The Band's Ultimate Live Album Recorded at Its Career Peak: Rock of Ages Features Horn Arrangements by Allen Toussaint and Virtuosic Performances
Open, Natural, and Dynamic: Mobile Fidelity's Numbered-Edition Hybrid SACD Presents 1972 Set in Audiophile Sound
The Last Waltz gets bigger billing, but The Band's 1972 live album Rock of Ages is actually the better representation of a live Band album. Recorded at the tail end of the group's Cahoots tour and over the course of four nights at New York's Academy of Music at the end of December 1971, the incendiary concert set bookmarks the close of the first phase of the collective's career.
Rather than follow the lead of most other live records made at the time (and many since), The Band resists any temptation to improvise or extend its material. Instead, the group plays with an intensity, chemistry, and spirit that's nearly unrivaled by any other live album. The quintet also draws on a secret weapon: One Allen Toussaint, who tailors expert horn arrangements for multiple songs, a move that spices renditions of classics such as "Don't Do It" and "Chest Fever." To top it all off, the horn charts are performed by the Rock of Ages Horn Section – a five-piece ensemble that includes legendary trumpeter Snooky Young (Count Basie, Lionel Hampton) and saxophonist Joe Farrell (Charles Mingus, Elvin Jones).
"I felt very much at home with The Band," said Toussaint in an interview with Rob Bowman. "You could tell in their music they know where they're coming from and they know where they're going. Each one had an extremely special interest in what they were doing."
Do they ever. Unencumbered by the myriad guests and grandiose sense that define The Last Waltz, and energized by Toussaint's invaluable work, Rock of Ages is the sound of a great band pulling out all the stops. Robbie Robertson's guitar solos take "Unfaithful Servant" to a higher ground; "The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show" kicks with raunchy R&B abandon; Garth Hudson delivers a show-stealing performance on "The Genetic Method," a thrilling organ piece that incorporates elements of Anglican church music, folk, classical, and pop – as well as "Auld Lang Syne," due to its being recorded on New Year's Eve.
Mobile Fidelity's numbered-edition hybrid SACD lets The Band's feverish interplay shine like never before. Mastered from the original tapes, the open, airy, natural, and balanced sound will have you returning to Rock of Ages again and again.
- Introduction
- Don't Do It
- King Harvest (Has Surely Come)
- Caledonia Mission
- Get Up Jake
- The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
- Stage Fright
- The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
- Across The Great Divide
- This Wheel's On Fire
- Rag Mama Rag
- The Weight
- The Shape I'm In
- Unfaithful Servant
- Life is a Carnival
- The Genetic Method
- Chest Fever
- (I Don't Want To) Hang Up My Rock and Roll Shoes