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Little Feat - Waiting For Columbus (TML Pbthal Needledrop)

Track listing:
  1. Join The Band 1:40
  2. Fat Man In The Bathtub 4:49
  3. All That You Dream 4:26
  4. Oh Atlanta 4:11
  5. Old Folks' Boogie 4:36
  6. Dixie Chicken 4:22
  7. Tripe Face Boogie 5:18
  8. Rocket In My Pocket 4:31
  9. Time Loves A Hero 5:33
  10. Day Or Night 8:54
  11. Mercenary Territory 7:01
  12. Spanish Moon 3:50
  13. Willin' 4:47
  14. Don't Bogart That Joint 1:02
  15. Apolitical Blues 3:43
  16. Sailin' Shoes 6:24
  17. Feats Don't Fail Me Now 5:28

Notes


Disc 2:

Previously Unissued Outtakes
06 - One Love Stand (Previously Unissued Outtake) (4:27)
07 - Rock And Roll Doctor (Previously Unissued Outtake) (4:17)
08 - Skin It Back (Previously Unissued Outtake) (5:40)
09 - On Your Way Down (Previously Unissued Outtake) (6:25)
10 - Walkin' All Night (Previously Unissued Outtake) (4:12)
11 - Cold, Cold, Cold (Previously Unissued Outtake) (5:18)
12 - Day At The Dog Races (Previously Unissued Outtake) (12:12)

Outtakes first issued on "Hoy Hoy"
13 - Skin It Back (Previously Unissued Outtake) (4:40)
14 - Red Streamliner (Previously Unissued Outtake) (4:59)
15 - Teenage Nervous Breakdown (Previously Unissued Outtake) (4:12)


Little Feat was one of the legendary live bands of the '70s, showered with praise by not only their small, fiercely dedicated cult of fans, but such fellow musicians as Bonnie Raitt, Robert Palmer, and Jimmy Page. Given all that acclaim, it only made sense for the group to cut a live album. Unfortunately, they waited until 1977, when the group had entered its decline, but as the double-album Waiting for Columbus proves, Little Feat in its decline was still pretty great. Certainly, the group is far more inspired on stage than they were in the studio after 1975 - just compare "All That You Dream," "Oh Atlanta," "Old Folks' Boogie," "Time Loves a Hero," and "Mercenary Territory" here to the cuts on The Last Record Album and Time Loves a Hero. The versions on Waiting are full-bodied and fully-realized, putting the studio cuts to shame. Early classics like "Fat Man in the Bathtub" and "Tripe Face Boogie" aren't as revelatory, but it's still a pleasure to hear a great band run through their best songs, stretching them out and finding new quirks within them. If there are any flaws with Waiting for Columbus, it's that the Feat do a little bit too much stretching, veering toward excessive jamming on occasion - and that mildly fuzzy focus is really the only way you'd be able to tell that this is a great live band recorded slightly after their prime. Even so, there's much to savor on Waiting for Columbus, one of the great live albums of its era, thanks to rich performances that prove Little Feat were one of the great live bands of their time.