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Carl
(The Summit City)
Posted: May 03, 2013 - 20:44
 

 Grayson wrote:
One of the stupidest rocks songs ever.

 
Reminds me of misspent college evenings at Duffy's Tavern playing shuffleboard when I should have been studying, so there's that yin-yang deal going on: kind of like the memories it conjures but, should I like it so much otherwise—doubtful.

Grayson
(Atlanta)
Posted: Mar 02, 2013 - 06:08
 

One of the stupidest rocks songs ever.

Rmike
(Up a creek down a river)
Posted: Feb 17, 2013 - 21:13
 

 idavido wrote:
I know  this is Blasphemy to Band fans, but I like the Three Dog Night cover better (great vocal harmonies).
 
Oh shut up



idavido
(Fairfax, Northern California, USA)
Posted: Jan 17, 2013 - 13:36
 

I know  this is Blasphemy to Band fans, but I like the Three Dog Night cover better (great vocal harmonies).

ThePoose
(Ottawa, capital of Canada)
Posted: Jan 17, 2013 - 13:34
 

RIP Levon + Rick

The greatest rhythm section ever.



Papernapkin
(Mountain View, CA)
Posted: Dec 29, 2012 - 14:11
 

Tired oldies.

helgigermany
(Germany)
Posted: Dec 29, 2012 - 14:10
 

never heared this before:nice!

cShaggy
(..in the general vicinity..)
Posted: Nov 28, 2012 - 05:16
 

 Dahlia_Gumbo wrote:
Oh, nice segue from Bach.
{#Clap}
 



..second this emotion..Bill pulled that off today too..smooth gear-shift..

yerba-32
(just a hop-skip away)
Posted: Oct 15, 2012 - 11:41
 

this song exemplifies how this is a fine pec of musicians  {#Clap}

PFM
(wherever I am)
Posted: Oct 15, 2012 - 11:37
 

 kjf06 wrote:
I hate to say. But the Three Dog Night version is pretty darn good!
 
+1

silby
Posted: Oct 15, 2012 - 11:35
 

definitely my favorite song by the Band...

Dahlia_Gumbo
(San Francisco)
Posted: Sep 26, 2012 - 09:11
 

Oh, nice segue from Bach.
{#Clap}

Sloggydog
(UK)
Posted: Sep 13, 2012 - 22:31
 

Ahh the Band.  I remember when I was across the great divide, up on cripple creek with my wheels on fire on the night they dragged old dixie down.

kjf06
Posted: Sep 13, 2012 - 22:21
 

I hate to say. But the Three Dog Night version is pretty darn good!

kurtster
(Back in Ohiya, for now ...)
Posted: Aug 25, 2012 - 20:53
 

 Mikey1 wrote:
Clever segue from Bach,  Toccata in D minor. Love it.
 
A keeper !

Stingray
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:21
 

Better than Jimi or copycat?

ThePoose
(Ottawa, capital of Canada)
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:13
 

No, it's Richard.

RIP to them both.

 
GeneP59 wrote:

Levon!  {#Cheers}
 



RipperP
(Greater New York Metro)
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:09
 

Weird experience: I have "Chest Fever" intro as my phone's ringtone for my wife. So, I'm plugging away at work with earbud's in just now listening to RP just now, when this song came on. Naturally, I grabbed my cell and couldn't understand why her name wasn't showing up in the incoming call display!?!

Needless to say, I love this tune.{#Confused} 

dpvest
(northern cali)
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:05
 

 Mikey1 wrote:
Clever segue from Bach,  Toccata in D minor. Love it.
 

I can see why after looking at the wiki below:

The introduction is based on Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor. In live performances, this solo evolved into an improvisation drawing from numerous musical styles and lasting several minutes.

good stuff...

BigIslandBlues
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:03
 

Nice Bill. J.S.Bach to the Band...seamless. Great organ work.

westslope
(BC coast)
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:02
 

 neuticle wrote:
That was a sweet mix The Bach to The  Band..seemless
 
Hear! Hear!  The DJ rocks!

westslope
(BC coast)
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:01
 

Ode to Bach?

 



Mikey1
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:00
 

Clever segue from Bach,  Toccata in D minor. Love it.

Crazytrain
(Stuck on Land)
Posted: Jul 25, 2012 - 11:00
 

Nice follow up to Toccata

SpamNRice
(Northern, Italy)
Posted: Jul 13, 2012 - 00:31
 

Goin to church with The Band! Love that gigantic synth boom-start!

lily34
(lexvegas)
Posted: Jun 11, 2012 - 08:38
 

 railroadwail wrote:

Levon!

 
amen!! love it!

Stingray
("ANONYMOUS INTERNET")
Posted: May 23, 2012 - 04:31
 

Had I had the chance to own this album in 68, I had most

likely liked it and would do so today. Without this history

it's kind hard to be enthusiastic. Still I can feel the spirit of

the late 60's. Likable, after all!



Algis
Posted: May 16, 2012 - 12:47
 

 Steve wrote:

Take a few minutes and read this. Your perspective might change.
 
I read the piece - an appreciation of Levon Helm. Don't get me wrong - I like "The Band," and enjoyed "The Last Waltz" immensely. It's this particular "song" I really dislike. With all due respect.

coding_to_music
(Beantown)
Posted: May 10, 2012 - 13:35
 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chest_Fever

"Chest Fever" is a song recorded by The Band on its 1968 debut, Music from Big Pink. It is, according to Peter Viney, a historian of the group, “the Big Pink track that has appeared on most subsequent live albums and compilations,” second only to The Weight.<1> The music for the piece was written by Robbie Robertson, guitarist and vocalist. Total authorship is typically credited solely to Robertson, although the lyrics, according to Levon Helm, were originally improvised by Levon Helm and Richard Manuel, telling the story of a man who becomes sick when he is spurned by the woman he loves.

Robertson has since said the lyrics were nonsensical, used only while the instrumental tracks were recorded. "I'm not sure that I know the words to 'Chest Fever'; I'm not even so sure there are words to 'Chest Fever'." He has also stated the entirety of the song does not make sense.

At the Woodstock Festival in 1969, The Band performed on the final day, between Ten Years After and Blood, Sweat, and Tears. They opened the set with "Chest Fever".

The song featured a dramatic solo organ intro played by Garth Hudson. The introduction is based on Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor. In live performances, this solo evolved into an improvisation drawing from numerous musical styles and lasting several minutes. "When Levon Helm has complained about the share out of royalties at this period, this is the song he quotes," states Viney. "His theme is that Garth's contribution was always grossly under-estimated and under-credited. As he says, 'what do you remember about 'Chest Fever' - the lyrics or the organ part?'"

Viney notes that, despite the death of Richard Manuel later line ups of The Band continued to perform "Chest Fever" with Helm singing lead vocals. It "rapidly became an on-stage showpiece for Garth's organ", and as such it was an essential song. The intro was a improvisation piece called "The Genetic Method".

He says the definitive recordings of the song can be found on "Live in Washington," (sic) an Italian bootleg of the group’s 1976 King Biscuit Flower Hour performance, or the version on The Complete Last Waltz.

The song has been covered numerous times by bands including Three Dog Night and, most recently, the rootsy jam bands Widespread Panic and Tishamingo. It has also been covered by John Mayer during his Battle Studies tour.

In a review of Endless Highway: The Music of the Band, David Hyland noted that "noodlers Widespread Panic transform 'Chest Fever' into how it should have sounded at 'The Last Waltz' with full horn section accompaniment if the Band hadn't played their farewell gig like they were coked out of their minds.



railroadwail
(Deep in Penn's Woods)
Posted: May 10, 2012 - 13:35
 

Levon!



Steve
(In The Shadow Of The Superstition Mountains)
Posted: Apr 21, 2012 - 11:23
 

 Algis wrote:
Sorry, this is terrible!
After Bach and Biggs (melodramatic but good), it was painful to hear this distorted-sounding organ-like noise.
 
Take a few minutes and read this. Your perspective might change.

Algis
Posted: Apr 21, 2012 - 11:04
 

Sorry, this is terrible!
After Bach and Biggs (melodramatic but good), it was painful to hear this distorted-sounding organ-like noise.

GeneP59
(On the edge of tomorrow looking back at yesterday.)
Posted: Apr 21, 2012 - 11:03
 


Levon!  {#Cheers}

IrieTom
(Plattsburgh , NY)
Posted: Apr 21, 2012 - 10:59
 

R.I.P. Levon

Bobert_ParkCity
(Park City Utah)
Posted: Apr 08, 2012 - 20:20
 

 SinisterDexter wrote:
Release date: 2000? {#Stupid}
 
re-release date....upsampled, etc

drictor
(Victor, ID, Cultural center of the universe!)
Posted: Mar 20, 2012 - 18:28
 

 dedawson wrote:
Had to give it a 2 to balance all the unwarranted 8s, 9s,  and 10s.  Three Dog Night's version was much better.

 
Too bad there's not an 11, which I would do to balance.

Sloggydog
(UK)
Posted: Feb 18, 2012 - 00:22
 

Another cool track by the Band.  Bless that funky pink house of theirs - seems to have been a bloody inspirational place.

Proclivities
(Carrboro, NC)
Posted: Jan 17, 2012 - 06:24
 

 gypsyman wrote:

Also sounds like Deep Purple stole a riff or two.

 
I don't really hear any riffs that may have been "stolen" by Deep Purple.  There are obvious similarities since Jon Lord used a Hammond organ - as did Garth Hudson on this tune.


Chowek
(Saudi Arabia)
Posted: Jan 17, 2012 - 06:19
 

 neuticle wrote:
That was a sweet mix The Bach to The  Band..seemless
 
I'll go on this one. Lloyd Cole->Bach->The Band? Fortunately, seamless transitions like this one were very rare on RP so far.



Shesdifferent
(Just visiting this planet)
Posted: Jan 04, 2012 - 16:33
 

This song in particular is not my thing...too much of this kind of stuff on RP makes me turn the channel.

neuticle
(fog fog fog)
Posted: Dec 16, 2011 - 13:29
 

That was a sweet mix The Bach to The  Band..seemless

jimmpypowder
Posted: Dec 16, 2011 - 13:25
 

Bach to the Band organs.Sweet!!!!!!!!!

Carl
(The Summit City)
Posted: Nov 14, 2011 - 20:28
 

This song's a 5 for me by itself; a 7 in the mix with Bach. Now, how to get them to pair in iTunes...

ajlept
(Athens, GA)
Posted: Nov 14, 2011 - 20:24
 

Garth Hudson, there is no substitute!

etwilson
(Pittsburgh, PA)
Posted: Nov 02, 2011 - 07:28
 

Never has the "godlike" rating seemed more appropriate.

sandymac2010
(Am I there yet?)
Posted: Oct 14, 2011 - 07:10
 

 ziakut wrote:
Segway of the year....Bill does it again. Toccata in D minor to this tune was absolutely brilliant. Just unbelievably great!!!!!!
 

No matter how you spelled it, your comment is spot on{#Clap}

ThePoose
Posted: Aug 31, 2011 - 08:22
 

So bland that this album singlehandedly changed the way top songwritersw and musicians saw the way ahead for music at that time—from Eric to Elton. Check out the attendees at The Last Waltz.

 
Papernapkin wrote:
The Bland
 


Dog_Ear
Posted: Aug 12, 2011 - 09:36
 

 Papernapkin wrote:
The Bland
 
clever . . . but inaccurate.

fingerpin
(oHIo)
Posted: Aug 12, 2011 - 09:33
 

Dayummmmm, Bill!

gypsyman
(just passing through....)
Posted: Jun 29, 2011 - 13:06
 

 ziakut wrote:
Segway of the year....Bill does it again. Toccata in D minor to this tune was absolutely brilliant. Just unbelievably great!!!!!!
 
Segue?