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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get (1973)
I rarely do this, but the review that states this album has 'stinkers' on it, hasn't bought the same album I have. I'm not sure what album they have, but it's not the one I have. The album I have is a pretty wonderful collection of songs, played by great musicians, and made with the decision that Joe Walsh does not have to play a guitar solo for every song he writes. And...
Published on February 26, 2005 by Mr. S. St Thomas

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4 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars GOOD BUT NOT BEST
"Rocky Mountain Way" is the best cut hands down. The work is uneven, however, because there are several stinkers: "Wolf" (a depressing largo tempo can really drag you down), "Midnight Moodies" (a throaway), and "Dreams." Nevertheless, SMOKER stands head and shoulders above its predecessor, BARNSTORM.
Published on October 11, 2003 by Gregory Moss


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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get (1973), February 26, 2005
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
I rarely do this, but the review that states this album has 'stinkers' on it, hasn't bought the same album I have. I'm not sure what album they have, but it's not the one I have. The album I have is a pretty wonderful collection of songs, played by great musicians, and made with the decision that Joe Walsh does not have to play a guitar solo for every song he writes. And to me that's refreshing. I'm glad he thought so too.

I've always thought that The Eagles needed Joe Walsh more than he needed them. Songs like 'Life In The Fast Lane' Walsh could have written on his own, in his sleep, while making Pot Noodles. The best thing that comes from his association with The Eagles is his work with Don Felder, and on 'You Bought It, You Name It', this 'team' comes up with one of the best Joe Walsh tunes of his career. But that's on another album. I'm just stating the simple fact that Joe Walsh is an immensely talented musician, who's experimentation with everything, not just guitar, makes him quite a talented man indeed. And this album is full of experimenation. So there are no stinkers.

Second point is this. In 1973, a Grammy went to the engineering work done by Geoff Emerick on Paul McCartney's Band On The Run. It's pretty obvious that the Grammy's are decidedly 'fixed', because I swear Alan Parson's engineering on Pink Floyd's 'Dark Side of the Moon' puts BOTR to shame. And many albums I've heard from that year put BOTR to shame. Steely Dan's 'Countdown To Ecstasy', 10cc's debut album, Frank Zappa's 'Overnite Sensation', ELO's 'Eldorado', George Harrison's 'Living in the Material Word' to name only a few on a large list. The Grammy went to the wrong person for the wrong album.

And I have to say, and I own ''The Smoker . . . . ' on vinyl, that this album is in fact, one of the best sounding albums from that year, if not the best, that I currently own. It literally sounds so modern that I was very hard-pressed to remind myself that this was 1973 I was listening to. It is an incredibly engineered & recorded album, and this alone makes songs that are so called 'stinkers', truly worth hearing for the amount of hard work and patience that went into mixing and making this album. I have many albums from 1973, and this one is just about the best one I've ever heard. Sorry Pink Floyd!

What I also love about this album is the contributions by all of Walsh's band at the time, Joe Vitale on Drums, Flute, and Keyboards, Rocke Grace on Keyboards, and Ken Passarelli on Bass. Each of these musicians contributes songs to what is called a ''Joe Walsh'' album, and I just like the fact that if you were in Joe Walsh's band, he had no problem with you writing songs for 'his' album. I also like the fact that Walsh so rarely chooses to guitar solo on this album. He pratcically doesn't do one at all, barring 'Rocky Mountain Way'. That I find incredibly interesting, and it actually removes that expectation of ''well, I'll get through the song til the guitar solo comes up, then I'll just move on to the next one''. It forces you to accept that there is no guitar solo coming to ''redeem'' the song in any way, so you might as well listen to what Walsh thought was more important, and that's the song itself.

There are some beautiful songs on this album, and songs that truly 'rock'. Most BEST OF collections take from this album 'Rocky Mountain Way', 'Bookends' and 'Meadows'. But they miss the other songs, which would mean making the whole album a best of collection. And I do believe every song on this album is as good as anything Walsh has ever worked on. The material his band comes up with, and those he wrote. Passarelli's 'Happy Ways' is a great bit of Pop, where Grace's 'Midnite Moodies' is an instrumental with great playing from everyone. Particularly Vitale's Flute. When it appeared in the song, I had to look at the credits once or twice to see who was playing Flute! Discovering it was the drummer, just made me say, that guy is pretty talented. He's not just 'a drummer', like that's a bad thing 'just to be'. His whole band was full of talent, and Walsh lets that shine through on every song here. The title of the album may be confusing, but what happens on it sounds cohesive, artistic, and just a pleasure to listen to.

Need you buy this album? That's not up to me, but I wish that you would. Just to hear what Walsh was capable of as a solo artist, and that The Eagles were lucky to have him.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Joe's best solo album, May 20, 2000
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
Not counting the albums he did with the James Gang and Barnstorm, this is Joe Walsh's best album, and not just because it kicks off with the classic hit "Rocky Mountain Way." In later years, Walsh would derail his career with sloppy songwriting and lame jokiness. But here his guitar is still as crisp as the fine batch of songs he chooses to apply it to. "Happy Ways" and "Meadows" are two other standouts, but there are no bad songs. This is a solid 1970s classic rock album.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Jokier You Get, The Less Focussed Your Music Becomes, November 7, 2000
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
This is an outstanding album, definitely in my all-time Top 20, and still waiting to be remastered. (The follow-up "So What" is pretty good, too.)

One tragedy it highlights is that drummer/flautist Joe Vitale's wonderful solo album "Roller Coaster Weekend" has never been transferred to CD, to my knowledge. Until that happens -- and it's going to take a campaign by fans to achieve that -- then this magnificent album is our best reminder of what Walsh and Vitale achieved together.

Who knows what Joe could have achieved if he hadn't joined the Eagles? He certainly gave them a power injection, but his solo career never again hit the heights that this rocky mountain album reached.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A pure gem. It's really not what you think!, December 22, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
Definitely a peak in his creativity. Listening to this you wonder is this the same guy who gave us classics like I.L.B.Ts.

Its not your typical 70's classic rock album either. Unlike the popular opening tack (Rocky Mountain Way), in my opinion the albums weakest track, the rest of it is a masterful score covering so many moods from the dark "Wolf" to the bouncy "Happy Ways" to the breezy "Days Gone By".

I don't own another Joe Walsh disc, and probably never will, yet this remains a favorite in my collection.

One last note, try programming the songs to play last to first, it has a really great feel to it.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best rock albums ever made!, October 4, 1998
By 
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
This cd is a great example of what rock 'n' roll can aspire to- when played by a true master. There's not one bad tune on this cd. You not only get some of the best r'n'r ever made, but Joe's background in classical music is evident in some of the tastiest bits you've ever heard!
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remastering and repackaging please!, January 17, 2003
By 
Stephen Andrew McDonnell "SAM" (Regina, Saskatchewan Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
I am not going to review this album here, the previous reviews say all that needs to be said. I am simply voicing the long over due need to REMASTER Joe's back catalogue: 'Barnstorm', 'The Smoker You Drink...', 'So What?' How about it MCA? You did the right thing with the first 3 'James Gang' albums, particularly 'Yer Album'. It's time!
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Almost his finest hour, October 17, 2002
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
I first heard this album in 1973 at the tender age of 10 and it has stayed with me ever since.

I actually think Joe Walsh was rather lucky teeming up with such a brilliant musician as Joe Vitale whose drums and flute playing on this LP are quite outstanding. His later material - largely without the help of Vitale - never reached this creative high.

The album is highly eclectic in turns blues rock (the famous 'Rocky Mountain Way'), instrumental jazz in ' Midnight Moodies'where Vitale produces some electric flute and one of my favourites the moving 'Bookends' which sounds like an 'out-take' from Joe Vitale's long lost first solo LP of the following year.

For those who are interested Bob Harris actually played a track on 'Roller Coaster Weekend' (Joe Vitale's Lp) on the Old Grey Whistle Test in the UK.

This is the sort of LP that a serious rock fan should not ignore, but would perhaps never consider. The creativity and musicianship on display here make great listening, but for methe 1972 Barnstorm LP IS still his finest hour.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Push 'Play' and that's it, November 10, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
...because you won't be programming the cd player for this one. No need to skip any track. I have all of Walsh's albumns and this one is the best. Joe Vitale's flute and drum work are stellar - when Walsh and Vitale are together good things happen.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Joe Walsh CD/Cassette With A Humorous Title, September 19, 2007
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This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
THE SMOKER YOU DRINK, THE PLAYER YOU GET is a great CD/cassette that includes many classic songs, including, especially, the sports anthem "Rocky Mountain Way" and the midtempo rocker "Meadows." The album continues Walsh's direction from his James Gang years while pointing the way towards his work with the Eagles. While there's plenty of humor to be found here, Walsh is clearly no novelty act. Walsh's advocacies of sanctions against countries which convict foreign tourists for trumped-up crimes and increased funding for law enforcement/community policing make this CD/cassette an essential purchase for both your ears AND your conscience.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brings Back Memories, May 12, 2007
By 
S. Schreckengast "Schreckbabe" (Cedar Rapids, Iowa United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Smoker You Drink the Player You Get (Audio CD)
I had this back in the 70's and it still is a favorite. I play it all the time and can see now where I developed a love for a blend of rock & roll and jazz mix. This recording has both. Great music from Joe Walsh and his crew.
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Smoker You Drink the Player You Get
Smoker You Drink the Player You Get by Joe Walsh (Audio CD - 1990)
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