50 Years Later: Revisiting Little Feat's Defining Studio Album 'Dixie Chicken' - Glide Magazine (2024)

  • January 25, 2023
  • B-Sides, Columns
  • By Doug Collette
  • 13 Comments

After two excellent albums as a quartet, duly applauded by critics but overlooked by the masses (despite yeoman’s work on the promotional parts of their Warner Brothers record label), Little Feat reinvented itself as a sextet forDixie Chicken. It is in this configuration that the group gained the fame it holds today (albeit in one of many subsequently revamped lineups).

Upon the departure of original bassist Roy Estrada, the other founding members Lowell George, Bill Payne, and Richie Hayward aligned themselves with guitarist Paul Barrere, percussionist Sam Clayton and bassist Kenny Gradney (the latter two leaving Delaney & Bonnie and Friends to join these eccentric ranks). Produced by Lowell George–at the time Little Feat’s principal songwriter, vocalist, and guitarist–the six-man bond was remarkable in its unity. With a half-century hindsight now, it’s even more impressive how this record manages to feature the talents of all involved in accurate proportion to their contributions.

In the process of tightening up, the musicians imbued the newly-modified ensemble’s sound with an unmistakable New Orleans rhythm influence (more than a little reminiscent of the famed Meters) that rendered its quirky style as memorable as it was infectious. The title song stands as the archetype of the modified second-line approach, thanks in no small measure to Hayward’s deft touch, and it’s wisely sequenced as the very first cut of the ten on the album, its joyful impact ratified by the subsequent track “Two Trains.”

Yet even as both those numbers handsomely featured the virtues of the new Little Feat, including George’s unpredictable vocal phrasing and his equally distinctive slide guitar,Dixie Chickendoesn’t include another cut moving at much the same stop-and-go beat, with comparably comical lyric imagery, til the eighth selection. “Fat Man in the Bathtub” follows what is essentially a solo acoustic tune by Lowell, “Roll Um Easy,” then two-blues derived, ominous mood pieces in the form of “On Your Way Down” (composed by NOLA icon Allen Toussaint) and “Kiss It Off,” its arrangement dominated by dark clouds of the synthesizer from Payne. (Aside from “Apolitical Blues,” it is the only Feats tune of topical tenor, but this song, originally titled “Milk Toast Hitler,” has proven relevant across multiple timelines of American politics).

The latter also composed “Walkin’ All Night” with Barrere, the first of what would become a string of songs that are basically replications of Lowell George’s main style of songwriting, singing and guitar playing. The latter’s “Juliette” is something different, however, a combination cautionary tale/character portrait, delivered gently but firmly, via guarded understatement.

Recalling the sophom*ore albumSailin’ Shoes, its rootsy folk-rock strains constitute an ideal setup for the LP closer, an instrumental called “Lafayette Railroad.” A performance so mesmerizing it compels the question of whether it’s possible to play any more slowly and tantalizingly utilize a bottleneck (here in the form of the socket-wrench attachment George preferred), it is, in fact, like everything that’s preceded it, a denouement that displays a sumptuous range of audio dynamics in such a way the sonics mirrors Feat’s instrumental versatility.

Neon Park’s surreal cover art forDixie Chickenradiated all the surreal humor of the music at its most off-beat. Like the images on the previous LP (and in a variety of future forms as well, inimitably suited to their respective records), it stands as the crowning touch to an oeuvre arguably more self-sufficient and distinctive as any contemporary band this side of the Grateful Dead.

Certainly, the loyalty of the Feats’ fanbase is compared favorably to the Deadheads community and for similar reasons. Followers of both institutions endured multiple personnel changes and, in the case of, Little Feat, the shadow of a split-up from internecine squabbling within the group afflicted much of its history following this record and into the self-referentialFeats Don’t Fail Me Now.

During this period too, George’s tangible retreat from prominence was obvious through the album that followed, wryly titledThe Last Record Album, an unstable state of affairs that also continued into 1977’sTime Loves A Hero(which included the quasi-fusion of “Day At The Dog Races,” which the one-time titular leader refused to play live).

The abiding faith in Feats then transferred to tracking group activities (of lack thereof) in the wake of George’s 1979 death right up until the present day’s regular recurrent tours and archive releases. The continuity therein, including tours marking the anniversary of the beloved group’s other defining moment, the concert piece that isWaiting For Columbus, should be no surprise, especially now with a half-century hindsight. This third Little Feat album is as durable (or more so) as any release of its time.

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13 Responses

  1. The best band ever! Dixie Chicken hit me when I was 13. And still at 64 my favorite!

    Reply

  2. Little Feat help you make all the hot spots, and your money flow like wine. Hopefully you’ll remember some of it, including the denouement. But then you’ll be left with Featsitis which you can’t shake off. Best to mosey down that railroad.

    Reply

  3. As Bonnie Raitt once said, “I miss Little Feat more than I miss being 8 years old”. I think she was referring mostly to Lowell, but I take her point

    Reply

  4. I have been a fan of feats since late 70’s, I admire their survival instincts. They are one of the greatest storytellers in the business. People who attend a feats concert leave happy and can’t wait for the next show. Feat’s won’t ever fail. My wife and I have wanted to participate in the annual Bahama cruise but at the time raising two sets of twin boys money was tight. Thank you for all the joy over the years.

    Reply

  5. I have been a fan of feats since late 70’s, I admire their survival instincts. They are one of the greatest storytellers in the business. People who attend a feats concert leave happy and can’t wait for the next show. Feat’s won’t ever fail. My wife and I have wanted to participate in the annual Bahama cruise but at the time raising two sets of twin boys money was tight. Thank you for all the joy over the years. This may be duplicated but I don’t know how to delete the first.

    Reply

  6. Love the Piano part on Dixie Chicken!

    Reply

  7. Dixie Chicken has always been the most accurate description of my relationships with women. Thanks, Lowell.

    Reply

  8. Love Little Feat … went to my first concert in 1975 at the Warner Theatre in Washington DC … Bonnie Rait opened up and the party began … Fabulous music .. loved Lowell George .. Sailing Shoes..Fat Man in the Bathtub.. Dixie Chicken and the list goes on and on … saw them at least 20 times … Feats don’t Fail me now …Great band for sure ❤️

    Reply

  9. Was introduced to LF in the early ’80s and uby a new roommate. Unfortunately, Lowell was already gone. Fell in love with their sound. Saw them in the late’ 80s in Seattle at Bumbershoot. They were amazing. Dixie Chicken is my all-time favourite album. Maybe one day I’ll get to go on the Bahama cruise with that roommate, cuz 41 years later we’re still best friends.

    Reply

  10. WAITING FOR COLUMBUS

    Reply

  11. Went SIU Carbondale, and was on the student council. We got lucky and discovered Little Feat playing St Louis with an open date in December before playing in Chicago. They agreed to travel Carbondale during finals week. I was riding my bike across campus the morning before they played and heard them doing a sound check. I went to my 10th row center seat and Lowell asked me where was a great place for lunch. I recommended Mary Lou’s on Main Street. The band’s picture still hangs prominently as you enter Mary Lou’s. SIU 1975

    Reply

  12. Ahhh, the memories…

    I grew up in DC, as far as I know, the epicenter of Feat’s fan base. My best friend’s older brother was dating Bonnie Rait, so going to Rait & LF concerts, and sometimes scoring backstage passes, was a regular affair for us. One LF memory was being at an out-of-control party in Kensington Park, MD, when a living room full of drunken, stoned high schoolers, dancing up and down in unison to Dixie Chicken, cracked to main carrying beam of the house. The floor sagged sickeningly, and everyone fled. Party over.

    Another time, when LF was coming to Lisner Auditorium, my girlfriend and best friend (mentioned previously) went to the Commodore Hotel looking for a souvenir to give to the band. The only thing we could find with “Commodore” on it was a six-foot rubber door mat. Our get-away vehicle was my girlfriend’s VW bug (shout out to the get-away driver Mary!). The door mat was so big we couldn’t closed the doors. Lowell George seemed non-plussed when we wrangled our way back stage and presented him with it at Lisner. That was hours before his tragic death of a cocaine overdose. Dixie Chicken is, to my mind, one of the top-ten rock albums ever. The quirkiness is what sets it apart from so many other title contenders.

    Reply

  13. Lowell was weary of certain band members making demands “or else”.
    He called they’re bluff. Knowing his 1st Solo LP was about to be released and a tour
    Soon to follow. The only real Little Feat, was the one that Lowell created. THE ONE that Lowell was in.

    Reply

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50 Years Later: Revisiting Little Feat's Defining Studio Album 'Dixie Chicken' - Glide Magazine (2024)
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