It makes perfect sense that now would be the time Tom Petty would get the idea to reunite Mudcrutch. The path to this point is easy enough to trace, beginning with his 2006 solo album Highway Companion, a record filled with songs about the passing of time. Characters drift from place to place taking stock of their lives, in some cases looking forward but mostly looking back.
After releasing the record, he and his Heartbreakers embarked on a 30th anniversary tour. Around this same time, the work of Petty's other band was put back in print for the first time in more than a decade when The Traveling Wilburys Collection was released. All of this was captured and reflected upon in Peter Bogdanovich's film about the history of the band, Runnin' Down a Dream. Among the stories told in that film is how Mudcrutch became Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers. In 2008, Tom Petty went back to the future and brought Mudcrutch with him to finally make the record they never got to make all those years ago.
One of the first things I wondered when I found out Mudcrutch was actually going to make a record was how much different it might sound from the rest of Petty's essential catalog. Was this going to be a Heartbreakers' record with a different name and yet another drummer? It's not that I'm jaded or that I was prejudging anything. These weren't doubts, they were questions and they were questions based on minimally observant listening to Petty's records.
Tom Petty has mixed three solo records among his work with The Heartbreakers, but he hasn't taken a shit without Mike Campbell in over 30 years. Campbell has played on and co-produced all three of those solo records. Benmont Tench has played on two of the three. Not only that, but The Heartbreakers play songs from Petty's "solo" records along with songs from the band records interchangeably. Both Tench and Campbell join Petty for Mudcrutch's long overdue debut. Rounding out the Mudcrutch lineup are drummer Randall Marsh and guitarist Tom Leadon.
The album credits say this album was recorded live in the studio in just 10 days with arrangements done on the fly. This is such an old school record the band didn't even use headphones as they recorded. This direct, relaxed approach is evident in the music and two things are immediately clear about Mudcrutch. First, there is a lot more variety between this and a Heartbreakers record than there is between a Petty solo record and a Heartbreakers record, but anyone who has ever claimed to like a Petty record is going to find something to like here.
page 1 | 2