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Post by the Scribe on Mar 22, 2020 21:29:47 GMT
Released: November 1974 Label: Capitol Recorded: June-September 1974 Produced by: Peter Asher Currently available: Yes, The Best Of Linda Ronstadt: The Capitol Years
Side 1: 1.You're No Good (Clint Ballard Jr) (3:44) 2.It Doesn't Matter Anymore (Paul Anka) (3:26) 3.Faithless Love (J.D. Souther) (3:15) 4.The Dark End Of The Street (Chips Moman/Dan Penn) (3:55) 5.Heart Like A Wheel (Anna McGarrigle) (3:10)
Side 2 6.When Will I Be Loved (Phil Everly) (2:04) 7.Willin' (Lowell George) (3:02) 8.I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You) (Hank Williams) (2:45) 9.Keep Me From Blowing Away (Paul Craft) (3:10) 10.You Can Close Your Eyes (James Taylor) (3:09)
Musicians: Linda Ronstadt: Vocals Andrew Gold: Guitar, Piano, Drums, Keyboards, Electric Piano, Tambourine, Percussion, Ukulele, Backing Vocals Peter Asher: Guitar, Percussion, Cowbell, Backing Vocals Ed Black: Guitar John Boylan: Guitar Paul Craft: Guitar Glenn Frey: Guitar J.D. Souther: Guitar, Backing Vocals John Starling: Guitar Bob Warford: Guitar Sneaky Pete Kleinow: Pedal Steel Guitar Danny Pendleton: Pedal Steel Guitar David Campbell: Viola Jimmie Fadden: Harmonica David Lindley: Fiddle Dennis Karmazyn: Cello Herb Pedersen: Banjo, Backing Vocals Kenny Edwards: Bass, Backing Vocals Chris Ethridge: Bass Richard Feves: Bass Emory Gordy: Bass Tom Guidera: Bass Timothy B Schmit: Bass Don Henley: Drums, Backing Vocals Russ Kunkel: Drums Lloyd Myers: Drums Dennis St. John: Drums Emmylou Harris: Backing Vocals Cissy Houston: Backing Vocals Sherlie Matthews: Backing Vocals Maria Muldaur: Backing Vocals Clydie King: Backing Vocals Wendy Waldman: Backing Vocals Joyce Nesbitt: Backing Vocals
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Post by the Scribe on May 13, 2021 6:16:48 GMT
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Post by the Scribe on May 13, 2021 9:03:22 GMT
Linda Ronstadt – Heart Like A Wheel Label: Audio Fidelity – AFZ 034 Series: 24K+ Gold CD Series – Format: CD, HDCD, Album, Numbered, Remastered, Gold Country: US Released: 2009
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Post by the Scribe on Nov 21, 2022 8:21:53 GMT
5 Interesting Facts About The Album ‘Heart Like A Wheel ‘ By Linda Ronstadt stage.rockpasta.com/5-interesting-facts-about-the-album-heart-like-a-wheel-by-linda-ronstadt/
Heart Like A Wheel was Linda Ronstadt’s fifth studio album which was released in 1974. The last album he recorded under Capital records. Below are the 5 Interesting Facts About The Album ‘Heart Like A Wheel ‘ By Linda Ronstadt:
Linda’s First Top Charter
The first album of Linda to reach the top of the Billboard 200 and spent four weeks at the No. 1 position. With this achievement, many critics have considered the album as her breakthrough.
“A Masterpiece of Writing and Arrangement”
Stephen Holden’s 1975 article for the Rolling Stone called the title track “a masterpiece of writing and arrangement” and commended the album’s extensive collection, production, and song choice.
A Historical Album
Heart Like a Wheel was chosen for conservation in the National Recording Registry in 2013 for existing as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically important.”
One of the Greatest Country Music Album
In 2006, CMT listed “Heart Like a Wheel” No. 34 on their 40 greatest albums in country music. The record was listed No. 490 on the September 22, 2020 publication of Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
Four Nominations
In 1976, the record got Ronstadt four nominations at the Grammy Awards:
Best Country Vocal Performance, Female – “I Can’t Help It If I’m Still In Love with You” Album Of The Year Best Pop Vocal Performance – Female Producer of the Year – Peter Asher
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Post by the Scribe on Nov 23, 2022 3:10:42 GMT
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Post by the Scribe on Dec 24, 2022 10:51:02 GMT
LINDA RONSTADT – HEART LIKE A WHEEL ontherecord.co/2021/01/21/linda-ronstadt-heart-like-a-wheel/
More Linda Ronstadt better-records.com/search?q=title:%22ronstadt,%20linda%22
More Women Who Rock better-records.com/search?q=tag:%22women-who-rock%22
With two outstanding sides, this vintage Capital pressing was giving us the sound we were looking for on Linda Ronstadt’s Best Album
“You’re No Good” was the hit but “It Doesn’t Matter Anymore,” “Faithless Love” and “The Dark End of the Street” are every bit as good – and that’s just side one! A Must Own Classic, the best album Ms Ronstadt ever made, and a True Country Rock Masterpiece practically without peer and 5 stars: “What really makes HLAW a breakthrough is the inventive arrangements that producer Peter Asher, Ronstadt, and the studio musicians have developed. …[they] help turn Heart Like a Wheel into a veritable catalog of Californian soft rock, and it stands as a landmark of ’70s mainstream pop/rock.” If you’re a Country Rock fan, then Linda’s Masterpiece from 1974 belongs in your collection. better-records.com/search?q=tag:country-rock ontherecord.co/tag/1974-top-ten/ The complete list of titles from 1974 that we’ve reviewed to date can be found here.
Heart Like A Wheel
I’ve been playing HLAW since the year it came out, roughly 48 years by my calculation, and I can tell you it is no easy task to find this kind of smooth, sweet, analog sound on the album. Folks, we heard it for ourselves: the Heart Like A Wheel magic is here on practically every song.
Pay special attention to Andrew Gold’s Abbey Road-ish guitars heard throughout the album. He is all over this record, playing piano, guitar, percussion and singing in the background. If anybody deserves credit besides Linda for the success of HLAW, it’s Andrew Gold.
A key test on either side was to listen to all the multi-tracked guitars and see how easy it was to separate each of them out in the mix. Most of the time they are just one big jangly blur. The best copies let you hear how many guitars there are and what each of them is doing.
What The Best Sides Of Heart Like A Wheel Have To Offer Is Not Hard To Hear
The biggest, most immediate staging in the largest acoustic space The most Tubey Magic, without which you have almost nothing. CDs give you clean and clear. Only the best vintage vinyl pressings offer the kind of Tubey Magic that was on the tapes in 1974 better-records.com/search?q=tag:%221974%22 Tight, note-like, rich, full-bodied bass, with the correct amount of weight down low Natural tonality in the midrange — with all the instruments having the correct timbre Transparency and resolution, critical to hearing into the three-dimensional studio space
No doubt there’s more but we hope that should do for now. Playing the record is the only way to hear all of the qualities we discuss above, and playing the best pressings against a pile of other copies under rigorously controlled conditions is the only way to find a pressing that sounds as good as this one does.
What We’re Listening For On Heart Like A Wheel
Less grit — Smoother and sweeter sound, something that is not easy to come by on Heart Like A Wheel. A bigger presentation — More size, more space, more room for all the instruments and voices to occupy. The bigger the speakers you have to play this record the better. More bass and tighter bass — This is fundamentally a pure rock record. It needs weight down low to rock the way the engineers wanted it to. Present, breathy vocals — A veiled midrange is the rule, not the exception. Good top-end extension to reproduce the harmonics of the instruments and details of the recording including the studio ambience. Last but not least, balance — All the elements from top to bottom should be heard in harmony with each other. Take our word for it, assuming you haven’t played a pile of these yourself, balance is not that easy to find. Our best copies will have it though, of that there is no doubt.
Not only is it hard to find great copies of this album, it ain’t easy to play ’em either. You’re going to need a hi-res, super low distortion front end with careful adjustment of your arm in every area — VTA, tracking weight, azimuth and anti-skate — in order to play this album properly. If you’ve got the goods, you’re gonna love the way this copy sounds. Play it with a budget cart / table / arm and you’re likely to hear a great deal less magic than we did.
Track Commentary
The Tracklist tab above will take you to a select song breakdown for each side, with plenty of What To Listen For advice. Other records with track breakdowns can be found here.
A Must Own Pop Record
Linda’s Masterpiece, and a recording that should be part of any serious Popular Music Collection. Others that belong in that category can be found here.
TRACK LISTING
Side One
You’re No Good
Right from the git-go, if the opening drum and bass intro on this one doesn’t get your foot tapping, something definitely ain’t right. Check to make sure your stereo is working up to par with a record you know well. If it is, your copy of HLAW belongs on the reject pile along with the other 90% of the copies ever pressed.
It Doesn’t Matter Anymore
Amazing acoustic guitars! Lots of tubey magic for a mid-’70s pop album. And just listen to the breathy quality of Linda’s voice. She’s swimming in echo, but it’s a good kind of echo. Being able to hear so much of it tells you that your pressing is one of the few with tremendous transparency and high resolution.
Faithless Love
Another superb arrangement with excellent sound. The banjo that opens this track is key — the picking should have a very strong plucky quality, with lovely trailing harmonics, even some fret buzz. So many copies are veiled or blunted sounding; this clearly demonstrates a lack of transient information. The copies without the trailing harmonics lack resolution. Once you hear either of these problems on the banjo, you can be sure to find them on the voices and guitars throughout the side.
That the Cisco pressing doesn’t do a very good job with the banjo should be clear for all to hear. If you want the sound of the real thing only the best Capitol pressings are going to give it to you.
The Dark End of the Street
We love the meaty, dark and distorted guitars at the opening of this one; really sets the tone.
Heart Like a Wheel
Side Two
When Will I Be Loved?
This presumptive Hit Single has lots of multi-tracked instruments crammed into its mix, a mix which is ready for radio and plenty processed and compressed to suit the Top 40 format. What that means for us audiophiles is not that the sound will be bad, rather that it will have a set of sonic characteristics in common with most of the original pressings: a little grit, yes, that is to be expected, but what one hears more often than not is a murky, dark, muddy quality to the midrange.
It’s the rare copy that presents a breathy, present , clear Linda Ronstadt on this track. Which is why it’s a great test track. If this track sounds right you can be pretty sure that everything that follows will too (up to a point naturally).
Willin’ I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still in Love With You)
This track has the lovely and talented Emmylou Harris on harmony vocal. Between her and Linda cthere is a great deal of midrange and upper midrange energy on this track which will tend to strain on most copies.
Is that strain the result of bad mastering? Bad pressing quality? Bad vinyl? Some combination of all three? No one can say, and what difference does it make anyway? The proof of the pudding is in the eating. The proof of a good sounding side two is right there on track three. If there’s anything unnatural in the midrange, this song will not be a pleasant listening experience for you, dear reader.
Keep Me from Blowing Away
Linda’s voice here is sweet as honey. On the best copies this one should sound transparent and quite natural. Linda excels at this kind of song, but she stopped doing material like this soon after this album came out. That’s about the time I lost interest in her.
You Can Close Your Eyes
This is one of my all time favorite James Taylor songs. Linda does a lovely version of it here over a superb arrangement with top quality audiophile sound to match. What a great ending for the album, with her old buddies The Eagles backing her up. It takes this brilliant album out on a high note.
AMG 5 Star Rave Review
Following the same formula as her early records, Heart Like a Wheel doesn’t appear to be a great breakthrough on the surface. However, Ronstadt comes into her own on this mix of oldies and contemporary classics. Backed by a fleet of Los Angeles musicians, Ronstadt sings with vigor and passion, helping bring the music alive.
But what really makes Heart Like a Wheel a breakthrough is the inventive arrangements that producer Peter Asher, Ronstadt, and the studio musicians have developed. Finding the right note for each song — whether it’s the soulful reworking of “When Will I Be Loved,” the hit “You’re No Good,” or the laid-back folk-rock of “Willing” — the musicians help turn Heart Like a Wheel into a veritable catalog of Californian soft rock, and it stands as a landmark of ’70s mainstream pop/rock.
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