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Alice's Restaurant Massacree - 40th Anniversary

Arlo Guthrie

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Alice's Restaurant Massacree - 40th Anniversary Arlo Guthrie 19:27 Album Only View In iTunes

Album Review

As an album, the original soundtrack to Alice's Restaurant — like a lot of movie soundtracks — is something of a dud, bound for collecting dust after a few listenings; for most buyers, its greater value is its collectible potential as a piece of Arlo Guthrie memorabilia, and not as a listening experience. Fans of the movie will likely find the soundtrack more a letdown than it logically should be: it doesn't include some of the movie's most memorable musical moments, such as Arlo's kazoo-blowing coffeehouse rag, his duet with Pete Seeger on Woody Guthrie's "Car Song," or the emotional guitar arrangement of "Amazing Grace." The title story-song, "Alice's Restaurant Massacree," is reproduced here in a new, two-part version which pales in comparison with the original — indeed, its weakest points sound almost like a parody of the more famous performance. The record is filled out by a few short, folk-rock instrumentals composed by Guthrie or the album's producer, Garry Sherman; an a cappella, congregational "Amazing Grace"; the guitar solo "Crash Pad Improvs," which cropped up with lyrics a year later as "Gabriel's Mother's Hiway Ballad # 16 Blues"; a throwaway honky tonk vocal (sung by Al Shackman) that is either a send-up of or tribute to classic country, or both; and Joni Mitchell's painfully dated "Songs to Aging Children," sung by Mitchell impersonator Tigger Outlaw. It can be said in favor of the album that it boldly went where few movie scores had gone before, abandoning typical Hollywood orchestrations for banjos, harmonicas, and electric guitars, and the resulting instrumentals are good if unexceptional. Still, the soundtrack fails to do justice to the score you actually remember from the movie, and the original LP is best left to the die-hard fans and collectors. Fortunately, when Rykodisc reissued the album on CD in 1998, it included the missing stuff, making for a much more satisfying listen.

Recent Customer Reviews

Alice
     
by Skruda

Don't buy this. It is dull and lacks the fire of the original recording. Though it will hurt, buy the original version for $9.99. It's clear Arlo wants our money and as a fan of the orginial song I need my fix.

A GOOD rendition, OF A GREAT SONG by A LEGENDARY FOLK ARTIST…
     
by tmcm166

I find that it is a compliment to Mr. Guthrie and particularly to his song that opinions expressed here some 40 years after the release of the original (MASACREE
AT ALICE’S) remain as passionate and divisive as were the times. For me the original release that I listened to as a young man, COMPLETELY defined my generation, my war, my government and my career. In less than twenty minutes of righteous humor, Arlo also managed to express a singularity of enormous cultural complexity the likes of which we will never experience again. It is through trial, terror and censorship that we own the right of criticism. The fault here is
not w/ the artist or his creation nor his delivery; it lies exclusively at the feet of corporate greed and deception. iTunes just picked the wrong Artist, the wrong song, and the wrong customer base to mess with. If they were smart they would lose the frills and sell both versions at the single song rate. The songs deserve
a five, the marketing genius gets a 0.

arlo guthrie alice's restaurant live
     
by Bushkill_Mark

I'm proud to say I grew up in Western Mass and this song is a tradition. I travel a lot and all over the world you'd be surprized at how may folks know about Alice and the restaurant. It's a great icebreaker when I say I'm from the Berkshires.

Biography

Born: July 10, 1947 in Brooklyn, NY

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s

Is it possible to be a one-hit wonder three times? The question is provoked by the recording career of Arlo Guthrie, which is best remembered for three songs in three different contexts. There is "The City of New Orleans," Guthrie's only Top 40 hit, which earns him an entry in Wayne Jancik's The Billboard...
Full Bio