of the album and realise that you’ve been so relaxed that you’ve paid precious little attention to anything that’s gone on for its duration, and it’s even weirder if you’re listening to the original vinyl, because at some point you must have turned it over. That said, it’s also an album which sounds much better on vinyl, as the majority of CD editions have sounded oddly thin and even flimsy over the years, which is something that can seriously hamper your enjoyment of Little Feat.

While some would encourage the newcomer to approach Little Feat in a purely chronological manner, however, if you’re not to fussed about hearing their musical evolution, then Dixie Chicken is for many their definitive studio statement. Live, they frequently took things to another level entirely, but if you want to hear them at their best in the studio, then this is probably the best place to start.

The title cut from Little Feat’s 1973 album heralds the sound fans can instantly recognise the cantilevered songs laced with sardonic surrealism; the slinky Nu’Awlins rhythms; the funk touches; the high sustained wail of George’s slide; the offbeat vocal blend and twin-guitar work; Payne’s unfailingly brilliant piano. Barrere went to Hollywood High with the furrier’s son who grew up rich among Tinseltown royalty, but he was also a guitar ace; his nuanced rhythms and fills and fiery solos added new dynamics and colours. Perfect, since onstage George played only slide.

His sonic setup was now fully in place. He explained, “I use an open A tuning, which is an open G moved up a whole step. Instead of moving the first, fifth, and sixth strings down, I leave them alone and move all the other strings up a whole step. There’s a lot more tension on the strings, and it gets a much cleaner and brighter sound.” Those strings were “fairly heavy-gauge” Fender F-50s, his action was set “very high,” and a Craftsman 11/16th-inch socket was his slide; he used both a pick and his fingers. From now on, those super-taut strings will slice and squall through Little Feat’s stuff, tracing George’s exceptional sonic signature “Roll Um Easy” .

“Roll Um Easy” A contemplative take lays bare the accents working in Little Feat’s regenerated sound. Tenderness often lurks in George’s lyrics, but here it’s unusually foregrounded. Even his slide doesn’t howl; it glides with muted celebration. Contrast the intimate, heartfelt feel here with the version Linda Ronstadt fronted for L.A. hitmaker Peter Asher.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Zh5oMJo3co

“Fat Man In The Bathtub” One way George’s circle could tell how he was doing was his weight variations. So you can hear this catchy fun as a bit of self-mockery. This “mosaic” demonstrates how to take an essentially simple musical idea and deconstruct it using syncopations. It’s also one of those complex tunes that Payne helped him get his meters straight on; they worked more closely as a team than George often liked to admit. The double-tracked slide guitars are totally distinctive.

“Two Trains” followed, updating a familiar blues metaphor for sexual rivalry while showcasing bubbling cross-rhythms stitched by Barrere’s rhythm guitar, Payne’s electric piano and the triple-threat interplay of Hayward, Clayton and Gradney with Lowell George hovering above the mix with his signature slide. Where other blues and rock stylists would typically lay out melodic lines that slurred their blue notes upward, George’s slide work carved out angular leads that could dart downward, sustain shimmering single notes or sting with short, fat jabs that were uniquely his.

Sleek grooves and sly story lines weren’t George’s or the band’s only strengths. As they had on earlier ballads (notably the previous album’s definitive take on “Willin’” and the wry but tender “Trouble”), Feat knew when to pull back on firepower and dolly in for intimate close-ups. On “Roll Um Easy,” Lowell George’s voice and acoustic guitar are decorated sparingly with restrained slide accents and raw vocal harmonies by Three Dog Night’s Danny Hutton.

“On Your Way Down” was a seamless fit for Feat in terms of both sound and sinister theme—the Golden Rule translated into karmic paybacks, haunted by serpentine synthesizer lines and moody percussion going bump in the night. Beyond the album’s charms, the sextet’s ensemble chemistry and expanded tool kit would elevate them onstage. Another Dixie Chicken standout, “Fat Man in the Bathtub,” provided percolating Afro-Cuban rhythms as George recounted a sexual standoff for Spotcheck Billy, whose plea to “check your oil” is rebuffed by Juanita, the object of his obsessions and the subject of his refrain.

That track, like the album’s title song and “Two Trains,” would become a fixture in Little Feat’s live sets, frequently anchoring medleys linked to Sailin’ Shoes gems, and their fourth album, Feats Don’t Fail Me Now, doubled down on their L.A./NOLA axis to open up a lane at rock radio and in record stores. With 1975’s The Last Record Album, however, George’s role began to recede as Bill Payne and Paul Barrere added jazz fusion elements.

Bill Payne – keyboards Paul Barrére – guitar Kenny Gradney – bass Richie Hayward – drums, Sam Clayton – percussion Lowell George – slide guitar

Following the premature death of Little Feat’s chief architect Lowell George from a cocaine-charged heart attack, Paul Barrere stepped into the role of the band’s primary guitar slinger.

Indeed, it was no small challenge considering that George’s formidable presence as singer, songwriter and lead guitarist had imbued such an indelible mark on the band’s overall identity. Yet even at the outset, Barrere managed to accomplish that ,feat which enabled the band to continue and not only survive, but actually thrive in the aftermath of George’s passing.

Not that Little Feat always got their due, while certain albums are rightfully now remembered as genuine American classics “Sailin’ Shoes, Dixie Chicken, Time Loves a Hero”, and “Feats Don’t Fail Me Now” in particular — other efforts are inexplicably overlooked.

With Paul Barrere’s recent passing, it was an apt time to shine the light back on those Little Feat recordings that are well worthy of more recognition, All add emphasis to a powerful legacy, one that belongs to Barrere as much as it does to the other band members overall.

Little Feat(1971)

Offering the first hints of Little Feat’s trademark sound — a combination of greasy funk, sturdy R&B, primal rock, and a crisp country croon, Little Feat is often overlooked whenever pundits retrace the band’s trajectory. Yet it was a stirring first step, one that demonstrated all the verve and versatility that they would become known for a short time later. Several songs stand out — the spunky “Strawberry Flats,” the tender “Truck Stop Girl” and the gutbucket read of the blues standards “Forty-Four Blues” and “How Many More Years” in particular —  but no one track in the whole of their canon is as enduring Lowell George’s classic “Willin’,” a definitive road song that would become one of the most covered offerings of their classic catalog. With George’s shimmering bottleneck guitar at the fore, it’s a sparse read, but one that defines the group as much as any other.

The Last Record Album(1975)

Although given a somewhat curious title that the unsuspecting might have misinterpreted as a death knell, The Last Record Album showed the band was nevertheless in fine form. Here again, the band’s songwriting prowess was well represented by the supple and seductive “All That You Dream,” a co-composition from Barrere and keyboardist Bill Payne, George’s sobering and sensitive “Long Distance Love” and the various examples of Feat’s solid pacing and assertive rhythms — “Down Below the Borderline,” “One Love Stand” and “Day or Night.” Although  it’s only eight songs long, it’s as definitive an album as any in their classic catalog.

Hoy Hoy (1981)

An odds and sods collection released two years after the band’s initial break-up in 1979, “Hoy Hoy” isn’t so much an encapsulation as it is a reminder of the band’s extraordinary diversity. Although Little Feat has had ample live albums released throughout their lengthy tenure, Hoy Hoy is far more than a concert collection given the fact that it also includes outtakes, demos and various quirky covers. A handful of songs come from earlier albums, but this is hardly a true anthology given its array of otherwise obscure offerings. Nevertheless, it deserves inclusion in any true Feat fan’s collection, simply by virtue of the fact it boasts so many interesting and otherwise unavailable selections.

Let It Roll (1988)

The first studio album issued in the aftermath of Lowell George’s untimely passing, this was the first to feature Craig Fuller, George’s tentative replacement, and guitarist Fred Tackett, who would remain a mainstay in the years to come.  Fuller–a veteran of Pure Prairie League and a handful of ad hoc collaborations–wrote eight of the album’s ten tracks, not only a bold move by a new member attempting to fill such massive shoes, but also a clear sign of the confidence given him by his new compadres. They were all well rewarded; indeed, the music retains the upbeat, effusive sound that characterized the classic Feat albums early on. George Massenburg and Bill Payne’s co-production efforts substitute a bit of polish for the down home designs that marked their earlier efforts, but it’s never a deterrent. In fact, it serves to remind the fan faithful that even despite the loss of the seemingly irreplaceable Lowell George, Feats were still clearly capable of moving forward without fear of faltering .

Under the Radar (1998)

Marking the tenth anniversary of Little Feat’s reconvening in 1988, the then-current line up that included Barrere, Tackett, Payne, percussionist Sam Clayton, bassist Kenny Gradney, drummer Richie Hayward, and recent arrival and dominant force, vocalist Shaun Murphy, proved themselves to be as formidable as ever. Although their profile had diminished considerably in later years, it was clear that the band were as determined as ever to retain their potent presence. While several songs boasted Feat’s signature spunk and spirit, other offerings — “Eden’s Wall,” “Under the Radar,” “Vale of Tears,” and “A Distant Thunder” in particular — demonstrated a marked maturity in their delivery, one that promised, for better or worse, to bring them closer to the mainstream. Although it can’t exactly be called an extraordinary album, Under the Radar is a credible effort regardless and a sign that even in their new incarnation, Little Feat was worthy being called an American classic.

thanks https://rockandrollglobe.com/

Image result for LITTLE FEAT - " Live At Winterland " San Francisco 14th February 1976

Few bands that formed in the early 1970s have managed to survive and continue touring to the present day, albeit with a fair few line-up changes. Little Feat is one of the few that have, in no small part due to their outstanding musicianship and the idiosyncratic songwriting of founding member, Lowell George, which has stood the test of time.

Thier 1976 Winterland performance is one of the finest examples of  the band Little Feat during the prime years of Lowell George, when the group had established a reputation as one of the most exciting and original live bands on the planet. Lowell George’s innate ability to craft songs with sophisticated melodies and intriguing lyrics, as well as the high production standards on the groups studio recordings, were key to the group’s popularity and longevity. it was concert performances, such as this one, that truly established such a dedicated fan base.

Little Feat were opening for Electric Light Orchestra, this remains one of their most legendary performances. Broadcast live on KSAN radio, parts of this performance were immediately bootlegged to vinyl and rapidly began circulating under various titles, the most common being “Rampant Syncopatio” and “Chinese Bejeezus,” titles rumored to have been supplied by Lowell George himself.

It’s no wonder that this performance became so popular, as it captures the band at the peak of the “Lowell George era,” promoting the release of The Last Record Album. This album signaled the emergence of jazzier elements being incorporated into the bands sound, as well as stronger contributions from guitarist Paul Barrere and keyboardist Bill Payne, which added greater diversity to the group’s material.

The recording kicks off with a smokin’ version of “Apolitical Blues,” followed by a double dose of funky New Orleans flavored rock, with sizzling takes of “Skin It Back” transitioning into “Fat Man In The Bathtub.” This establishes a deep groove that continues to intensify as the set progresses.

The middle of the set features several outstanding new songs by Barrere and Payne, “One Love Stand” and “All That You Dream,” proving them a songwriting force to be reckoned with. Sandwiched between is an outstanding performance of Allen Toussaint’s classic “On Your Way Down.”

The set rises to another level entirely, when the band launches into “Cold, Cold, Cold.” This is Lowell George at his most astounding; not only singing like his life depended on it, but playing devastatingly great slide guitar. His slide guitar technique, which utilized a Sears & Roebuck 11/16ths spark-plug socket wrench rather than the traditional glass or steel finger tube, is absolutely incredible here and utterly unique.

“Cold, Cold Cold” gives way to the ever popular “Dixie Chicken,” one of the bands most popular songs, here featuring an extended jam that lets the band stretch out a bit. This eventually builds in intensity and transforms into a searing version of “Tripe Face Boogie.” A solo section, first showcasing the percussion stylings of Sam Clayton and Richie Hayward, followed by an impressive keyboard improvisation by Bill Payne, is featured before they finish pummeling the audience into submission with the conclusion of “Tripe Face Boogie.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bk7Se0EylLw

Seemingly in no hurry to hear the headliners, Electric Light Orchestra, the Winterland audience clamors for more. The band returns to the stage and Lowell leads them through the composition that helped facilitate him leaving The Mothers of Invention and forming Little Feat in the first place, “Willin’.” (He elaborates on this prior to beginning the song.) They close this incredible set with a ferocious take of “Teenage Nervous Breakdown.” The bootleg was known as “Rampant Syncopatio” is from this show

Paul Barrere – guitar, vocals; Sam Clayton – percussion, vocals; Lowell George – guitar, vocals; Kenny Gradney – bass; Ritchie Hayward – drums, vocals; Bill Payne – keyboards, vocals