Cahoots & Roots: Live [Import]

cahoots & roots: live [import]

Track Listings

1. God's Gift To Man
2. Let It Rain
3. Kingston
4. Love Understanding
5. Sneakin' Sally
6. Deep Colours Bleed
7. Good To Be Alive
8. Days Of Magic
9. Florence
10. Downfall
11. Lifelong Guarantee
12. Coming Home
13. Instant Karma
14. Mama Talk To Your Daughter
15. Why Get Up
16. Bobby's Soul Serenade
17. He Gave The Names
18. From 4 Till Late
19. Slow Down
20. Carlypso
See all 21 tracks on this disc

Cahoots & Roots: Live,Carl Carlton,Spv,Rock
Cahoots
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Most bands would give their left arm for an album as good as this
  • Where did the magic go?
  • A Fine Album Made Better
  • From what I've heard
  • Worst Band Album
Cahoots
The Band
Manufacturer: Capitol
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Folk RockFolk Rock | Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Country RockCountry Rock | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Stage Fright
  2. Northern Lights-Southern Cross
  3. Moondog Matinee
  4. Islands
  5. The Band

ASIN: B00004W50Y
Release Date: 2000-08-29

Tracks:

  1. Life Is A Carnival
  2. When I Paint My Masterpiece
  3. Last Of The Blacksmiths
  4. Where Do We Go From Here?
  5. 4% Pantomime
  6. Shoot Out In Chinatown
  7. The Moon Struck One
  8. Thinkin' Out Loud
  9. Smoke Signal
  10. Volcano
  11. The River Hymn
  12. Endless Highway (Early Studio Take)
  13. When I Paint My Masterpiece (Alternate Take)
  14. Bessie Smith (Outtake)
  15. Don't Do It (Outtake - Studio Version)
  16. Radio Commercial

Amazon.com

Here's where the Band stumbled. This 1971 lapse followed two consensus classics (Music from Big Pink and The Band) and the dicier but still worthy Stage Fright. Consequently, expectations were high. But, despite moments of excellence ("Life Is a Carnival," "When I Paint My Masterpiece," their first Dylan cover since their debut), primary songwriter Robbie Robertson repeatedly comes up short. "Last of the Blacksmiths," "Where Do We Go from Here," and "River Hymn" are overwrought attempts to recapture the unaffected longing for the past that marked the first two albums, while the likes of "Smoke Signal" and "Volcano" are merely forgettable. Still, Van Morrison's rambunctious duet with Richard Manuel on "4% Pantomime" and the weird "Moon Struck One" help make Cahoots a worthwhile curio for those interested in digging deep into the Band songbook. The remastered reissue includes four quality bonus songs as well as a vintage radio spot. --Steven Stolder

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Most bands would give their left arm for an album as good as this.......2007-02-28

This 4th Band album has gotten a bad rap over the years. Only because the first 3 were so legendary. I tell you what, do yourself a favor and listen to this album again, I was amazed how good it really is. With songs like The River Hymm, Life Is A Carnival, Moon Struck One, Shoot Out in Chinatown an dthe underrated Volcano, it's an album most bands would die for to make.

3 out of 5 stars Where did the magic go?.......2007-01-07

Unfortunately, it's not here on the Band's 4th full-length, Cahoots. You don't have to dig very deep into The Band's history to hear a catalog of reasons why Cahoots turned out the way it is (not very good); no one would help Robbie write, Levon, Rick and Richard were more interested in drugs than a half-baked album, and Garth's narcolepsy combined with his lack of inspiration from Robbie's new material made him fall asleep during recording sessions. Sounds pretty rough, huh? Although Cahoots has a pretty rough reputation (as well as many stalwart fans who seem bent on hyperbole, arguing that it's the best album The Band ever put out), it's not that it's characteristically bad, it's just uninspired, forced, and shrivels in comparison with their first three albums.

I think the main problem is probably the writing. When you look at the other reviews on the page, probably about 3/4 of the tracks are labeled worthless by one reviewer or another. Like anybody else, there are are tracks on this album that I like and others I think are pretty terrible, but I think the general point of this trend is that this album is really hit or miss. It's not like The Band, where every track was strong; the songs on Cahoots aren't that strong, so they depend on the listener and her/his preferences. Not a hallmark of a classic album.

"Life is A Carnival" is pretty good, by anyone's standards. It's real funky, with a sweet bass line from Rick Danko (I can almost see that dance he used to do) and some characteristically good drumming from Levon. Allen Toussaint's horn arrangements get a lot of buzz, but I could probably take them or leave them. I'm a bigger fan of The Band's home-grown horns (i.e. "Tears of Rage," "Chest Fever"), and these slick arrangements ("Last of the Blacksmiths" included) don't really seem to fit The Band. Not only that, it sometimes feels like Robbie wanted to add a flowery horn section to cover up some mediocre material--they seem more like an unnecessary ornate dressing and not an essential part of the music, so in the end it just isn't too convincing. The second track is a great example of how forced the creation of this album was; "Hey, people loved the Dylan tracks we did on our first album, let's do another one." I've never been too big of a fan of "When I Paint My Masterpiece," though some are, Garth Hudson plays some pretty cool accordion on the track though.

A lot of the rest of Cahoots is pretty experimental, melodically, but lackluster lyrically. "The Last of the Blacksmiths" has some really interesting chord changes, and I like the theme (a prevalent one on this album of innocence/good old days lost), but the ideas needed a little more refinement, and "Moon Struck One" has a pretty wimpy story lyric, but Richard Manuel's vocal melody is pretty interesting and Garth Hudson plays some sweet keys. For me, "Shoot Out In Chinatown" is the worst Band song ever written. From the stock "Chinese-sounding" guitar riff to the outdated culturally insensitive stereotypes in the lyrics, I often wish Robbie never wrote it. "4% Pantomime" is a track I actually like, more for the dynamic between Richard and Van Morrison than for the writing quality, which is again nothing too special. The version on A Musical History is better for the energy between the two singers.

The rest of the album, though pleasant enough (and pretty rocking at times on "Smoke Signal," [also better live on A Musical History] and also on "Volcano") doesn't really make a very memorable impression. Maybe it's because many of the tracks try to unsuccessfully recreate classic moments from past albums or keep up with an uninspired desire to buy into the "Americana" image that the media created for The Band (case in point, "The River Hymn").

After a few listens, you can really tell that the main problem with Cahoots is that their hearts just weren't in it. Although I've ripped on it pretty heavily, it's not worthless, just not very inspirational. I recommend you get it after steeping yourself in The Band's first three albums, which are much more transcendental. That way you can appreciate its small pleasures while at the same time appreciating what set the first albums so far above Cahoots. Then buy Moondog Matinee to see that the boys hadn't lost their playing skills, they were just waiting for some good original material. Last, Northern Lights - Southern Cross, a surprise classic. You'll appreciate its quality a lot more by comparing it with this period, where The Band's creativity floundered.

5 out of 5 stars A Fine Album Made Better .......2006-09-16

There is an eerie haunting sound to this 4rd album from The Band..the production is noticeably slicker, funky horns,the songs juxtapose upon each other unlike the thematic soundscapes found on their 3 prior efforts.
If their first album, Music From Big Pink was the soul, their 2nd,The Band, the heart, their 3rd, Stage Fright,raw emotion, then Cahoots is the mind..these well crafted produced songs featuring the likes of New Orleans legend A. Touissant, a great belting Van Morrison, all add to a fine album worthy of being part of any one's collection..As a matter of fact, 2 great Band classics, their stellar version of Dylan's troubadour gypsy classic "When I Paint My Masterpiece" and the funky "Life Is A Carnival" are well worth the 5 stars allotted this review.
The eerie vocal mixes throughout, a group somewhat not sounding comfortable but in Cahoots with it all..poised for stardom and somehow throwing it all away in their persistence of authenticity is a theme felt throughout these tracks...the strained guitar chords of Robbie Robertson, the pain found in Danko's and Manuel's singing, the ever present exuberance of the highs and lows found in Levon Helm's voice and the keyboard wizardry of that mad tinkerer Garth Hudson all add to an album hard to find the likes of nowadays.
The Band gels and manage to shine in the right places.
The extra tracks are all stellar,Endless Highway,Bessie smith,Don't Do It..

4 out of 5 stars From what I've heard.......2006-08-08

I've only had the opportunity to listen to part of this album, but I like what I've heard.

I am among the ones that does not understand the sentiment against "The Moon Struck One." The song is written about and somewhat from the viewpoint of a little kid. "He looked like he's really really hurt" is exactly what a little girl would say. I find that the language evokes, not just a chronological place in time like "Old Dixie," but a place in life, to which every person who has been a kid can relate. I like the words of the song, also. "Sweetheart" and "cohort" rhyming has always thrilled me.

If "Moon" is the lowpoint of the album, I can hardly wait to hear the rest.

I'll reserve the fifth star until I have heard the entire album.

1 out of 5 stars Worst Band Album.......2006-07-06

Unless one considers "Planet Waves," Dylan's 1974 studio album with the Band playing backup, to be a Band album, "Cahoots" has no competition for the title of the worst Band album ever. Yes, the first two tracks are good ("Life is a Carnival" - great rhythms, great horns, OK lyrics; and Dylan's "Masterpiece" -- does nothing for me, but I understand many people love it), but they are available on other compilations, so the reason to shell out for "Cahoots" has to reside in the remaining tracks if anywhere, and they are AWFUL. The songs, that is, not the performances. The boys sing and play as well as ever, but their efforts -- particularly some fine Danko vocals and Hudson horn playing -- are wasted on songs that are utterly tuneless, charmless and brainless. There is not a single memorable musical phrase on tracks 3-11. Nor do the bonus tracks on this reissue rescue the enterprise: all are either available elsewhere in equivalent or superior versions or are unworthy of inclusion on anything (a RADIO COMMERCIAL?!). Save your money for any of the worthier products of this wonderful group of musicians.
Conspiracy Theories
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Conspiracy Theories

    Manufacturer: Moonjune
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B000QEILC4
    Release Date: 2007-07-17

    Tracks:

    1. Conspiracy Theories
    2. Press Find Enter
    3. Flashpoint
    4. 5s & 7s
    5. End Of the Line
    6. Freudian Triode
    7. Orinaca
    8. Crackpot
    9. Lydiotic
    All That
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      All That
      In Cahoots
      Manufacturer: Cuneiform
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
      Progressive RockProgressive Rock | Progressive | Rock | Styles | Music
      Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
      Similar Items:
      1. Cutting Both Ways
      2. Playtime
      3. Gilgamesh
      4. Arriving Twice
      5. Belle Illusion

      ASIN: B0000C0FB3
      Release Date: 2003-09-16

      Tracks:

      1. Black Cat
      2. Big Dick
      3. Inca
      4. Sleight Of Hand
      5. Upside
      6. Out There
      7. Your Root 2
      Everyday Magic
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Everyday Magic
        Tim Bays
        Manufacturer: Cahoots Music
        ProductGroup: Music
        Binding: Audio CD
        ASIN: B000GU3MM2
        Somewhere East of Topeka
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          Somewhere East of Topeka
          Gunn , and Vermont Contemp Music Ens
          Manufacturer: Albany Records
          ProductGroup: Music
          Binding: Audio CD

          Chamber MusicChamber Music | Forms & Genres | Classical (c.1770-1830) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
          ASIN: B000083F4C
          Release Date: 2003-01-28
          Cahoots
          Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
          • Most bands would give their left arm for an album as good as this
          • Where did the magic go?
          • A Fine Album Made Better
          • From what I've heard
          • Worst Band Album
          Cahoots
          The Band
          Manufacturer: Indent Series
          ProductGroup: Music
          Binding: Audio CD

          Folk RockFolk Rock | Rock | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
          Country RockCountry Rock | Rock | Styles | Music
          Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
          Similar Items:
          1. Stage Fright
          2. Northern Lights-Southern Cross
          3. Moondog Matinee
          4. Islands
          5. The Band

          ASIN: B000005JJB
          Release Date: 1996-07-23

          Tracks:

          1. Life Is A Carnival
          2. When I Paint My Masterpiece
          3. Last Of The Blacksmiths
          4. Where Do We Go From Here?
          5. 4% Pantomime
          6. Shoot Out In China Town
          7. The Moon Struck One
          8. Thinkin' Out Loud
          9. Smoke Signal
          10. Volcano
          11. The River Hymn

          Amazon.com

          Here's where the Band stumbled. This 1971 lapse followed two consensus classics (Music from Big Pink and The Band) and the dicier but still worthy Stage Fright. Consequently, expectations were high. But, despite moments of excellence ("Life Is a Carnival," "When I Paint My Masterpiece," their first Dylan cover since their debut), primary songwriter Robbie Robertson repeatedly comes up short. "Last of the Blacksmiths," "Where Do We Go from Here," and "River Hymn" are overwrought attempts to recapture the unaffected longing for the past that marked the first two albums, while the likes of "Smoke Signal" and "Volcano" are merely forgettable. Still, Van Morrison's rambunctious duet with Richard Manual on "4% Pantomime" and the weird "Moon Struck One" help make Cahoots a worthwhile curio for those interested in digging deep into the Band songbook. --Steven Stolder

          Customer Reviews:

          5 out of 5 stars Most bands would give their left arm for an album as good as this.......2007-02-28

          This 4th Band album has gotten a bad rap over the years. Only because the first 3 were so legendary. I tell you what, do yourself a favor and listen to this album again, I was amazed how good it really is. With songs like The River Hymm, Life Is A Carnival, Moon Struck One, Shoot Out in Chinatown an dthe underrated Volcano, it's an album most bands would die for to make.

          3 out of 5 stars Where did the magic go?.......2007-01-07

          Unfortunately, it's not here on the Band's 4th full-length, Cahoots. You don't have to dig very deep into The Band's history to hear a catalog of reasons why Cahoots turned out the way it is (not very good); no one would help Robbie write, Levon, Rick and Richard were more interested in drugs than a half-baked album, and Garth's narcolepsy combined with his lack of inspiration from Robbie's new material made him fall asleep during recording sessions. Sounds pretty rough, huh? Although Cahoots has a pretty rough reputation (as well as many stalwart fans who seem bent on hyperbole, arguing that it's the best album The Band ever put out), it's not that it's characteristically bad, it's just uninspired, forced, and shrivels in comparison with their first three albums.

          I think the main problem is probably the writing. When you look at the other reviews on the page, probably about 3/4 of the tracks are labeled worthless by one reviewer or another. Like anybody else, there are are tracks on this album that I like and others I think are pretty terrible, but I think the general point of this trend is that this album is really hit or miss. It's not like The Band, where every track was strong; the songs on Cahoots aren't that strong, so they depend on the listener and her/his preferences. Not a hallmark of a classic album.

          "Life is A Carnival" is pretty good, by anyone's standards. It's real funky, with a sweet bass line from Rick Danko (I can almost see that dance he used to do) and some characteristically good drumming from Levon. Allen Toussaint's horn arrangements get a lot of buzz, but I could probably take them or leave them. I'm a bigger fan of The Band's home-grown horns (i.e. "Tears of Rage," "Chest Fever"), and these slick arrangements ("Last of the Blacksmiths" included) don't really seem to fit The Band. Not only that, it sometimes feels like Robbie wanted to add a flowery horn section to cover up some mediocre material--they seem more like an unnecessary ornate dressing and not an essential part of the music, so in the end it just isn't too convincing. The second track is a great example of how forced the creation of this album was; "Hey, people loved the Dylan tracks we did on our first album, let's do another one." I've never been too big of a fan of "When I Paint My Masterpiece," though some are, Garth Hudson plays some pretty cool accordion on the track though.

          A lot of the rest of Cahoots is pretty experimental, melodically, but lackluster lyrically. "The Last of the Blacksmiths" has some really interesting chord changes, and I like the theme (a prevalent one on this album of innocence/good old days lost), but the ideas needed a little more refinement, and "Moon Struck One" has a pretty wimpy story lyric, but Richard Manuel's vocal melody is pretty interesting and Garth Hudson plays some sweet keys. For me, "Shoot Out In Chinatown" is the worst Band song ever written. From the stock "Chinese-sounding" guitar riff to the outdated culturally insensitive stereotypes in the lyrics, I often wish Robbie never wrote it. "4% Pantomime" is a track I actually like, more for the dynamic between Richard and Van Morrison than for the writing quality, which is again nothing too special. The version on A Musical History is better for the energy between the two singers.

          The rest of the album, though pleasant enough (and pretty rocking at times on "Smoke Signal," [also better live on A Musical History] and also on "Volcano") doesn't really make a very memorable impression. Maybe it's because many of the tracks try to unsuccessfully recreate classic moments from past albums or keep up with an uninspired desire to buy into the "Americana" image that the media created for The Band (case in point, "The River Hymn").

          After a few listens, you can really tell that the main problem with Cahoots is that their hearts just weren't in it. Although I've ripped on it pretty heavily, it's not worthless, just not very inspirational. I recommend you get it after steeping yourself in The Band's first three albums, which are much more transcendental. That way you can appreciate its small pleasures while at the same time appreciating what set the first albums so far above Cahoots. Then buy Moondog Matinee to see that the boys hadn't lost their playing skills, they were just waiting for some good original material. Last, Northern Lights - Southern Cross, a surprise classic. You'll appreciate its quality a lot more by comparing it with this period, where The Band's creativity floundered.

          5 out of 5 stars A Fine Album Made Better .......2006-09-16

          There is an eerie haunting sound to this 4rd album from The Band..the production is noticeably slicker, funky horns,the songs juxtapose upon each other unlike the thematic soundscapes found on their 3 prior efforts.
          If their first album, Music From Big Pink was the soul, their 2nd,The Band, the heart, their 3rd, Stage Fright,raw emotion, then Cahoots is the mind..these well crafted produced songs featuring the likes of New Orleans legend A. Touissant, a great belting Van Morrison, all add to a fine album worthy of being part of any one's collection..As a matter of fact, 2 great Band classics, their stellar version of Dylan's troubadour gypsy classic "When I Paint My Masterpiece" and the funky "Life Is A Carnival" are well worth the 5 stars allotted this review.
          The eerie vocal mixes throughout, a group somewhat not sounding comfortable but in Cahoots with it all..poised for stardom and somehow throwing it all away in their persistence of authenticity is a theme felt throughout these tracks...the strained guitar chords of Robbie Robertson, the pain found in Danko's and Manuel's singing, the ever present exuberance of the highs and lows found in Levon Helm's voice and the keyboard wizardry of that mad tinkerer Garth Hudson all add to an album hard to find the likes of nowadays.
          The Band gels and manage to shine in the right places.
          The extra tracks are all stellar,Endless Highway,Bessie smith,Don't Do It..

          4 out of 5 stars From what I've heard.......2006-08-08

          I've only had the opportunity to listen to part of this album, but I like what I've heard.

          I am among the ones that does not understand the sentiment against "The Moon Struck One." The song is written about and somewhat from the viewpoint of a little kid. "He looked like he's really really hurt" is exactly what a little girl would say. I find that the language evokes, not just a chronological place in time like "Old Dixie," but a place in life, to which every person who has been a kid can relate. I like the words of the song, also. "Sweetheart" and "cohort" rhyming has always thrilled me.

          If "Moon" is the lowpoint of the album, I can hardly wait to hear the rest.

          I'll reserve the fifth star until I have heard the entire album.

          1 out of 5 stars Worst Band Album.......2006-07-06

          Unless one considers "Planet Waves," Dylan's 1974 studio album with the Band playing backup, to be a Band album, "Cahoots" has no competition for the title of the worst Band album ever. Yes, the first two tracks are good ("Life is a Carnival" - great rhythms, great horns, OK lyrics; and Dylan's "Masterpiece" -- does nothing for me, but I understand many people love it), but they are available on other compilations, so the reason to shell out for "Cahoots" has to reside in the remaining tracks if anywhere, and they are AWFUL. The songs, that is, not the performances. The boys sing and play as well as ever, but their efforts -- particularly some fine Danko vocals and Hudson horn playing -- are wasted on songs that are utterly tuneless, charmless and brainless. There is not a single memorable musical phrase on tracks 3-11. Nor do the bonus tracks on this reissue rescue the enterprise: all are either available elsewhere in equivalent or superior versions or are unworthy of inclusion on anything (a RADIO COMMERCIAL?!). Save your money for any of the worthier products of this wonderful group of musicians.
          Time Will Tell
          Average customer rating: Not rated
            Time Will Tell

            ProductGroup: Music
            Binding: Audio CD

            Blues RockBlues Rock | Rock | Indie Music | Stores | Music
            ASIN: B00000K0AG
            Release Date: 1999-01-01

            Tracks:

            1. Are You Ready To Dance?
            2. No Way Of Knowing
            3. This Side Of Midnight
            4. Part Of The Story
            5. I Meant Every Word I Said
            6. I Don't Want To Need You
            7. Time Will Tell
            8. Let Him Go
            9. Every Sun Is A Star
            10. Best I Can
            11. Love's Just a Heartbeat Away
            12. Like Nothing Ever Happened

            Album Description

            Country blues rock from a Virginia singer/songwriter

            Band Members: Jackie Burton - vocals, guitar
            Dave Mayes - Drums, vocals
            Todd Cassell - Electric guitar, vocals
            Ronnie Tinnell - bass, vocals
            Perfect Partners
            Average customer rating: Not rated
              Perfect Partners
              Luther Hughes & Cahoots
              Manufacturer: Iti/Lema/Ka
              ProductGroup: Music
              Binding: Audio CD

              Bebop GeneralBebop General | Bebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
              GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
              Modern PostbebopModern Postbebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
              Smooth JazzSmooth Jazz | Jazz | Styles | Music
              ASIN: B00000DUP3
              Release Date: 1991-04-02
              Split Seconds
              Average customer rating: Not rated
                Split Seconds
                phil miller
                Manufacturer: VIRGIN JAPAN
                ProductGroup: Music
                Binding: Audio CD

                Progressive RockProgressive Rock | Progressive | Rock | Styles | Music
                ASIN: B000K2AU2G

                Product Description

                rare japanese cd-8tracks 1988-phil miller with frirnds abd IN CAHOOTS
                Cohorts in Cahoots
                Average customer rating: Not rated
                  Cohorts in Cahoots
                  Cohorts
                  ProductGroup: Music
                  Binding: Audio CD

                  GeneralGeneral | Blues | Styles | Music
                  ASIN: B000FSMJRO
                  Release Date: 2002-11-19

                  Tracks:

                  1. Alright for Now
                  2. Jenny
                  3. Nothings Ever Changed
                  4. Let It Ride
                  5. Sleepin' in Blues
                  6. Long Road Back....
                  7. O' Young Man
                  8. I Wish This Boat Would Stop Rockin'.
                  9. Rain
                  10. Take Me Down.

                  Rock Music:

                  1. Collectors Box [Import]
                  2. Dc Ep [Import]
                  3. Death Walks Behind You [Import] [Original recording remastered]
                  4. Doktor Frankendragster
                  5. Drive to Nowhere: Verity's Novel
                  6. Everybody's Changing [CD-single] [Import]
                  7. Flesh And Steel
                  8. Francesca [CD-single] [Import]
                  9. Full House [Import]
                  10. Gone Ain't Gone [Limited Edition] [Import]

                  Rock Music

                  Rock Music