Coast to Coast: Overture and Beginners is a 1974 live album credited to Rod Stewart/Faces.
In an unusual arrangement, LP versions of the album were issued in the United States by Mercury Records (which at the time issued Stewart's solo albums), while cassette and 8-track configurations were issued by Warner Bros. Records, the Faces' former label—and with whom Stewart would sign as a solo artist following the Faces' demise.
The cassette and 8-track versions also include an extra track – "(I Know) I'm Losing You" (Norman Whitfield, Edward Holland, Jr., Cornelius Grant).
The back cover photo is actually the Old Boston Garden taken on May 2, 1973.
Long out of print in the United States, Coast to Coast is only available as an import from Japan. The Faces would disband within a year and a half of the album's release.
The crowd noise that plays behind the opening of David Bowie's Diamond Dogs was taken from the opening track "It's All Over Now". Stewart can be heard saying "Hey" on the Bowie track.
Reception
In The Pittsburgh Press, critic Pete Bishop termed the album "50 disappointingly dull minutes" during which "nothing really excites".
Track listing
Side one
- "It's All Over Now" (Bobby Womack, Shirley Womack) – 4:38
- "Cut Across Shorty" (Wayne Walker, Marijohn Wilkin) – 3:45
- "Too Bad" / "Every Picture Tells a Story" (Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood) – 7:34
- "Angel" (Jimi Hendrix) – 4:28
- "Stay With Me" (Stewart, Wood) – 4:50
Side two
- "I Wish It Would Rain" (Roger Penzabene, Barrett Strong, Norman Whitfield) – 4:20
- "I'd Rather Go Blind" (Billy Foster, Ellington Jordan) – 5:55
- "Borstal Boys" (Ian McLagan, Stewart, Wood) / "Amazing Grace" (Traditional, arr. D. Throat) – 9:52
- "Jealous Guy" (John Lennon) – 4:25
Personnel
- Rod Stewart – lead vocals
- Ronnie Wood – guitars, backing vocals
- Ian McLagan – keyboards, backing vocals
- Tetsu Yamauchi – bass, trombone
- Kenney Jones – drums
Production
- Faces – producer
- Gary Kellgren – engineer
- Tom Scott and Tom Fly – assistant engineers
Charts
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="text-align:center;"
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! Chart (1974)
! Peak<br />position
|-
!scope=row|Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)
| align="center" |38
|-
|-
|-
|}
