Music from Big Pink [Bonus Tracks] The Band

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CD - Remastered

  • Release Date: 08/29/2000
  • Original Release: 1968
  • Sales Rank: 1,116
  • Label: CAPITOL
  • UPC: 724352539024

Listener Rating: (3 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Arrangements" See All

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Music from Big Pink [Bonus Tracks]

1LISTENTears of Rage 5:23
2LISTENTo Kingdom Come 3:22
3LISTENIn a Station 3:34
4LISTENCaledonia Mission 2:59
5LISTENThe Weight 4:38
6LISTENWe Can Talk 3:06
7LISTENLong Black Veil 3:06
8LISTENChest Fever 5:18
9LISTENLonesome Suzie 4:04
10LISTENThis Wheel's on Fire 3:14
11LISTENI Shall Be Released 3:19
12LISTENYazoo Street Scandal Bonus Track / Outtake 4:01
13LISTENTears of Rage Bonus Track / Alternate Take 5:32
14LISTENKatie's Been Gone Bonus Track / Outtake 2:46
15LISTENIf I Lose Bonus Track / Outtake 2:29
16LISTENLong Distance Operator Bonus Track / Outtake 3:58
17LISTENLonesome Suzie Bonus Track / Alternate Take 3:00
18LISTENOrange Juice Blues (Blues for Breakfast) [Demo Version Bonus Track / Outtake-Demo 3:40
19LISTENKey to the Highway Bonus Track / Outtake 2:28
20LISTENFerdinand the Imposter Bonus Track / Outtake-Demo / Demo Version 3:59

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The four Canadians (Robbie Robertson, Richard Manuel, Garth Hudson, and Rick Danko) and one Arkansan (Levon Helm) who made up the Band created some of the most quintessentially American music of the 1960s and '70s. They cut their hallmark album, Music from Big Pink, in 1966 after a lengthy and legendary tour as Bob Dylan's backing band. Holing up in an old house in West Saugerties, New York (the same locale that birthed Dylan's The Basement Tapes), the Band ignored the current musical mania for psychedelia and took a more historic approach, looking back at the roots of American popular music, exploring blues, country, folk, even Civil War ballads. Three decades later, the original tunes on Music from Big Pink ("The Weight," "This Wheel's on Fire," "Tears of Rage," as well as the first recorded appearance of Dylan's "I Shall Be Released") still retain the sound of classic Americana. More than 30 years after its release, Robbie Robertson and company decided to tinker with the classic album -- and actually managed to better it through the addition of nine rarities and outtakes long thought to have slipped between the cracks. Fans and novices alike will appreciate the appearance of tracks such as a Robertson rarity called "Ferdinand the Impostor" and a demo rendition of "Orange Juice Blues" that spotlights the piano and vocals of Richard Manuel. Devotees will likewise feast on alternate versions of such Basement Tapes favorites as "Yazoo Street Scandal" and "Tears of Rage." Joel Roberts, Barnes & Noble



More Reviews and Recommendations

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

Bringing the basement to the studioby JohnQ

Reader Rating:
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July 28, 2009: The album itself is very good and is enjoyable even without knowing the history behind it. This album has songs that were first worked on in the so-called Basement Tapes and recorded in the studio long before those tapes were released (although the boots were beginning to surface). This album had two songs co-written by Bob Dylan and so, in a time when Dylan was in exile, it was exciting to have those songs come out. People may have originally bought this album out of curiosity about what Dylan was up to but they ended up appreciating just how good Dylan's Band was, so much so that The Band ended up with its own following, and rightly so. A classic album.

I Also Recommend: The Band, The Basement Tapes.

one of the warmest, most beautiful albums ever madeby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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October 11, 2004: Feeling a bit blue? Stick on Music from Big Pink. This album has got the remedy and then some. Now I've never heard the vinyl version, or the CD version that was initially released. I've only got the most recent version that has all the bonus tracks. I don't know if they've done any real tinkering with the sound here, but this version of Big Pink sounds really cosy, really warm and simultaneously sounds like music that should be played in the great outdoors, or in a house by a warm fire on a cold winter's night. Absolute top marks for opener 'Tears of Rage', which is one of the most chilled, slow and mellow songs that have ever opened an album. It's really lovely. In fact, all the way, The Band make playing music sound so easy: they just sound so relaxed, so in tune with each other, so effortlessly on top form. Take 'The Weight', which I've noticed being used in a few films now and then, which just strolls gorgeously, boasting a lovely harmony break at the end of each chorus. Or 'Chest Fever', which has a great organ intro before settling into a cool beat. Or 'In a Station', which just feels so good to listen to, thanks to the amazing vocals. Or 'Lonesome Suzie', a beautiful bittersweet thing of wonder. 'I Shall Be Released' is an incredible closer. Slow, catchy, brilliant, Music from Big Pink is essential listening.