Reviews

Little Feat, Rooster Rag

Little Feat
Rooster Rag
(Rounder)
Rating: 3 1/2 out of 5 stars

Sixteen studio albums and over four decades into a career that started inauspiciously in 1971, the key elements of the Little Feat sound remain. Swampy rhythms? Check. Nasty, cutting slide guitar? Present. A funky combination of blues, country and rock and roll? Oh yeah. Quirky idiosyncratic songwriting? Well, three out of four ainโ€™t bad.

With keyboardist Billy Payne as the lone remaining original member, Feat stomp and strum their way through a pretty good batch of new tunes that capture the bandโ€™s distinctive musical gumbo but arenโ€™t exactly classics on the order of Lowell Georgeโ€™s timeless songs that remain the backbone of the groupโ€™s raison dโ€™รชtre. Still, with help from Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, theyโ€™re solid enough and the veteran band sounds fresh, inspired and revived if not exactly young and hungry on their first studio album of original material in twelve years and after losing irreplaceable founding drummer Ritchie Heyward. Considering their time in the cult trenches, thatโ€™s plenty impressive.