| Stage Fright | 
| Artist: The Band Label: Capitol Category: Music
List Price: $8.94 Buy New: $4.98 as of 9/6/2010 19:49 CDT details You Save: $3.96 (44%)
New (29) Used (11) Collectible (1) from $4.98
Seller: --cdzone-uk-- Rating: 37 reviews Sales Rank: 8,806
Format: Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 724352539529 EAN: 0724352539529 ASIN: B00004W50Z
Release Date: August 29, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Strawberry Wine | | • | Sleeping | | • | Time To Kill | | • | Just Another Whistle Stop | | • | All La Glory | | • | The Shape I'm In | | • | The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show | | • | Daniel And The Sacred Harp | | • | Stage Fright | | • | The Rumor | | • | Daniel And The Sacred Harp (Alternate Take) | | • | Time To Kill (Alternate Mix) | | • | The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show (Alternate Mix) | | • | Radio Commercial |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential recordings The Band's third studio album is also their third-best studio album, and that isn't bad. It's not as synchronous as Music from Big Pink or as overpowering as The Band, but that's part of its appeal. The quintet's first two albums were such towering achievements that the group came to lean on those songs, turning the lion's share of them into concert staples. Stage Fright is littered with lesser-known Robbie Robertson compositions possessing more modest charms than the overplayed likes of "The Weight" and "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." The title track is uncommonly hard-eyed and modern; Richard Manual's vocal, like most of his turns at the mic, is sparkling. (Manual also shines on the reflective "Sleeping" and the uptempo "Just Another Whistle Stop"). "All La Glory" is a gorgeous lullaby, while "Time to Kill" sounds like the Band doing Creedence Clearwater Revival. This isn't the place to discover this great North American band, but it's definitely a stop worth taking before your exploration is completed. The 2000 remastered reissue isn't as generously fleshed out with bonus tracks as its predecessors, offering up only three alternate takes and a vintage radio commercial. --Steven Stolder
Amazon.com The Band's third studio album is also their third-best studio album, and that isn't bad. It's not as synchronous as Music from Big Pink or as overpowering as The Band, but that's part of its appeal. The quintet's first two albums were such towering achievements that the group came to lean on its songs, turning the lion's share of them into concert staples. Stage Fright is littered with lesser-known Robbie Robertson compositions possessing more modest charms than the overplayed likes of "The Weight" and "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." The title track is uncommonly hard-eyed and modern; Richard Manuel's vocal, like most of his turns at the mic, is sparkling. (Manuel also shines on the reflective "Sleeping" and the uptempo "Just Another Whistle Stop"). "All La Glory" is a gorgeous lullaby, while "Time to Kill" sounds like the Band doing Creedence Clearwater Revival. This isn't the place to discover this great North American band, but it's definitely a stop worth taking before your exploration is completed. --Steven Stolder
Album Description Limited Edition Japanese "Mini Vinyl" CD, faithfully reproduced using original LP artwork including the inner sleeve. Features most recently mastered audio including bonus tracks where applicable.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 37
Robertson vs. Manuel in a life and death struggle February 8, 2003 John Stodder (livin' just enough) 109 out of 116 found this review helpful
The conventional wisdom is right: Pound for pound, "Big Pink" and "The Band" are more complete successes for this group, and I love them both. But I love "Stage Fright" more. It is the album where this group drops its masks and speaks directly to the audience about themselves and each other. The Band is really two duos: Helm and Danko, who are usually paired as singers on some of the group's best-loved material, and Robertson and Manuel, who are engaged in a sort of musical and spiritual dialogue that often forms much of the depth, richness and mystery of this group. That dialogue is the dominant theme of "Stage Fright" in its many evocations of the theme of self-destructiveness, especially the self-destructiveness of a great artist. My theory is, Richard Manuel was the artistic soul of the The Band. He was their best singer, by far. His "feel" approach to playing the many instruments he played, especially piano, gave the Band a funky, soulful "bottom" that contrasted with the highly intellectual approaches of both Robertson and Hudson. Manuel was responsible, on their first three albums, for some of their very best songs as writer or co-writer: "Tears of Rage," "In A Station," "Lonesome Suzie," "Whispering Pines," "Across the Great Divide," and, on this album, "Sleeping" and "The Shape I'm In" were at least partly his. But...Richard Manuel was not a particularly responsible person. He was, in fact a drunk, and an unmotivated writer. He was a sadly vulnerable man, for whom, as Robertson writes in "Sleeping," "the world was too sore to live in." In some ways, being in the Band destroyed him. At the same time, it created a place for him to hide. Robertson, ever the brilliant control freak, clearly admired and loved Richard Manuel, and was also exasperated with him. Robertson was basically in charge of the business of The Band, and also the artistic direction of The Band as its most prolific songwriter. He wanted Manuel to play a bigger role, but eventually saw that he couldn't, or wouldn't. And so, according to my theory, he wrote songs to reach him when nothing else would work. It is no accident that the leadoff track is "Strawberry Wine," a fun but desperate track in which Levon Helm sings (brilliantly) the part of a drunk who wants to be left alone to "feel good all the time." This is followed by the album's first masterpiece, "Sleeping," which at first seems to be about life as a musician on the road, but expands into a poem about isolation and hiding. This song, one of Manuel's most treasured performances, almost seems like a dialogue between the two men, with Robertson acknowledging that perhaps life on the road, in which "to be called by noon, is to be called too soon" is part of the drill if you're performing before crowds of people "searching" for something special every night. Maybe, Robertson seems to suggest, that's why Richard is such a juicer; it's the road's fault. But then, the song seems to say, that's not why. He would be living this way on his own, even if he weren't part of The Band. Maybe the rock and roll lifestyle isn't killing him; maybe it's really keeping him alive. I won't go through every song, but themes of drunkenness, fear, isolation, and hiding take some form in almost every remaining track. Even the two songs that have the "old-timey" historic and mythic resonances of their prior albums, "Daniel and the Sacred Harp" and "W.S. Walcott's Medicine Show" are tales full of personal symbolism. Richard Manuel plays the role of the music-mad Daniel who sells his soul to play the sacred harp, but Levon Helm sings the part of the narrator who becomes horrified at Daniel's fate: "When he looked to the ground, he noticed no shadow did he cast." Again, this is Robertson assessing the cost of the music career to himself and his bandmates, especially Manuel. "Walcott" reinterprets the rock and roll touring lifestyle as a 19th century medicine show, in which alcohol-laced snake oil and other mind altering substances are purveyed to the dazzled crowds as the keys to health--which, back in '69 is about right. Manuel just happened to be the guy who kept sampling the stock. After this album, Manuel had many more wonderful performances ahead of him, but he wrote no more songs. From the Last Waltz and everything one can read about the Band, he appears to have not taken the bootstrap advice of the singer in "Stage Fright" who "when he gets to the end, wants to start all over again." He went on, and kept singing because that kept him afloat long enough to get the next drink. He began the long, slow retreat that to the people who knew him best and admired his talent was probably an agonizing spectacle to watch. I see "Stage Fright" as a collection of songs in which Robbie Robertson alternately rages at, laughs at, cries about, and tries to save, Richard Manuel--and in which Richard Manuel finally escapes Robertson's tender mercies. And, as great as the first two Band albums might have been, they don't have this kind of intimacy and depth. This album is hardly the coda or afterthought to a classic period--it may be its culmination.
Crystal clarity and some of the best songs ever written... November 22, 2004 Leslie Karen Rigsbey (WOOD RIVER, IL USA) 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Yeah, all of the Band's albums are dark, and some are intense to
say the least, but this record has Robbie and the other guys at
their peak. This time, though, they are playing ROCK AND ROLL!
Every track is a marvelous piece of lyricism, and the music is
equally good. "The Rumor" has to be one of the ten best songs
ever written anywhere by anybody, and The Band drive it home with
just the right amount of plot and passion. Don't pass this up,
because music like this isn't created anymore. It may not be their BEST ALBUM, but everything by the Band is brilliant and just wait until you hear the sonic clarity here. Never in my life
have I heard music that has this much atmosphere and intelligence. OH, YOU DON'T KNOW how good this record is!!!
Great December 19, 2000 David Wheeler (Buffalo, NY, USA) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Published reviews of this album are perplexing to me. Do people compare this album to their first two masterpieces, or are they reviewing the album by itself, comparative to everything else that came out that year? In my opinion the mixed reviews that it was gotten are due to people comparing it to their earlier work which must not be, and cannot be done. The supposed decline in quality from The Band to this is overly exaggerated. This album is still better than almost anything else recorded at the time and is simply a joy to listen to. That being said it is a much more straightforward and less complex album than its predecessors yet this does not make it any less enjoyable to listen to. For the most part the songs are all sung with one lead vocal, with little harmony in the mix. The album kicks off with Strawberry Wine a very up tempo rocker cowritten and sung by Helm. This moves into Sleeping, an absolutely beautiful Richard Manuel song that almost makes me cry listening to it. Another beautiful song on the album is All La Glory a childish lullaby type song sung by Helm that is one of my favorites. There are many more "rock" songs on this album than on any other Band album in my opinion. Time to Kill, Just Another Whistle Stop and The Shape I'm In are all heavier than most of their songs and the closest the Band got to sounding like anyone else. Stage Fright, in my opinion the best song on the album, will always be one of my favorites. The Rumor is actually the only song on this album that I don't consider to be great. The playing on this album is still impeccable even if the arrangements aren't as complex. Both Hudson's organ and Robertson's guitar are much more prominent. There are more guitar solos on this album then on their first two albums combined and Hudson's organ also becomes the lead instrument more often, notably on The Shape I'm In. Danko uses a fretless bass on the whole album which is quite interesting. The horn arrangement on W.S Walcott Medicine Show is a real treat as well. Overall I think the down home country feeling is still there although the songs have become more on their own than put together. which is by no means a bad thing. The wide range of instruments remains, and Robertson's songwriting is still effective. This remastered version contains far less than the rest of the albums but this is no reason to not go right out and pick this up. Stage Fright is a true masterpiece, an album that deserves to be listened to and valued based on the music that it contains, not on what came before it.
Tears come to me eyes when I hear this record September 1, 2005 Kent Wall (Stockholm) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Tears come to me eyes when I hear this record, so solid, so authentic, so smooth and full of experience... It's down to earth, and it's coming directly from the heart with no inkling of a pretence. If you don't know it already. There was never any fake connected with THE BAND.
"All La Glory" is so good it's unbelievable. "The shape I'm in" is so true for me right now that I might have to search in my record box until doomsday to find anything similiar to the hurt expressed there.
If you have the three first records of this group, you will have something in your possession that very few groups today can match.
Those are classic recordings now, originating from the best of the American tradition, and "Stage Fright" is just as brilliant in my ears as the other two.
A little Different - But Just as Strong! June 4, 2006 Morten Vindberg (Denmark) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Expectations were high when the Band released their third album in 1970. After two masterpieces, would they be able to do it again?
Guitarist and main song-writer Robbie Robertson had expressed a wish to do a more basic rock'n roll album - a more light-hearted good time record.
At the same time things were beginning to get more complicated for some members of the Band. Their commercial success meant money, and money meant temptations and easy access to drugs. At the time of the recordings of "Stage Fright" all three singers were taking heroin, and this obviously influenced the record and to some extent changed the sound of their vocals.
Though Robertson managed to write some lyrics that fit his original idea of a basic light-hearted rock album; other songs deal with darker sides of life.
Opening song, "Strawberry Wine", sung and co-written by Levon Helm is a blues fitting nicely into the original concept.
This is the last album where singer Richard Manuel contributes original material, and Robertson had to help him finish his two songs. "Sleeping" is a beatiful pianoballad with a rocking chorus; obviously sung by Manuel.
"Time to Kill" has a great catchy guitar intro and rocks on nicely with Danko and Manuel sharing the lead vocals.
The second Manuel song is "Just Another Whistle Stop", which features another fine intro, and it is also one of the few Band studi-recording with an extended guitar-solo from Robertson.
All four opening tracks bear the high quality mark of the Band, but the first really outstanding track is Robertson's beautiful lullaby/ballad "All La Glory". This is such a great song with Helm doing one of his best ever recorded vocals.
The dark theme is coming forward on the next rocker "The Shape I'm In" - sung by Manuel.
The slightly jazzy "W.S. Walcott Medicine Show" is quite amusing featuring different brass instruments, but lyrically the song show a serious side of Robertson's songwriting.
The original album was ended with 3 more outstanding Band songs; all personal favourites of mine.
"Daniel and the Sacred Harp" is a country/folky song telling a the story of Daniel in a similar way the Dylan told the story of "Frankie Lee and Judas Priest". It's always a thrill when the three singers share the verses and all join in on the chorus.
The title track sung by Rick Danko, was an immediate live-favourite and one Danko finest performances; which says a lot.
"The Rumor" is another outstanding ballad, again with all singers taking lead verses. A worthy final the a great album.
The album is often regarded as a step downhill for the Band; I don't see it that way - it's a little different, yes, but just a strong as its predecessors.
This new version of the album features some interesting alternate versions, but none ot them matches the original recordings.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 37
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