| "There's a memorable scene in Martin Scorsese's Last Waltz when 
        the director asks The Band's bassist what he's going to do now they're 
        gone. The camera lingers on Rick Danko's sad, stoned reaction. Crouched 
        over a mixing desk he mumbles about trying to make music and keep busy, 
        before pulling his hat down over his eyes and losing himself completely 
        in cinematic shadow. A tape rolls and after a slow picked intro his familiar 
        voice soars. The song in question was "Sip The Wine," just one 
        of several gorgeous ballads on this neglected 1977 release that broke 
        the post-Band silence. If any voice deserved the epithet tortured it's 
        Rick Danko's. It defined The Band's sound on songs like "It Makes 
        No Difference" and "Stage Fright" and here on "Sweet 
        Romance," "Sip The Wine" and "New Mexico" it 
        possesses the same strange and fragile beauty. The opener "What A 
        Town" is reminiscent of fractured Dixieland bops like "Life 
        Is A Carnival" and "Ophelia," but misses Levon Helm's loose 
        feel behind the kit. All the ex-members do appear however: Levon harmonises 
        on "Once Upon A Time" and the late Richard Manuel adds keyboards 
        to "Shake It." With comparisons inevitable, this LP has stood 
        the test of time far better than some of The Band's later output." 
        (Charlie Dick, Q-Magazine, Rating: 4/5) |