The Album That Made the Doobie Brothers Superstars: The Captain and Me Features the Hits "China Grove" and "Long Train Runnin'," Even Balance Between Edgy Rock and Rustic Ballads
Experience the 1973 Record in Definitive Sound: Mobile Fidelity's Numbered-Edition 180g 45RPM 2LP Set Elevates Ted Templeman's Production and Comes Housed in a Stoughton Gatefold Jacket
1/4” / 15 IPS Dolby A analog master to DSD 256 to analog console to lathe
Taking off on the commercial success of Toulouse Street, The Captain and Me propelled the Doobie Brothers to superstar status. Having spent an entire year on the charts after its March 1973 release, the band's third record features one classic after another. Not to mention an even-keeled balance between gritty rock fare and mellow balladry that highlights the group's chemistry and songwriting prowess. And a guest turn on pedal steel by Steely Dan alum Jeff “Skunk” Baxter, who’d officially crack the Doobie Brothers’ lineup the following year.
Sourced from the original analog master tapes, pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing in California, and housed in a Stoughton gatefold jacket, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition 180g 45RPM 2LP presents The Captain and Me in definitive sound. Given the luxurious room of a 45RPM version for the first time and benefiting from the wider grooves, the music unfolds amid large soundstages replete with ultra-quiet backgrounds, vivid dynamics, and sharp imaging. Ted Templeman’s excellent production charms like never before.
The organic sonics of The Captain and Me demonstrate why myriad listeners swear allegiance to 70s recordings. Facets that help make the album so welcoming — voices that naturally rise and fall, notes that properly carry and decay, bass lines you can trace from beginning to end, well-placed percussive accents, warm tones, defined separation between the players — come across on this collectible reissue with involving presence, openness, and realism. Everything sounds crisp and clear. Nothing is overdone or out of place, even with the addition of strings and synthesizers in places.
No wonder why The Captain and Me stands as one the feel-good California quintet's signature works. Balanced between Tom Johnston's harder-edged contributions and Patrick Simmons' rustic excursions, the album displays a stunning array of high harmonies and interlocking rhythms. Laidback yet engaged, the stylistic combination belies the Doobies' roots as a Northern California bar band that played at afternoon jam sessions for members of the Hells Angels and parallels its evolution into a more polished, confident collective on par with mainstream peers the Eagles and the Allman Brothers Band.
Such biker-meets-beach mentality informs the lead-off "Natural Thing" — a midtempo tune that feeds of the tension between the acoustic and electric guitars while showing off the the band’s then-new incorporation of ARP synthesizers — and on the skyward title track, which builds in energy as it moves towards a climax. And of course, there's the Top 15 smash "China Grove" and Top 10 hit "Long Train Runnin'." Each pop-rock hallmark rides memorable guitar riffs into the sunset. Each conjures the liberating feelings of wind blowing through your hair and three-day weekends. Each never gets old.
By keeping their craft deceptively simple and thoroughly enjoyable, the Doobies understand music is supposed to be fun — and that it needs to groove. And groove and sway The Captain and Me does without fail. You could say it keeps on movin’. Another key reason for its ageless charm: The playing of pianist Bill Payne. The Little Feat member appears on five cuts, including the romantic “South City Midnight Lady” (along with Baxter), polyrhythmic “Without You,” and blues corker “Dark Eyed Cajun Woman.”
You’d likely never guess the Doobie Brothers made The Captain and Me under the pressures associated with a quick turnaround time and demands for a set that would prove its prior LP wasn’t a fluke. More than two million copies in sales, two massive singles, and Top 10 chart status did more than that. The Captain and Me sent the band on its way to Rock and Roll Hall of Fame stature and permanent standing as one of the great rock ‘n’ roll bands of its time.
Side One:
- Natural Thing
- Long Train Runnin’
- China Grove
Side Two:
- Dark Eyed Cajun Woman
- Clear as the Driven Snow
Side Three:
- Without You
- South City Midnight Lady
Side Four:
- Evil Woman
- Busted Down Around O’Connelly Corners
- Ukiah
- The Captain and Me