The Late Great Townes Van Zandt
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The Late Great Townes Van Zandt | ||
Studio album by Townes Van Zandt | ||
Released | 1972 | |
Genre | country, folk, singer-songwriter | |
Length | 38:31 | |
Label | Tomato | |
Producer(s) | Kevin Eggers and Jack Clement | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Townes Van Zandt chronology | ||
High, Low, and in Between (1972) |
The Late Great Townes Van Zandt (1972) |
Live at the Old Quarter, Houston, Texas (1977) |
The Late Great Townes Van Zandt was the second 1972 studio album by Texas singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt and a follow-up to High, Low and In Between. The album includes the earliest recorded version of two of his best-known songs, "Pancho & Lefty" and "If I Needed You". The album also included several cover songs and a re-recorded version of "Sad Cinderella" from his 1968 debut album. Some reviewers point to this as an indication that Van Zandt's prolific writing was beginning to slow,[1] however, this was his sixth studio album in five years. The cover songs included one song by his close friend, Guy Clark ("Don't Let the Sunshine Fool Ya'"), one by a major influence, Hank Williams ("Honky Tonkin'"), and the Lawton Williams song "Fraulein". As a boy Van Zandt's father only agreed to buy him his first guitar after Van Zandt promised to learn to play "Fraulein".
The album has been reissued many times over the years. In 1996, just before Van Zandt's death, Capitol released a single disk that compiled High, Low and In Between and The Late Great Townes Van Zandt onto a single disk.
Contents |
[edit] Critical acclaim
The album has made several critical "best of all-time" lists. Stereophile included it as one of 94 honorable mentions that just missed their list of "The 40 Essential Albums".[4]
[edit] Track listing
All lyrics and music by Townes Van Zandt unless noted otherwise:
- "No Lonesome Tune" – 4:21
- "Sad Cinderella" – 4:15
- "German Mustard" (Clapalong, Van Zandt) – 2:55
- "Don't Let the Sunshine Fool Ya'" (Clark) – 2:25
- "Honky Tonkin'" (Williams) – 3:44
- "Snow Don't Fall" – 2:27
- "Fraulein" (Williams) – 2:42
- "Pancho & Lefty" – 3:40
- "If I Needed You" – 3:44
- "Silver Ships of Andilar" – 5:07
- "Heavenly Houseboat Blues" – 2:51
[edit] Release history
year | format | label | catalog # |
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1971? | LP | Tomato | 7011 |
CD | Tomato | 269627 | |
1994 | CD | Rhino | 71242 |
1996 | CD | Capitol | 53930B[5] |
2003 | CD | Tomato | 2010 |
2003 | CD | Charly | 138 |
2001 | CD | Charly | 215 |
[edit] Credits
[edit] Musicians
- Townes Van Zandt – acoustic guitar & vocals
- Joe Allan – bass
- Jack Clement – mandolin
- Vassar Clements – fiddle
- Chuck Cochran – piano, keyboards & arrangments
- Jim Colvard – guitar
- Rocky Hill – slide guitar
- Kenny Malone – drums
[edit] Production
- Produced by Kevin Eggers & Jack Clement
- Executive producer – Kevin Eggers
- Engineer &nash; Garth Fundis
- Production coordination – Kevin Calabro, Katja Maas, & Tyson Schuetze
- Remastering – Gene Paul
[edit] Artwork
- Milton Glaser – art direction, design, & cover design
- Steve Salmieri – photography
- Kevin Eggers & Lola Scobey – liner notes
[edit] Notes & sources
- ^ a b William Ruhlmann, Review for the Capitol reissue of High Low and in Between/The Late Great Townes Van Zandt, All Music Guide ' The AMG does not have an individual rating on their page for the individual album, The Late Great Townes Van Zandt (link)
- ^ Al Riess, "Recordings", (Review of Rear View Mirror, The Highway Kind, and the High, Low, and In Between/The Late Great Townes Van Zandt reissue), Dirty Linen, 72, October-November 1997, p. 49
- ^ Tyson Schuetze, "CD Reviews: The Late Great Townes Van Zandt", (favorable review of reissued Tomato Records catalog), Relix - Music for the Mind, 29:4, August-September 2002, p. 80
- ^ Robert Baird, Richard Lehnert and Robert Levine, "40 Years of Stereophile: The 40 Essential Albums", Stereophile November, 2002 (main article, "honorable mentions")
- ^ The October 1, 1996 Capitol reissue combined High, Low and In Between & The Late Great Townes Van Zandt onto a single disk.