Hidden Track

Interview: Bill Payne of Little Feat

As Little Feat prepares to the celebrate their 40th anniversary together in 2009, the group has just put an extraordinary new album that pays tribute to the band’s past, present and future. It’s hard to classify Join The Band, as the disc is equal parts tribute, cover and reworked greatest hits album. A number of legendary performers who have either influenced or been influenced by Little Feat including Emmylou Harris, Bob Seger, Dave Matthews and Jimmy Buffett, have joined the septet on their best release in years.

We spoke with Little Feat keyboardist Bill Payne, who also co-produced Join The Band, about how this collection of memorable tunes came together, the dark days of Little Feat and many other topics. Also, be sure to check out Glide’s main site for an interview with drummer Richie Hayward and keep your eyes out later this week for our interview with co-producer, special guest and Coral Reefer Band member Mac McAnally. Here’s our talk with Bill…

Scott Bernstein: I’ve been listening to Join The Band for the last couple of weeks now and I really dig the album. It’s an album that flows nicely from the first track to the last. I don’t know what you’d call it…

Bill Payne: I was hoping you’d say that!

SB: It’s certainly not a tribute album or a straight greatest hits album. How did this album come about? I know it’s been four years in the making, can you take us through the timeline?

BP: Let’s go back about four or five years before that even. I tried to bring some people to the Fox Theater in St. Louis to play a large Little Feat show with a buncha different artists. That proved to be too complicated, but Dave Matthews actually signed on to do it. So, four or five years later when (Jimmy) Buffett’s people called him, Dave’s people they said “we told Billy we’d do it way back then and we’ll do it now.” So he was on both times.

But really what brought it together, honestly, was Jimmy Buffett. He more or less helped not only finance the album but really brought this thing into reality in terms of giving us an actual platform to do something. He provided his studio down in Key West. It was amazing to get a chance to work in the studio with Mac McAnally who produced that album and then work with Alan Schulman who was the engineer and Mike Utley of Jimmy’s band. When the idea for this album was born, I called Mac up and asked him if he would produce something with me for this record and he said sure. Then Jimmy came onboard and everything kinda fell together.

READ ON for much, much more from Little Feat’s Bill Payne…

Read More

The Dead Give ‘Em What They Want

Many Grateful Dead fans were up in arms when the band and Rhino Records announced the Road Trips release series last November. The idea behind Road Trips is to take

Read More

Stormy Mondays: Torturous Bonus Edition

Here’s a special back to school edition of Stormy Mondays featuring a double dose of Phish’s Chalk Dust Torture. First up is the monster, nearly 25 minute version from day

Read More

R.I.P. Richard Wright (1943-2008)

Pink Floyd founding member Richard Wright passed away this morning at the age of 65. The extremely underrated keyboardist succumbed to cancer after a short battle with the disease. Our

Read More

This Is The New Stuff: Hidden Track 2.0

After six months of planning, writing and implementing the new version of this here rag, we’ve finally flipped the switch on Hidden Track 2.0. As you can see, we’ve changed

Read More

Mule and Umphrey’s Announce NYE Shows

Two of the biggest jambands in the game: Gov’t Mule and Umphrey’s McGee, have each played the same venue for New Year’s Eve over the past few years. Yet both

Read More

Briefly: Celebrating Rush Hashanah

Rush, the best band not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, combines their love of puns and Judaism to celebrate the band’s favorite holiday this side of Bastille

Read More

View posts by year