Robbie Robertson changed the order of the tracks on "Stage Fright" for this edition. He says that this is the original order that he envisioned for the album. During the recording, he says he was trying to get the others involved in the songwriting and he was only partially successful. When he first sequenced the record, the others complained that their songs were consigned to side B of the record. So he rearranged them to the order we have known for years:
All songs written by Robbie Robertson unless otherwise indicated.
Side A
Strawberry Wine (Helm-Robertson)
Sleeping (Manuel-Robertson)
Time To Kill
Just Another Whistle Stop (Manuel-Robertson)
All La Glory
Side B
The Shape I'm In
The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
Daniel and the Sacred Harp
Stage Fright
The Rumor
For the 2021 edition:
Side A
The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
The Shape I'm In
Daniel and the Sacred Harp
Stage Fright
The Rumor
Side B
Time To Kill
Just Another Whistle Stop (Manuel-Robertson)
All La Glory
Strawberry Wine (Helm-Robertson)
Sleeping (Manuel-Robertson)
So he basically switched sides A and B and tinkered with the order a bit on each side.
After one listen, I think Robertson was right to change the order. It feels odd to have the record end with "Sleeping" instead of "The Rumor" but I think it works better.
There are two "alternate mix" recordings following this. "Strawberry Wine" has Levon Helm singing with Robertson, I assume, on guitar. "Sleeping" has Richard Manuel singing and, I assume, playing piano with maybe some harmony singing from someone, maybe Rick Danko. They aren't essential, but I like them.
The rest of the first disc is from a hotel room in Calgary with Robertson, Danko, and Manuel. They are somewhat interesting and it would have been fun to sit in that room listening to them play.
The second disc is a 1971 20-song performance recorded at Royal Albert Hall. The Band sounds very good and you can hear a good bit from Garth Hudson, which I like as he sometimes got lost in other Band live recordings. It was recorded to four-track, so Bob Clearmountain had limited sources to deal with and the enormous hall's acoustics don't help much, but it sounds good and The Band was working well together as a group in the performance. I enjoyed it.
Here's an interview with Robertson about the reissue ("Cahoots" may be next):
https://www.theoaklandpress.com/enterta ... 447bd.htmlIt's so sad that three of them, the singers, are dead. I saw a video with Levon Helm a year or so ago recorded well after The Band's breakup. He said that there was only one singer with the group. He said that he and Rick Danko just waited until it was their turn to sing a song. I don't agree with that, but admire the sentiment and his respect for Richard Manuel's voice.