Little Feat  (Self Titled)

Little Feat: (Self Titled)

Album #133 - January 1971

Episode date - December 11, 2019

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    Some albums are just impossible to comprehend.  The only reason I bought this album is because I became a Little Feat fan around “The Last Record Album” (in 1975, their fifth album) and liked it enough to delve into the band’s back catalog.

    The most striking thing about working backward through their career was their progression. Other than David Bowie, I never heard a band change so much from album to album, and this (now recognized as a) quality made it difficult to appreciate each album on its own merit. After all, if you approach a catalog backward, there are expectations, but Little Feat in reverse never matched my preconceived notions. Each record required multiple listens to reveal itself, but none more so than the first ‘eponymous’ album.

    Hearing “The Last Record Album” first, I couldn’t even comprehend that this was the same band.  The core personnel (guitar, piano, drums) were essentially the same, but everything else was different. What on earth is this record trying to be?  What could possibly cause a band to release something as uncategorizably strange as this debut record?

    I played this album about ten times before I drew genuine pleasure from hearing it. Without being cognizant of my subtle but steady change in attitude, “Little Feat” became a passion and an ‘all-time favorite’. I’m not implying that I understand it. After four decades, I still find myself wondering about the band’s motives, their intentions, and especially their lyrical ambiguities (Lowell George’s in particular). As I literally find myself growing old with this album, I recognize that the thing I love is the combination of simplicity and confounding weirdness.

    How can I reconcile the superficial ‘dumbness’ with the profound spirituality? Fully half of Lowell George’s songs are told from the perspective of an American cross-country trucker, yet somehow balanced by tales from a warped and lustful teenaged hippie hitchhiker. I’ve gone gray in the interim, but I still cannot believe that the same guy wrote both “Truck Stop Girl” and “Brides of Jesus”.  “Hamburger Midnight” (what the hell…?) is pulled together by the same human being who composed the heartbreakingly sad “I’ve Been the One”?

    This is an album that wants you to laugh and cry simultaneously, and the push/pull of emotions are aided and abetted by George’s love for surrealism and multi-syllabics .  Scattered among his amusingly bizarre diatribes are Billy Payne’s complex lyrical compositions, blatantly focusing on soul searching and honest requests for truth. Regardless of the author, song structure is never less than weird. It’s the twists and turns, the dropped beats and half measures, the raw unpredictability, that makes “Little Feat” such a dense and difficult album to latch onto. The lyrics read as prose more than poetry, and the music is bent to match, but the core impact is never damaged. Do not underestimate this album. You may never ‘get’ it, but it will accompany you for a lifetime if you do. 

    January 1971 - Billboard: Did Not Chart

     

     

     

    Related Shows

    Nick Drake - Pink Moon

    Nick Drake: Pink Moon

    Album #147 - February 1972

      0:00
      0:00
      Ry Cooder: Into the Purple Valley

      Ry Cooder: Into the Purple Valley

      Album #146 - February 1972

        0:00
        0:00
        Townes Van Zandt: High, Low and In Between

        Townes Van Zandt: High, Low and In Between

        Album #145 - January 1972

          0:00
          0:00
          Jackson Browne: Jackson Browne (AKA - 'Saturate Before Using')

          Jackson Browne: Jackson Browne (AKA - 'Saturate Before Using')

          Album #144 - January 1972

            0:00
            0:00
            J.J. Cale - Naturally

            J.J. Cale: Naturally

            Album #143 - January 1972

              0:00
              0:00
              David Bowie: Hunky Dory

              David Bowie: Hunky Dory

              Album #142 - December 1971

                0:00
                0:00
                The Kinks: Muswell Hillbillies

                The Kinks: Muswell Hillbillies

                Album #141 - November 1971

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  Pink Floyd - Meddle

                  Pink Floyd: Meddle

                  Album #140 - November 1971

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    O.V. Wright

                    O.V. Wright: A Nickel and a Nail and Ace of Spades

                    Album #139 - July 1971

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      Gil Scott Heron: Piecees of a Man

                      Gil Scott Heron: Pieces of a Man

                      Album #138 - June 1971

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        John Prine: John Prine (Self Titled)

                        John Prine: John Prine (Self Titled)

                        Album #137 - June 1971

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          Leonard Cohen: Songs of Love and Hate

                          Leonard Cohen: Songs of Love and Hate

                          Album #136 - March 1971

                            0:00
                            0:00