Who-related
posts aside, the most read of my most recent posts was the one about Lowell
George and Little Feat, so I’ve dredged up another piece I wrote for Melody Maker in September 1974. I’d been to see the band at the Bottom Line in New
York that week – the first time I ever saw them – but I can’t for the life of
me remember where I interviewed Lowell. This would have been one of the last
pieces I wrote from New York that year before I was summoned back to London for
the last three months of 1974 and Michael Watts took over the NY watch while I
kicked my heels back in London, deeply regretting that I was missing Johnny
Beatle appearing on stage with Elton that November.
Anyway, Little Feat blew my mind at the
Bottom Line and here’s what I reported in MM dated 28 September, 1974. Like a
lot of my stuff from those days it sounds a bit starry-eyed now, but what the
hell…
It would be difficult to count the
number of musicians who have eulogised about Little Feat over the past year.
This little known band from California, a six-piece rock outfit with subtle
overtones and an obvious training in music, have just about become the
musicians' band over the past 12 months.
Their albums have been steeped with
critical praise but the group remain in the clubs and small concert halls, and
have made little impression on the vast record-buying public.
Now it seems, we're gonna hear more
from Little Feat. Warner Brothers, their record company, are pushing hard with
their fourth and latest album, Feats Don't Fail Me Now. Perhaps the
sudden success of Steely Dan, the nearest possible comparison I can think of,
has brought all this about, but either way, few can doubt that Little Feat deserve
to be heard by many more than are now aware of them.
Last week they appeared at New York's
Bottom Line Club, packing the place on their second night when I caught up with
them. Bob Dylan was in the audience, and Dylan doesn't turn out these days unless
he's had it on good authority that the band in question are worth the problems
with photographers and gawkers. The good authority could have been Randy Newman
who, apparently, digs Little Feat too.
Little Feat are a very tight and
complex rock band. Their music doesn't veer off into lengthy improvisations but
instead hovers around multi-rhythmic structures and classy, zippy instrumental
work. They're also just beginning to get into vocal harmonies too. The songs
are a crisp, foot-tapping blend of r&b, soul and country, but the layers of
background make it impossible to write them off as a catchy hook line band. All
types of influences make up Little Feat — there's some of Zappa's wit and not a
little of his perfection, and there's also a black influence to shake out the
cobwebs. The bottom line, though, is that they are pretty much unchacterisable.
Little Feat revolve around Lowell
George, guitarist, singer and songwriter, who has also turned his hand to
production and engineering and spent time studying music from other countries. Lowell
was a session player before he decided to form a band of his own. On the LA
session circuit he worked with Nilsson, Carly Simon and Delaney & Bonnie,
and took a stint as the Standells' lead singer. He also worked with Frank Zappa
and became the first replacement Mother, staying as a touring and recording
member of the band for nine months. In 1968, he formed Little Feat.
"I'd been a musician for seven
or eight years before I got involved in starting Little Feat," he tells
me. "Frank Zappa was actually one of the people that initiated it. I'd
played in Frank's group for about nine months and he came up to me and
suggested I formed my own group. It was a polite way of saying I was
fired."
First to arrive in Little Feat was
Bill Payne, the keyboard player, who was actually about to audition for
Lowell's vacant role in the Mothers. Richard Hayward, from the just split
Fraternity Of Man, came in as drummer and finally Roy Estrada defected from the
Mothers to become Little Feat's bassist. It was Jimmy Carl Black, the Mothers'
first drummer, who came up with the name: a reference to Lowell's small shoes.
"Mostly we wanted to play what I
would call music with a stream of consciousness," says Lowell. "We
wanted to explore all sorts of areas together and we just took it from there. I
still really love country and western music, so there were, and still are, some
country and western songs with twists to them.
"Actually the first cut on our
first album was a demo that I made when I was still playing with the
Mothers."
But Little Feat were two years on the
road before they saw the inside of a recording studio as a band. Some of their
early gigs, mostly in clubs, are recalled with terrifying memories by Lowell.
"We did any number of
psychedelic dungeons across the country. Our first gig was at a club where
there was a big notice above the stage that said 'No Fighting Allowed'. It
appeared that the MC5 had started a riot there the previous week."
Little Feat had various offers from
other record companies until they were approached by Russ Titelman who wanted
to produce them for Warners. Lowell already knew Warners boss Mo Austin and the
deal was signed.
It was their second album, though,
that garnered the critical response from the elite of the rock industry, but
instead of the anticipated stardom for the band, one member quit and it seemed
for a while as if the whole group would disband. Roy Estrada packed up his bass
and went to join Captain Beefheart. "He felt that the music that Beefheart
was making was more open for his style of playing," says Lowell. "I really
consider him one of the all-time great bass players, a real stylist who
developed a whole fantastic approach to the instrument.
"I was thinking of going into
producing, but then we ran into Kenny Gradney who's our bass player now. He was
friends with Sam Clayton, a conga player who'd worked with Delaney & Bonnie
for a couple of years. He showed up and said he had a partner who played congas
and I thought... 'congas, I dunno,' but we offered him a place and he turned
out OK."
The band also picked up an extra
guitar player in Paul Barrere, a friend of Lowell's since high school. "I
am much happier with the bigger group now," says Lowell. "And I
really like having another guitar player. It means I can play lead instead of
rhythm all the time, and I can concentrate on singing all the time.
"You know... I really admire
someone like Paul McCartney who can play the bass and sings great at the same
time. It means both sides of someone's brain are thinking about different
activities and it's amazing that it can be done well."
The new Little Feat, augmented by
this time to six, put out their third album Dixie
Chicken which generated excitement at radio stations in the States, but not
enough to pull it up into the charts. Then, earlier this year, there were
further rumours that the band was splitting again. The rumours, says Lowell,
were true but exaggerated: in the end, after a brief period apart
soul-searching, they reformed to make their fourth album and are now back
stronger than ever.
The good publicity scares Lowell.
"Everybody's a little scared about it," he admits. "There comes
to a line between stage A and stage B in this business, and when we read good
reviews we get worried about how to make the next album better still. I'm sure
a lot of other artists must be worried whether they can follow through."
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