<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Thursday,  April 25 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Life

Tom Petty, Mudcrutch reunite

Their new album’s lyrics often reflect group’s long journey

By Randy Lewis, Los Angeles Times
Published: May 21, 2016, 5:59am

If a filmmaker were to tell the story of Florida rock group Mudcrutch, it would go something like this: Rock ‘n’ roll-loving teenagers form a band and head for Hollywood in search of fame, only to fall short and disband.

Flash ahead three decades. The members reunite, record the album they never got to make, play a series of sold-out shows and, having savored their victory lap, return to their lives.

That unlikely story is what happened with Tom Petty’s band before the Heartbreakers put him, and them, on the musical map in the mid-1970s.

The key difference between real-life and the silver screen scenario is that instead of quitting for good after a successful reunion in 2008, Mudcrutch is back for a third time at bat.

“We had so much fun we just wanted to do it again,” Petty, 65, said recently during a group interview at offices of Warner Bros. Records in Burbank, the label that released “Mudcrutch 2” on Friday.

“It was a little bit intimidating to do another one,” he continued. “To top that one, it was going to be hard. But we just decided not to worry about topping it; let’s just make a good record, and this is what happened.”

“Mudcrutch 2” again teams the original lineup of Petty (singing and playing bass) with the Heartbreakers’ Mike Campbell and Benmont Tench along with their northeast Gainesville bandmates from long ago: guitarist Tom Leadon and drummer Randall Marsh.

Because Mudcrutch includes 60 percent of the members of the Heartbreakers, it’s easy to find similarities in sound. In addition to the different singers and songwriters, the key differences include Petty’s return to the bass, his first instrument before shifting to guitar in the Heartbreakers.

Morning Briefing Newsletter envelope icon
Get a rundown of the latest local and regional news every Mon-Fri morning.

“I love playing bass. The bass really helps drive the band, so I’ve got a lot more power than I’m used to having,” he said with a laugh.

All five of the band members get a turn on lead vocal and have written at least one song for “Mudcrutch 2,” an album with lyrics that often reflect the group’s long journey.

The first release is “Trailer,” a country-rock song written by Petty that’s about looking back to hardscrabble younger days and a relationship that fell by the wayside. “Welcome to Hell” is a piano-driven rocker from Tench that evokes some of Jerry Lee Lewis’ and Chuck Berry’s most insistent grooves. Campbell takes a rare turn at the microphone for his song “Victim of Circumstance,” relating a coast-to-coast journey by a man looking for answers to tough questions.

Campbell, who has long handled most of the lead guitar work in the Heartbreakers, shares those duties with Leadon, the older brother of guitarist Bernie Leadon, who followed his big brother’s advice to take his own shot in Southern California and soon after arriving in the early 1970s found his way into the Eagles.

Leadon’s “The Other Side of the Mountain” ponders the gulf between people who have drifted apart and the yearning to find a way to recapture their former closeness. Musically Leadon adapts a minor-key bluegrass-rooted shuffle into a country-rock workout in which banjo co-exists with broadly strummed electric guitars.

“It’s a very different band (from the Heartbreakers), though superficially it sounds similar,” said Tench, the youngest member of Mudcrutch when Petty and the others drafted him at age 17. He required his father’s signature to tour with the group while he was a minor.

“(Petty’s) on bass, and that changes the whole feel of it. Having Randall and Tom Leadon also really changes things up,” Tench said. “The two Toms have known each other since they were tiny. I’m the late-comer to this whole gang. The rest of them have played together since 1970 or before, and I came in late ’71 or early ’72.

There’s also the advantage of playing alongside people who grew up in the same area, absorbing the same music and cultural influences.

“You’ve got people who go back that far, who grew up in the same area, with the same regional radio,” Tench said. “There had been local bands that would play whatever the current hit is, but they’d play it wrong, but everybody kind of learned the version that the local band did — wrong. Since everybody comes from the same literal swamp, there’s a lot of instinctive stuff in this band that’s really terrific.”

Also, he said, “Mudcrutch leans a little more toward the country side of life at times, although it was always quirky enough it could do a 180 at any point. Live, it’s a lot more jammy, with a lot more improvisation” than the Heartbreakers typically engage in.

“We tried to throw more of that into the record, too,” said Petty, who wrote seven of the album’s 11 tracks.

Loading...