Les Paul & Friends: A Tribute to a Legend
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It must have looked great on paper, and few musicians are more deserving of a tribute than Les Paul, but as misbegotten encomiums go, Les Paul & Friends: A Tribute to a Legend ranks somewhere near or below George Martin’s disastrous In My Life — and that album featured performances from Robin Williams and Jim Carrey, so you know you’re on dangerous ground here. Tribute is a hack job, from the shoddy artwork (which lists the tracks in the wrong order) to the songs themselves, a handful of which have been poached from the last Les Paul tribute album, 2005’s American Made World Played. What you end up with is a foul-smelling hash that has its high points (notably “The Good Luck You’re Having,” featuring guitar work from Paul, Hiram Bullock, and Joe Bonamassa), but also answers the question of what it would sound like if Johnny Rzeznik of the Goo Goo Dolls covered U2 (answer: he’d make “All I Want Is You” sound vaguely like “Black Balloon”) and leaves room for Jeff Golub to add an inexplicable cover of Ace’s “How Long.” What does this have to do with Les Paul? In most cases, not much – in fact, Paul doesn’t even appear on some tracks. It has the look and feel of a shady licensing deal gone wrong, but even if you choose to believe the folks who put it together had the best intentions, there’s no reason to purchase this album. Pick up 2005’s The Best of the Capitol Masters: 90th Birthday Edition instead, and leave this to the truck stops and swap meets it deserves. (Immergent 2008)



I could not disagree more with this “hack job” of a review. I picked this CD up the first day it went on sale (and also own “American Made World Played”) and feel this is a much more superior package to that one. It’s obvious that Mr. Giles does not listen to the CD’s he receives to review as their is NO problem with the track listing being in the wrong order. He would’ve also picked up on the reworking on the couple of songs that appeared on American Made World PLayed. Perhaps he being overly critical. As a musician and someone who knows quite well the influences of Les Paul, I have read other articles about this disc and the message was clear that this is a tribute to the man and also the recording techniques he developed. This is why I picked it up. It is an amazing package and has a wide array of different music and styles – all which make for a very entertaining experience.