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Levon Helm of The Band Dies
April 19, 2012
Levon Helm, singer and drummer for the Band, died on April 19th in New York of throat cancer. He was 71.
"He passed away peacefully at 1:30 this afternoon surrounded by his friends and bandmates," Helm's longtime guitarist Larry Campbell tells Rolling Stone. "All his friends were there, and it seemed like Levon was waiting for them. Ten minutes after they left we sat there and he just faded away. He did it with dignity. It was even two days ago they thought it would happen within hours, but he held on. It seems like he was Levon up to the end, doing it the way he wanted to do it. He loved us, we loved him."
In the late Nineties, Helm – whose singing anchored Band classics like "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "Up on Cripple Creek," "Rag Mama Rag," and "The Weight" – was diagnosed with throat cancer and underwent 28 radiation treatments, eventually recovering his voice.
In recent weeks, however, Helm had canceled a number of shows, including one at the New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 27th and another in Montclair, New Jersey. A note posted to his website on Tuesday from his daughter Amy and wife Sandy said that Helm was in the "final stages of his battle with cancer. Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way through this part of his journey. Thank you fans and music lovers who have made his life so filled with joy and celebration...he has loved nothing more than to play, to fill the room up with music, lay down the back beat, and make the people dance! He did it every time he took the stage."
Born May 26, 1940 in Arkansas, Helm was literally a witness to the birth of rock & roll; as a teenager, he saw Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis in concert and was inspired to play drums after seeing Lewis' drummer, Jimmy Van Eaton. (Helm went on to play mandolin and other stringed instruments as well). In 1960, Helm joined the backup band of rockabilly wildman Ronnie Hawkins – a group that would eventually include Robbie Robertson, Richard Manuel, Rick Danko and Garth Hudson, all future members of the Band.
The musicians broke from Hawkins to form their own group – their names included the Crackers and Levon and the Hawks – but it was their association with Bob Dylan that cemented their reputation. After Dylan saw the group in a club (either in Canada or New Jersey, depending on the source), he invited Helm and guitarist Robertson to join his electric band. "Bob Dylan was unknown to us," Helm wrote in his 1993 memoir This Wheel's on Fire. "I knew he was a folksinger and songwriter whose hero was Woody Guthrie. And that's it."
Robertson and Helm were in Dylan's electric band for his controversial, frequently booed show at New York's Forest Hills Tennis Stadium. Afterward, various members of the Band played on Dylan's Blonde on Blonde and toured with him in 1966. (Helm left temporary in 1965, tired of the ongoing hostility from Dylan's folk fans.)
Recuperating in Woodstock after his 1966 motorcycle accident, Dylan again hooked up with the band that would soon be the Band. Before Helm rejoined them, they recorded the landmark Basement Tapes, and the Band's crackling, homespun take on American roots music began to take shape.
Rechristening themselves the Band, they signed to Capitol Records and released two classic albums, Music From Big Pink (1968) and The Band (1969). Although Robertson was the Band's principal songwriter, it was Helm's beautifully gruff and ornery voice that brought the Canadian Robertson's mythic Americana songs to life. He was also one of rock's earliest singing drummers.
In 1976, at Robertson's urging, the Band broke up after its farewell concert, known as "The Last Waltz." In meetings before the concert and as recounted in This Wheel's on Fire, Helm was adamantly opposed to the group disbanding. "I didn't want any part of it," he wrote. "I didn't want to break up the band." He begrudgingly went along, but his relationship with Robertson was never the same. After the show, Helm formed his own band, Levon Helm and the RCO All Stars, featuring fellow legends Dr. John, Steve Cropper, and Booker T. Jones, and recorded several solo albums.
Helm also ventured into acting with an acclaimed role in 1980's Coal Miner's Daughter, playing Loretta Lynn (Sissy Spacek's) father. But he couldn't leave the Band behind, and with Danko, Manuel, and Hudson, he formed a new version of the Band in the early Eighties, recording three new studio albums with them.
The Band continued for a while after Manuel's suicide by hanging in 1986, but Danko's death in 1999 of heart failure ended the Band once and for all. By then, Helm was dealing with throat cancer. After his recovery, he began holding intimate concerts in his combination barn and studio in Woodstock, called the "Midnight Ramble," in part to pay his medical bills.
The low-key, woodsy performances became must-see shows and attracted a rock who's who; Elvis Costello, Natalie Merchant, the Grateful Dead's Phil Lesh and Donald Fagen were among the many who joined Helm and his band. The Ramble shows led to two acclaimed Helm solo albums – one of which, 2007's Dirt Farmer, won a Grammy in the Best Traditional Folk category. "This go-round has been a lot more fun," Helm told Rolling Stone in 2009. "Now I know I've got enough voice to do it."
When the Band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004, Helm didn't attend, revealing that his feud with Robertson was still on. "I thought Levon was going to show," Robertson told Rolling Stone a few years later. "Then that evening they said he changed his mind and wasn't going to come. And I thought, 'Oh, God, it would have been better if he was here.'"
Helm's throat cancer had taken a toll on his singing voice. On stage and in recent interviews, his voice was sometimes strong but other times was reduced to a low rasp. But at one his last shows, in Ann Arbor on March 19th with a 13-piece band, the audience roared when he sang the Band classic "Ophelia." "I'm not the poster boy of good health," he said in an interview last year. "But I'm not doing too bad. I still got the energy to make music. As long as I can do that, I'm great."
[Edited 4/21/12 7:16am] | |
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From The Last Waltz concert movie, featuring Levon on lead vocals and drums. [Edited 4/19/12 12:29pm] | |
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Rest peacefully Levon. | |
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I had a feeling we would hear this today or tomorrow.
RIP | |
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Their eponymous 1969 album is a must-have classic. I was enthralled by Robbie Robertson's gift for penning folkish, melodic songs.
For decades, Levon and Robbie fought bitterly over songwriting credits; however, Robbie has confirmed that he visited him in the hospital just a few days ago. [Edited 4/19/12 13:18pm] | |
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Bummer
I did not know he had cancer, but I was watching the commentary for The Last Waltz, and Levon's voice was almost totally gone.
Not too many drummers are the singer for the band, and he did both roles really well.
I could watch this a million times in a row...
My Legacy
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One of the all time greats. * * *
Prince's Classic Finally Expanded The Deluxe 'Purple Rain' Reissue http://www.popmatters.com...n-reissue/ | |
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"King Harvest" is a memorable track about the plight of a dirt-poor farmer. Levon sings the aching chorus with Richard Manuel.
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RIP Levon Helm | |
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how sad! i love these guys. Bob Dylan just posted a thing talking about his friendship with Levon Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener
All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive | |
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Where is the Dylan post?
Robbie Robertson posted a lovely eulogy on his FB page.
"Last week I was shocked and so saddened to hear that my old band mate, Levon, was in the final stages of his battle with cancer. It hit me really hard because I thought he had beaten throat cancer and had no idea that he was this ill. I spoke with his family and made arrangements to go and see him. On Sunday I went to New York and visited him in the hospital. I sat with Levon for a good while, and thought of the incredible and beautiful times we had together. It was heartwarming to be greeted by his lovely daughter Amy, whom I have known since she was born. Amy’s mother, Libby Titus, and her husband, Donald Fagen, were so kind to help walk me through this terrible time of sadness. My thoughts and prayers are with his wife Sandy. Levon is one of the most extraordinary talented people I’ve ever known and very much like an older brother to me. I am so grateful I got to see him one last time and will miss him and love him forever." -Robbie Robertson
This is sad
RIP Levon [Edited 4/19/12 20:01pm] VOTE....EARLY | |
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Mr. Levon Helm RIP | |
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"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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Bob Dylan Remembers Levon Helm: 'One of the Last True Great Spirits' by David Greenwald
Bob Dylan and the Band had a thrilling musical relationship, but with the death of drummer Levon Helm on Thursday, it's the personal connection that Dylan remembers.
"He was my bosom buddy friend to the end, one of the last true great spirits of my or any other generation," Dylan wrote on his official website on Thursday. "This is just so sad to talk about. I still can remember the first day I met him and the last day I saw him. We go back pretty far and had been through some trials together. I'm going to miss him, as I'm sure a whole lot of others will too."
The Band backed Dylan on numerous occasions over the years, performing on the famed Basement Tapes and joining him on tour in the '60s and '70s. Dylan is one of the many musicians who appears in The Last Waltz, the concert film that documents the Band's farewell concert.
Helm was 71. His death came a day after the announcement that he was in the final stages of a battle with cancer.
http://www.billboard.com/...5152.story
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All three Band vocalists now gone. RIP, Mr. Helm. | |
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Levon Helm, Drummer and Rough-Throated Singer for the Band, Dies at 71 April 20, 2012
Levon Helm, who helped to forge a deep-rooted American music as the drummer and singer for the Band, died on Thursday in Manhattan. He was 71 and lived in Woodstock, N.Y.
His death, at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, was from complications of cancer, a spokeswoman for Vanguard Records said. He had recorded several albums for the label.
In Helm’s drumming, muscle, swing, economy and finesse were inseparably merged. His voice held the bluesy, weathered and resilient essence of his Arkansas upbringing in the Mississippi Delta.
Helm was the American linchpin of the otherwise Canadian group that became Bob Dylan’s backup band and then the Band. Its own songs, largely written by the Band’s guitarist, Jaime Robbie Robertson, and pianist, Richard Manuel, spring from roadhouse, church, backwoods, river and farm; they are rock-ribbed with history and tradition yet hauntingly surreal.
After the Band broke up in 1976, Helm continued to perform at every opportunity, working with a partly reunited Band and leading his own groups. He also acted in films, notably “Coal Miner’s Daughter” (1980). In the 2000s he became a roots-music patriarch, turning his barn in Woodstock — which had been a recording studio since 1975 — into the home of down-home, eclectic concerts called Midnight Rambles, which led to tours and Grammy-winning albums.
Helm gave his drums a muffled, bottom-heavy sound that placed them in the foundation of the arrangements, and his tom-toms were tuned so that their pitch would bend downward as the tone faded. Helm didn’t call attention to himself. Three bass-drum thumps at the start of one of the Band’s anthems, “The Weight,” were all that he needed to establish the song’s gravity.
His playing served the song. In “The Shape I’m In,” he juxtaposed Memphis soul, New Orleans rumba and military tattoo. But while it was tersely responsive to the music, the drumming also had an improvisational feel.
In the Band, lead vocals changed from song to song and sometimes within songs, and harmonies were elaborately communal. But particularly when lyrics turned to myths and tall tales of the American South — like “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” “Ophelia” and “Rag Mama Rag” — the lead went to Helm, with his Arkansas twang and a voice that could sound desperate, ornery and amused at the same time.
In a 1984 interview with Modern Drummer magazine, Helm described the “right ingredients” for his work in music and film as “life and breath, heart and soul.”
Mark Lavon Helm was born on May 26, 1940, in Elaine, Ark., the son of a cotton farmer with land near Turkey Scratch, Ark. In his 1993 autobiography, “This Wheel’s on Fire: Levon Helm and the Story of the Band,“ written with Stephen Davis, Helm said he was part Chickasaw Indian through his paternal grandmother. He grew up hearing live bluegrass, Delta blues, country and the beginnings of rock ’n’ roll; Memphis was just across the river.
His father gave him a guitar when he was 9, and he soon started performing: in a duo with his sister Linda and in a high school rock ‘n’ roll band, the Jungle Bush Beaters. He also played drums in the Marvell High School band.
Helm was in 11th grade when the Arkansas-born rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins hired him as a drummer. He traveled with Hawkins to Canada, where the shows paid better, and Hawkins settled there and formed a band. Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks played six nights a week in Ontario and had a number of hit singles, like “Mary Lou.” They performed on Dick Clark’s TV show “American Bandstand.”
By 1961 Hawkins had assembled the lineup that would become the Band: Mr. Helm, Robertson, Manuel, Rick Danko on bass and Garth Hudson on organ. “He knew what musicians had the fire,” Helm said of Hawkins. The others had trouble pronouncing Lavon, so Helm began calling himself Levon.
In 1963, weary of Hawkins’s discipline, the five Hawks started their own bar-band career as Levon and the Hawks. The blues singer John Hammond Jr. heard them in Toronto and brought Robertson, Hudson and Helm into the studio in 1964 to back him on the album “So Many Roads.”
Bob Dylan had famously brought an electric band to the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, and after its members had made other commitments, he hired Robertson and Helm for a summer tour. | |
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At their first rehearsals, Helm recalled, his reaction to Dylan was, “I couldn’t believe how many words this guy had in his music, or how he remembered them all.” Before playing their first show, at Forest Hills Tennis Stadium in Queens, Dylan told the band, “Just keep playing, no matter how weird it gets.”
They polarized the audience — those wanting to hear only Dylan’s folk music booed — and while a subsequent concert at the Hollywood Bowl was better received, another band member, the keyboardist Al Kooper, chose to leave. At that point Helm told Albert Grossman, Dylan’s manager, “Take us all, or don’t take anybody.” The Hawks became Dylan’s band.
They backed Dylan on a studio single, “Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?,” and toured with him through the fall, still getting booed. Helm quit the band late in 1965. “I wasn’t made to be booed,“ he wrote.
Mr. Dylan’s motorcycle accident in 1966 ended his touring with the Hawks. While he recuperated in Woodstock the Hawks, who were on retainer, rented a big pink house in a neighboring town, West Saugerties, for $125 a month.
For most of 1967 the Hawks, with Manuel playing drums, worked five days a week on music: writing songs with and without Dylan, playing them at his home and at the house they called Big Pink, and recording them on a two-track tape recorder in the basement. Songs sent to Dylan’s publisher were soon bootlegged.
In the winter of 1967, the band summoned Helm to rejoin them. With Manuel on drums, Helm picked up mandolin, though he would soon return to drums. Grossman got the Hawks their own recording contract with Capitol in February 1968, initially as the Crackers, a name Capitol didn’t like.
There was no band name on the LP label or front cover of “Music From Big Pink,” the group’s debut album, which simply had a painting by Dylan as its cover. (The songs had been written at Big Pink but recorded in professional studios.) The LP label listed all the music.
Released on July 1, 1968, a year after the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” “Music From Big Pink” was “rebelling against the rebellion,” Helm wrote.
There were no elaborate studio confections, no psychedelic jams, no gimmicks; the music was stately and homespun, with a deliberately old-time tone behind the enigmatic lyrics. Sales were modest, but the album’s influence was huge, leading musicians like Eric Clapton and the Grateful Dead back toward concision.
The Band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.
Adding to its mystique, the Band didn’t tour until 1969 because Danko broke his neck in an auto accident. It made its concert debut as the Band at Winterland in San Francisco in April 1969.
By then, the Band was well into recording its second album, simply titled “The Band,” which would include the group’s only Top 30 single, “Up on Cripple Creek.” The album was universally hailed, and the Band played a summer of huge pop festivals, backing Dylan at the Isle of Wight and performing in August at Woodstock.
In 1970, Helm and the songwriter Libby Titus had a daughter, Amy Helm, now a member of the band Ollabelle; she survives him, along with his wife since 1981, the former Sandra Dodd, and two grandchildren.
The Band would never match its two initial masterpieces. By the time the group started recording its 1970 album, “Stage Fright,” members were drinking heavily and using heroin, and there were disputes over songwriting credits and publishing royalties, of which Robertson had by far the greatest share.
The collaborative spirit of the first two albums was disappearing. But the Band’s career had momentum; it produced several more studio albums, toured internationally, and a live album, “Rock of Ages,” reached the Top 10 in 1972.
In 1973, the Band, the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers were the triple bill for the Watkins Glen festival, which drew 600,000 people to upstate New York — larger than Woodstock. In 1974, the Band made an album with Dylan, “Planet Waves,” and toured with him.
“The Basement Tapes,” a collection of songs with and without Dylan from the Big Pink era, was released in 1975.
In September 1976, Robertson decided to declare the end of the Band’s touring career with a grand finale: “The Last Waltz,” an all-star concert at Winterland on Thanksgiving 1976.
Recorded for an album, it was also filmed by Martin Scorsese and released under the same title. Helm hated the film, believing that it glorified Robertson and slighted the rest of the Band. After “The Last Waltz,” the original Band lineup returned to the studio for one last album, the desultory “Islands,” which completed its Capitol contract.
Helm had already embarked on a solo career. He also branched out into acting, playing Loretta Lynn’s father in “Coal Miner’s Daughter” as well as roles in “The Right Stuff” and in a television movie with Jane Fonda, “The Dollmaker.”
But Helm wanted above all to be a working musician. In the early 1980s he toured with his fellow Band members, minus Robertson. They were on the road in 1986 when Mr. Manuel committed suicide at 42. But Helm, Danko and Hudson continued to work together as the Band, with additional musicians and songwriters, releasing three albums during the 1990s.
Danko died in 1999 at 56. Meanwhile, Helm’s barn studio became a hub for musicians from Woodstock and beyond, often with Mr. Helm and Mr. Hudson sitting in. Helm, a heavy smoker, contracted throat cancer in the late 1990s, and for months he could not speak above a whisper.
A tumor was removed from his vocal cords, and he underwent 28 radiation treatments. Medical bills threatened him with the loss of his home. Partly to raise money, he began hosting the Midnight Rambles at his barn in 2004. More house parties than concerts, they featured unannounced guest stars and a band of his own that delved into Americana as well as the Band catalog.
His voice strengthened, and the core of his Midnight Ramble bands became a touring and recording group; it performed in 2009 at the 40th anniversary of the Woodstock Festival on its site in Bethel, N.Y., although Helm was unable to sing that night.
Helm’s 2007 and 2009 studio albums, “Dirt Farmer” and “Electric Dirt,” won Grammy Awards, as did his 2011 “Ramble at the Ryman,” recorded live in Nashville and broadcast on PBS.
Nearly to the end, Helm spent his life on the bandstand. “If it doesn’t come from your heart,” he wrote, “music just doesn’t work.”
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The Last Waltz Is a movie I always wanted to see, but never got a chance. I'm not familiar with their music, but I'm sure it's great. RIP Levon. Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It! | |
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Many years ago I had the Last Waltz on VHS. I must have watched it 30 times. The Band played at peak performance, and the guest acts were a who's who of music royalty. I think I'll look for the DVD tomorrow. [Edited 4/20/12 12:16pm] | |
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The first few videos on this thread are from the movie.
But the movie is also great for the guest stars. Watch Van Morrison nearly have a heart attack doing Caravan!
My Legacy
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The Hard-Won Lessons of Levon Helm's Life in the Record Business April 20, 2012
I think one of the reasons for the tremendous, and appropriate, outpouring of affection for the late Levon Helm is that for all his talent and fame, he knew struggle too, and not just growing up.
In addition to his enduring health problems, Helm faced very real financial hardships. In his honest and endlessly entertaining biography This Wheel’s On Fire, Helm told vivid stories about his life and music, like the time he and the other members of The Band got rousted by local cops for eating at a black barbecue joint with the legendary Sonny Boy Williamson.
Helm also also talked frankly about sometimes ruthless world of the record business. Here’s his explanation of the way that business matters contributed to The Band’s musical decline.
Those decades-old conflicts continued to haunt Helm, compounded by the loss of his friends and colleagues, and a tragic fire that cost him not only his possessions but drove him into bankruptcy. The Midnight Ramble concert series and recent recording projects were his eloquent and defiant response to hard times.
By sharing his hardships so publicly, Helm seemed to be sending a message to aspiring artists: make great music, but make sure you cover your a$$, and get a fair shake in the end.
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bless him.
that's 5 already this year. who on earth will be next?
d.corneilius whitney dick clark levon helm mike wallace - not a muso but still....
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As Robertson's daughter pointed out, Levon's solo works consisted entirely of cover versions. Doesn't speak much for him as a songwriter, does it?
I would think that the reason songwriters ended up with the lion's share of the royalties in the music business, is that coming up with appealing songs is the most important (and most difficult) part of selling records, concert tickets and merchandise.
In reality, Helm deprived himself of additional income by boycotting Band hall of fame inductions. If he would've shown and reconciled with Robertson, chances are they would've done some reunion projects that would've benefitted all.
Did he really think that holding onto bitterness was eventually going to convince RR to cut him in on songwriting royalties?
In the end, this stand did him zero good and I would bet dollars to donuts he "gave forgiveness (he'd) been denying" on his deathbed.
Helm was a charismatic, talented musician, but his vendetta against Roberston was sorely misguided, IMHO.
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Levon Helm: Joe Henry Remembers 'A Deacon Who Spoke Our Gospel' April 2012
Musician, songwriter and producer Joe Henry has overseen recordings by some of America’s most celebrated folk, rock, blues and jazz musicians, including Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Allen Toussaint, Solomon Burke, John Doe, Bettye Lavette, Rodney Crowell and Mose Allison. He named his son Levon after Levon Helm, the Band’s drummer and singer who died Thursday after a long battle with throat cancer. This past Tuesday afternoon, many of us began to receive and share word that Levon Helm was in the final stages of his long and heroic battle with cancer. By that evening, Levon was not yet gone, but neither was he fully among the living. As we understood from his family, he was hovering at the doorway between this world and the next ... still taking the air of mortals in shallow and halting breaths, but with his eyes rolled back against the drawn curtain of his times. And we hovered with him.
Yet already in that moment, for many of us sadly absorbing the falling shoe of this news and preparing for the other to drop, he had assumed the flickering posture of memory; of those who had danced alive in our high beams, throwing shadows that moved like ancient black rivers; of those who have pointed the way forward from so far behind us that they shall forever, henceforth, stand ahead on the pathway like an omen of what is still to come; of those disappeared into omnipresence, like word into deed, fear into mercy and grace.
Levon entered my life when I was so young as to have had no notion that my gate needed a guard; thus, he waltzed right in while I was completely vulnerable to his raucous and ranging alchemy, and he changed me. Like children pulled into ministerial service when still in single digits, I looked unquestioningly upon Levon Helm as my church elder ... a deacon who spoke our gospel; who swung- and sung-out time in glorious illumination of its wild and elastic poetry.
In the same way that his great friend and sometimes-boss Bob Dylan connected the dots between Jimmy Reed, Arthur Rimbaud and Muhammad Ali, so Levon drew the second line that had Howlin’ Wolf, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Marvin Gaye and Hank Williams all dancing out in front of the same New Orleans funeral parade. (They all walked liked Bo Diddley and didn’t need no crutch.) He brought soul and an open heart to the darkest corners of rock music -- in a troubled era he helped shape and define -- and a rural humility to the grandest stages.
As I awaited word of the inevitable -- while we all waited -- I found there was nothing I could do but listen. And when I did, I was moved; was moving ... leaning, as implied, from past tense into present action; loosing my mind to what my body already knew, to the instinctive sway of my knees and shoulders in the face of unease; and I was reminded how much of our true intelligence resides in our physical frames’ southern hemisphere.
Yes, all I could do was listen and move, and it is what we will all do today. But then, that is all Levon Helm ever asked of any of us.
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I agree with Robertson that Helm's indignation at him was rooted in ongoing financial hardships and health problems. Robertson has said that he encouraged songwriting within the group, but his ex-mates weren't interested and didn't have the same creative spirit. | |
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And you would not have vendetta against someone who you belived stole credit from you??
I wonder when we begin to live in a world were it is okay to be a "Sucker" | |
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Except there's no evidence in his post-Band career of Levon ever having penned songs himself. I believe Robertson's account of life with The Band, that Robertson gave writing credit to some of the guys when ideas were being exchanged during the process of finishing certain songs. | |
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I guess there may have been some questions about the source of the song materials, though.
Something like The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down may have been written with his help, even if Robbie wrote the actual song. Considering it's written from the perspective of a southern man, and R.R. is from Canada, he definitely got help somewhere.
So maybe Robbie feels he wrote the song, but Levon felt he guided Robbie through the subject. I could see where this might cause an argument. My Legacy
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