Perhaps the least heralded of the three great vernacular singers who made up the front line of
the Band,
Rick Danko may well have been the glue and the heart of the whole enterprise. If
Levon Helm's Arkansas drawl brought a kind of historical authenticity to the character studies he sang, and gave
the Band the closest thing to a frontman, while Richard Manuel's gospel-tinged vocals, sung like a ragged angel desperately down on his luck, gave
the Band its soul, then
Danko's beautifully unsteady voice gave
the Band its unabashed honesty, and particularly on his signature tune, "Makes No Difference," its very heart.
Danko always seemed bare, open, and naked when he sang this song in
the Band's standard live set, and his solo career, in a way, mirrored it, with
Danko sounding like an increasingly frayed nerve. This collection of live
Danko performances has been drawn from eight complete live shows originally released by Floating World Records.
Danko works his limited palette well, and while nothing here replaces the original versions by
the Band, neither does anything here diminish that legacy.
Danko's death in 1999 makes this a particularly valuable document of one of the most unique and unsung voices in rock. ~ Steve Leggett