Thanks, I'll Eat It Here

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (34 ratings)
Thanks, I'll Eat It Here album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 33:58

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Must have!

krjahnke

Lowell, we miss you...

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One of my aall time favorites

hoosiertoo

One of my desert island CD's. I've sung the songs to my bride-to-be at the top of my lungs and off key - she married me anyway in 1981 - and I still get requests for "Cheek to Cheek." Unfortunately for the neighbors I always oblige. Erlewine's opinion to the contrary, "Himmler's Ring" is pure fun and one of the album's highlights. I've owned this on vinyl twice, made endless cassette copies for friends and on CD as soon as it came out. Five stars isn't high enough. "Heartache" wasn't on my original vinyl recording and doesn't quite match the mood of the rest of the album, but it's a welcome addition nonetheless.

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Rounded to 5 stars

timabouttown

Call it 4 stars for the music, 5 stars for the love poured into the record, and pouring out of it. He was witty, outrageous, and larger than life, but Lowell George was also sincere. Nary a wink here, and some of his sweetest performances. His best ever? Nope, that's Sailing Shoes. But this is a comfortable second. Buy. Enjoy. Tell someone you love that you love 'em.

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A Shame

EvilAl

Should have been the first of a long series of productive, quality solo albums. An underappreciated album by a great talent. There are some gems to be had here.

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They Say All Music Guide

Thanks I’ll Eat it Here is strikingly different from the fusion-leanings of Little Feat’s last studio album, Time Loves a Hero. Lowell George never cared for jazz-fusion, so it should be little surprise that there’s none to be heard on Thanks. Instead, he picks up where Dixie Chicken left off (he even reworks that album’s standout “Two Trains”), turning in a laid-back, organic collection of tunes equal parts New Orleans R&B, country, sophisticated blues, and pop. George wasn’t in good health during the sessions for Thanks, which you wouldn’t tell by his engaging performances, but from the lack of new tunes. Out of the nine songs on the album, only three are originals, and they’re all collaborations. That’s a drawback only in retrospect — it’s hard not to wish that the last album George completed had more of his own songs — but Lowell was a first-rate interpreter, so even covers of Allen Toussaint (“What Do You Want the Girl to Do”), Ann Peebles (“I Can’t Stand the Rain”) and Rickie Lee Jones (“Easy Money”) wind up sounding of piece with the original songs. George’s music rolls so easy, the album can seem a little slight at first, but it winds up being a real charmer. Yes, a few songs drift by and, yes, Jimmy Webb’s vaudevellian “Himmler’s Ring” feels terribly out of place, but Lowell’s style is so distinctive and his performances so soulful, it’s hard not to like this record if you’ve ever had a fondness for Little Feat. After all, it’s earthier and more satisfying than any Feat album since Feats Don’t Fail Me Now and it has the absolutely gorgeous “20 Million Things,” the last great song George ever wrote. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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