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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 12, 2004
J.J.
CALE COMPLETES FIRST STUDIO ALBUM IN EIGHT YEARS,
TO TULSA AND BACK, HIS SANCTUARY DEBUT, HITS JUNE 8
NEW YORK, N.Y. – To Tulsa And Back is J.J. Cale’s first
new studio album since 1996’s Guitar Man. But as he says, “It
doesn’t seem that long.” You just can’t rush the good
things in life and that includes Cale, who, for his Sanctuary Records
debut, went back to his hometown of Tulsa to record.
Set for a street date of June 8, the album is at once different than
albums before it while reassuringly retaining the trademark sound that
has made Cale an American music legend for more than 30 years. Cale
is best known for his compositions -- some of them hits for Eric Clapton
and others for himself -- including “After Midnight,” “Cocaine,”
“Call Me The Breeze,” and “Crazy Mama.” His
songs have been covered by everyone from Lynyrd Skynyrd, Deep Purple,
the Allman Brothers Band, Johnny Cash, The Band and Santana to Captain
Beefheart and Bryan Ferry. Beyond the songs, his style profoundly influenced
Dire Straits, Clapton and many others.
Fittingly, the album will be released right in the eye of Eric Clapton’s
Crossroads Guitar Festival which will take place June 4-6 in Dallas.
Cale will perform at the festival alongside B.B. King, Joe Walsh, Brian
May, Robert Cray, Jimmie Vaughan, Robert Randolph, Steve Vai, Buddy
Guy and, of course, Clapton himself.
The initial plan for Cale’s next studio CD was to regroup with
his old friend and original collaborator, Audie Ashworth, who began
producing his albums in 1971. “We were going to do a record in
Nashville like we did in the old days, two friends sitting around talking
about music and playing songs,” he said. When Ashworth passed
away several years back, that idea was shelved and Cale dedicated his
2001 Live CD to Ashworth instead. The concept lingered on, though, and
Cale revived it after bringing many of his old friends out to join him
on tour in 2002.
Cale – who lives nowadays in the Southern California desert –
decided to return to his hometown of Tulsa to tackle the project on
his own. Cale loaded his gear into the studio of drummer and friend
David Teagarden (Teagarden & Van Winkle) and looked up some of their
old friends. “I played with some of these guys 40 years ago,”
Cale laughs. “I don’t think there’s anyone on this
record who’s under 60 years old.”
The result is a warm, rhythmic, relaxed record that preserves the down-home
flavor that’s come to define Cale’s sound. His fans like
it that way. Cale began playing Tulsa clubs in the 1950s with his own
band, Johnny Cale & the Valentines. He later played with fellow
Tulsa émigrés Leon Russell and Delaney & Bonnie. Then
Eric Clapton recorded “After Midnight” and the rest is history.
Lately, Cale garnered a new generation of fans when Widespread Panic
and other jam bands covered some of his songs. Cale says of the jam
band experience, “Those guys make a three minute song last 15
minutes and everybody does a solo. But they still need songs. How they
discovered mine, I don’t know. But they did. Then through those
songs, a whole new generation discovered me.”
Among other changes to be found on the new CD, songs such as "Stone
River," which he wrote for the environmental Earthjustice campaign,
and the sharply political "The Problem," find him addressing
new concerns about the world in which we live. Another touching commentary
on our times is the moving “Homeless.”
Almost as rare as a new Cale studio CD is a chance to see him live,
and that opportunity too is on the horizon. Watch for updates.
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