Album Review: Mudcrutch – Mudcrutch

August 27, 2008

Mudcrutch want you to know right out of the gate that this is a band record.  While Mudcrutch’s most famous member does most of the singing on the album, lead guitarist Tom Leadon gets the first verse of opener “Shady Grove.”

As viewers of Runnin’ Down a Dream know, Mudcrutch was Tom Petty’s original band.  Keyboardist Benmont Tench and guitarist Mike Campbell would go on to become Heartbreakers, Tom Leadon and drummer Randall Marsh would not.  Likely inspired by revisiting the past through making that film, Petty reunited the band, and Mudcrutch released their debut album a mere four decades after forming.

Believe it or not, the end result actually sounds like a band album, not a Tom Petty record with a slightly different version of the Heartbreakers backing him up.  For one, there are more songwriters than usual–two traditional songs, a Byrds song, the oft-covered “Six Days on the Road,” and one each by Tench and Leadon.  Tench and Leadon take lead vocals on their songs, and Leadon provides harmonies throughout.

And it often sounds, appropriately, like a tribute to the musicians who inspired Mudcrutch those many decades ago, even when the songs are original.  More than one, particularly Leadon’s “Queen of the Go-Go Girls,” would fit quite neatly on a Gram Parsons album or Sweetheart of the Rodeo.

Sometimes it does sound like Petty–”Scare Easy” is his best single in years, and ought to be added to the Heartbreakers’ live repetoire.  (Better yet, have Leadon and Marsh come out and play on it.)

Throughout, it sounds like what it is–a bunch of old friends having a blast playing together, and conveying every bit of that fun to the lucky listeners who purchased the album.  Here’s hoping they do it again sometime.

“Scare Easy”:

Update: Warner has pulled the official video.  Here’s a backup until the YouTube/Warner dispute is resolved.

The Byrds’ “Lover of the Bayou”:

A short promotional video about the band’s history and reunion:

Note: Mudcrutch is available in two versions–a standard CD, and an audiophile package that includes the album on both 180 gram vinyl and “full dynamic range” CD.  You can find out more about the two different releases in the articles and making-of videos linked here.  I have the audiophile package, and it sounds great.


Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: Runnin’ Down a Dream

July 24, 2008

What a treat this movie is.

Does four hours seem too long for a documentary on Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers? It isn’t. It could have been even longer and I would not have complained.

Peter Bogdanovich tells the story of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers from the beginning, with Tom a child in Gainesville, Florida (and meeting Elvis), through his early band Mudcrutch, which contained the seeds of the Heartbreakers, and onward through the long career of that legendary rock and roll institution, ending with the Highway Companion album and the thirtieth anniversary concert. And it’s never boring. Spending four hours with Tom and the boys drives home just how much great music they have made together these thirty-plus years.

Very little is revealed about anyone’s life unless the events related to the music. Petty’s relationship with his parents is covered only briefly. Later in the film, when his two daughters are mentioned, it comes as a surprise because we have never been informed that they were born in the first place. Whether this was done to protect the privacy of the Petty family or to keep the film’s focus firmly on the music and the musicians who made it, on the whole it is a good decision. There’s plenty of drama without dragging the rest of the Pettys into it (or the Tenches or the Campbells, for that matter).

Tom told us all on Full Moon Fever that he won’t back down. He meant it, as his multiple squabbles with record labels attest, including fighting to keep his albums reasonably priced for his fans when MCA wanted to squeeze a few more bucks out of us, something to warm the cockles of a music lover’s heart. It isn’t always a flattering picture that emerges, though–canning bassist Ron Blair for Howie Epstein (stealing Epstein from another band) looks like a cold and calculated move. (Blair was rehired twenty years later, after Howie Epstein was fired.)

But the music is why you’ll buy or rent this movie, and the music is nearly always front and center. Many times, documentaries on musical acts can be a bit frustrating–a snoopet of a classic song plays, and you want to hear the whole thing, but they’ve moved on. While there are few complete performances here, we do get longer excerpts than I’m used to. Disc one ends with a moving performance of the too-little-known “Southern Accents” from their thirtieth anniversary concert, which works beautifully. I still wanted more–the footage of Petty and the Heartbreakers touring as Bob Dylan’s road band is great, and I could have easily watched an hour or two of just that.

Amazingly, there are some things that aren’t covered in the lengthy running time. The second Traveling Wilburys record isn’t mentioned, nor are Tom Petty and Mike Campbell’s producing gigs for Del Shannon, who was rumored as a replacement for Roy Orbison in the Wilburys. But it’s hard to complain about a couple of omissions in a film this long and this good–although I will gripe that no reference is made to the underappreciated soundtrack to the 1996 movie She’s the One, which contains one of my favorite Petty songs, “Walls (Circus).”

Runnin’ Down a Dream was obviously created to make the case for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers as an important rock and roll band who can stand proudly with the best of all time, and at that, it succeeds brilliantly. It’s an absolute delight.

But wait–there’s more!

The box set (which is sold exclusively at Best Buy) contains two more discs.

The first is a DVD of their thirtieth anniversary concert in hometown Gainesville, where they perform hits from the previous three decades and some covers of their influences. Honorary Heartbreaker Stevie Nicks joins the festivities for several songs (How about recording with her again, Tom? You’re great together). It’s tremendous fun, spirited and joyful, and the band’s connection with its fans is palpable.

The fourth disc is a CD of rare performances featured in the movie, such as “Honey Bee” from Saturday Night Live with Dave Grohl on drums. It’s probably largely of interest to the hardcore fan, but the casual fan will find some things to enjoy.

Runnin’ Down a Dream is an embarrassment of riches celebrating a great American band and rock and roll itself, all for about thirty bucks. You need this.

Bonus Video

Here’s the performance of “Southern Accents” referenced above. Unfortunately, this YouTuber cut out Tom introducing the song and the long applause at the end, robbing it of some context. No matter–the song can stand alone.


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