The Records · Capitol, 1972 · Live
Rock of Ages
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If you only own one live Band album, make it this one. Rock of Ages captures the group at the absolute peak of their powers as a live act — and adds a secret weapon that the studio albums never had: a five-piece horn section.
The New Year's residency
The Band booked the Academy of Music in New York for the last week of 1971, recording four nights (28–31 December) and climaxing on New Year's Eve. Having loved Allen Toussaint's horn arrangement for “Life Is a Carnival,” Robertson commissioned the New Orleans master to write charts for a whole horn section — giving warhorses like “Chest Fever” and “The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show” a gorgeous, brassy lift.
Dylan's midnight surprise
In the early hours of New Year's Day 1972, the group's old boss Bob Dylan walked on stage unannounced and played the final four songs — including “Like a Rolling Stone.” Those performances were held back for years, finally surfacing on the 2001 expanded reissue (and the 2013 Live at the Academy of Music box set).
One of the great live albums
It reached No. 6 in the US and went gold, and it's widely regarded as one of the finest live rock albums ever made — tight, joyous, and full of the interplay that made the Band special. Phil Ramone engineered.
Own it on record
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Look for the expanded edition with Dylan's New Year's Eve guest set, or the Live at the Academy of Music 1971 box.