Live from Neon Park is the second live album by the American rock band Little Feat, released in 1996. The name of the album was a suggestion of a Little Feat fan in commemoration of the then-recent passing of long-time Little Feat album cover artist and friend of the band, Neon Park.

Track listing

Disc one

  1. "Introductions" – 1:47
  2. "Two Trains" (George) – 5:43
  3. "Spanish Moon/Skin It Back" – 10:23
  4. "Rock and Roll Everynight" – 5:07
  5. "Down on the Farm" (Barrère, Barrère) – 6:23
  6. "Willin'" (George) – 5:41
  7. "Hate to Lose Your Lovin'" (Barrère, Fuller) – 4:21
  8. "Can't Be Satisfied/They're Red Hot (Hot Tamales) [medley]" (Johnson, Waters) – 4:49
  9. "Cadillac Hotel" (Payne, Wray) – 6:50
  10. "Changin' Luck" (Fuller, Payne, Tackett) – 7:22
  11. "You're Taking Up Another Man's Place" (Isaac Hayes, David Porter) – 6:54
  12. "Oh, Atlanta" (Payne) – 5:35

Disc two

  1. "Texas Twister" (Barrère, Kibbee, Payne, Tackett) – 5:17
  2. "Fat Man in the Bathtub" (George) – 7:11
  3. "Representing the Mambo" (Barrère, Park, Payne, Tackett) – 7:51
  4. "Long Distance Love" (George) – 3:35
  5. "Rad Gumbo" (Barrère, Clayton, Gradney, Kibbee, Park, Payne) – 3:54
  6. "Dixie Chicken" (George, Kibbee) – 17:28
  7. "Feats Don't Fail Me Now" (Barrère, George, Kibbee) – 7:49
  8. "Sailin' Shoes" (George) – 5:13
  9. "Let It Roll/High Roller" [Acoustic] – 12:07

Personnel

Little Feat

  • Paul Barrère – guitar, vocals
  • Sam Clayton – percussion, vocals
  • Kenny Gradney – bass
  • Richie Hayward – drums, vocals
  • Shaun Murphy – vocals, percussion
  • Bill Payne – keyboards, vocals
  • Fred Tackett – guitar, mandolin, trumpet

Guest musicians

  • Craig Fuller – vocals, guitar on "Hate To Lose Your Lovin'"
  • Inara George (daughter of Lowell) – vocals on "Sailin' Shoes"
  • Piero Mariani (husband of Shaun Murphy) – electronic percussion
  • Miles Tackett (son of Fred) – guitar on "Dixie Chicken"
  • Joel Tepp – clarinet

Texicali Horns

  • Darrell Leonard – trumpet
  • Joe Sublett – tenor saxophone
  • David Woodford – tenor and baritone saxophone

References