Moondog Matinee


Moondog Matinee is the fifth studio album by Canadian/American rock group the Band, released in 1973. It consists entirely of cover material reflecting the group's love of R&B and blues music, with one exception in their interpretation of the theme from the film The Third Man.
In a 2002 interview, Levon Helm described the reasoning for recording an album of covers: "That was all we could do at the time. We couldn't get along—we all knew that fairness was a bunch of shit. We all knew we were getting screwed, so we couldn't sit down and create no more music. 'Up on [Cripple Creek]' and all that stuff was over—all that collaboration was over, and that type of song was all we could do."
The original idea had been to replicate the group's setlists of the mid-'60s when they had been known as Levon and the Hawks, playing clubs throughout Canada and the US. Of the ten tracks, only one, "Share Your Love " had been performed by the group in the mid-'60s. The rest were merely tracks the group admired, two of them, "Holy [Cow (Lee Dorsey song)|Holy Cow]" and "A [Change Is Gonna Come (song)|A Change Is Gonna Come]", chronologically coming after the group's club days.
Rhapsody praised the album, calling it one of its favorite cover albums. John Bauldie in Q Magazine called the re-issued album 'funny, affectionate and immaculately polished' in 1991.

Track listing

Side two

  • Sides one and two were combined as tracks 1–10 on CD reissues.

Personnel

;The Band
;Additional personnel
;Technical
  • Mark Harman – engineer
  • Jay Ranellucci – engineer
  • John Wilson – engineer
  • Edward Kasper – artwork