Coincidence
or not, the phrase "laid back" crept into common use right
around the time of J.J. Cale's first album. Nearly everyone but Cale
missed the point. "Laid back" wasn't a synonym for "slow";
it was a frame of mind that applied to any tempo. A fast song could
be "laid back" as easily as a slow one. It all hinged on
the approach. Cale arrived at a time when entire sides of LP's were
consumed with suites, and the suites had paragraph-length titles.
In the midst of this, Cale took his cue from old pop records which
said what they had to say in three minutes. His concession to the
new world order was to stretch the occasional song to four minutes.
It wasn't that he couldn't play all those notes or write a 20-minute
suite; he just couldn't see the point. In a world given to excess,
Cale made a virtue of economy. Even his LP titles had expressed much
in a few words. Naturally, Really, Okie.
Cale
seems proud that he has prevented himself from becoming tremendously
famous. "I stopped a lot of people who wanted to shove me into
the real big time, " he said recently. "Your ego wants to
say, 'Hey, I'm somebody, man,' but I knew there were many days when
I just wanted to be John Cale." Someone he knew from school painted
him as a sly raccoon on his first album jacket. He slips out at night
and makes a record. You catch him sometimes in your headlights, then
he's gone. Back to the lake. Back to the desert. Back to the trailer
park.
J.J.
Cale has given few interviews over twenty-five years. Someone likened
a Cale interview to the appearance of Halley's Comet. Only technical
questions about guitars and studio hardware elicit detailed replies.
The core of the man is known only to himself. Cale's songs are often
wry, ironic little observations, but they aren't deeply revealing.
Cale has--by his own choice--become the Howard Hughes of rock 'n'
roll. If it's a pose, it's one that has fooled everyone who has worked
with him over twenty-five years. If Cale could write his songs, make
his records, and never show his face, he probably would.
Cale
was born in Oklahoma City. He was raised and went to school in Tulsa.
"It was a good nightclub town," he said later. "Lots
of bars. They don't pay you very much, but you have such a good time
you forget you're poor." His earliest musical influences were
rockabilly records from Memphis, and single string blues players like
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and Billy Butler. He tried to
figure out how to play like them, and like Chet Atkins, Les Paul,
and Chuck Berry; "In trying to imitate them," Cale says,
"I missed it, and came up with my own kinda thing."
Others
floating around the Tulsa rock 'n' roll scene at that time included
David Gates, later the founder of Bread; Russell Bridges, who reinvented
himself as Leon Russell; and Carl Radle and Jimmy Karstein, who later
joined Cale's band. Everyone ended up in Los Angeles. Russell went
first and came back with the news that you could actually make a living
playing music there. Cale went in 1964. "When I got to Los Angeles,"
he said, "I decided no matter how bad the pay [as a musician],
it was better than that straight jive. I don't like to get out of
bed too early." Cale engineered at Leon Russell's home studio
on Sky Hill Drive, and it was there that he met Snuff Garrett, who
had been head of A&R at Liberty Records.
Garrett
had discovered Bobby Vee and was an independent producer working with
Gary Lewis, Brian Hyland, and several others. He placed Cale with
Liberty in 1965, and set him up as the recording engineer at his Amigo
Studio. Around the same time, Cale was a quasi-regular performer at
the Whiskey A-Go-Go, working when Johnny Rivers wasn't. The owner
of the Whiskey, Elmer Valentine, suggested the name change to "J.J."
Cale.
In
1966, Garrett started Viva Records. There's a cult market (mostly
in Europe) for Cale's Viva album, Take a Trip Down Sunset Strip by
the Leather-Coated Minds. It's an album that gives a real sense of
Cale's feeling for the experimental edge of music and technology.
"After Midnight" emerged from this project. According to
Cale, it was originally an instrumental track for Take a Trip Down
Sunset Strip, but it was jettisoned and then recycled into a "B"
side for Liberty later in 1966. Cale was playing in Atlanta when he
heard someone in the crowd shout, "Let it all hang out."
The lyrics fell into place from there.
It
was probably 1968 when Cale first went to Nashville. He had been working
in New York and Los Angeles for Garrett, producing Brian Hyland, Blue
Cheer, and other acts. Audie Ashworth and Garrett were putting a production
company together financed by Hubert Long, who owned a booking agency
and Moss-Rose music publishers. Audie worked for Moss-Rose as a song
scout, plugger, and producer. He persuaded Long to install a studio,
using an old console from Bradley's Barn. Snuffy told Ashworth he
was sending someone down to help him. "I know this guy,"
he said, "J.J. Cale. He can work in the studio with the players."
Cale drove into Nashville in the '65 Mustang that Garrett had given
him, and took an office in Hubert Long's building.
"Cale
had a different sound," says Audie. "A different approach
to the guitar and songwriting. We tried to produce some records for
Dot Records, but nothing worked. Next thing I know, Cale said, 'Snuffy's
unhappy. He wants his car back, so I guess I'll go back to Oklahoma.'
He split, went back to Tulsa and started working his club gigs again."
There
are several accounts of how Clapton came to cut "After Midnight."
Clapton was working with Cale's buddy Carl Radle in Delaney &
Bonnie's band, and in one version of the story Clapton heard Cale's
song on a tape that Radle had made. Garrett, though, says that Jerry
Ivan Allison, once Buddy Holly's drummer, had heard Cale's Liberty
record. Allison was hanging out with Clapton and offered to get the
song, now three years old, to Clapton on Garrett's behalf. Cale has
an idea of how "After Midnight" got to Clapton; he said
that his own mom might have sent it to Clapton for all he knows. According
to Clapton, "Delaney said someone should cover it. He said if
I didn't, he would. Delaney actually did a version with the same track
with his voice instead of mine. We argued about it, and he gave in."
Bobby
Keys, who had worked with Cale in Los Angeles and was working with
Delaney & Bonnie at the time, phoned Cale to tell him that Clapton
had recorded it, but Cale had heard what he called "that kind
of jive" before. He didn't pay much attention until "After
Midnight" came on his car radio in Tulsa. He had never heard
one of his songs on the radio before. "After Midnight" became
a Top 20 hit in the Fall of 1970.
"I
phoned Cale," says Audie Ashworth, "and I said, 'It might
be time for you to make your move. Do an album.' I said, 'Get your
songs together.' He said, 'I'll do a single.' I said, 'It's an album
market.' He said, 'I don't have that many songs,' so I said, 'Write
some.' Three or four months later he called me. He said, 'I got the
songs.' He drove in. He was driving a Volkswagen this time. He came
in with his dog, Foley. He played me all those songs." Ashworth
heard a very different J.J. Cale that time. Cale had been working
on a quiet mix of country, blues, and rockabilly. It was time to be
true to himself.
"He
and I went in the Moss-Rose studio and we cut 'Call Me the Breeze,'
'Crying Eyes,' 'River Runs Deep' and 'Crazy Mama,'" recalls Ashworth.
"He played everything and we used a drum machine. We needed to
add some stuff to 'Crazy Mama,' so I called Jerry Bradley, Owen's
son, and said I needed the multitrack. He let me in there at a demo
rate. I promised him full rate if we sold it. We worked at night.
I pulled a group of players together, Karl Himmel on drums, Tim Drummond
on bass, and Bob Wilson on piano. Eric was in Nashville for the Johnny
Cash T.V. Show and Carl Radle was with him. I called Carl and said,
'Bring Clapton out to the Barn, we're doing an album with J.J..' Clapton
didn't make it, but Carl did. He came and played bass on a few tracks
including 'Crazy Mama.'"
Ashworth
said, "'This track Mama needs something. How about a slide guitar?'
I called Mac Gayden, and he came out and set up as he ran it down
with the tape. J.J. said, 'Record it, that's it! Let's go home.' Mac
said, 'I can do it better.' Cale said, 'You can't do it better.'"
Ashworth
ended up with twelve songs. Out in Los Angeles Denny Cordell had launched
Shelter Records in January 1970 as a partnership with Leon Russell.
Originally from Ireland, Cordell had started out in England producing
The Moody Blues and selling Beatles merchandise. Then he started Regal
Zonophone Records to record The Move and Procul Harum. He came to
the United States with Joe Cocker's revue, eventually selling out
his share of Regal Zonophone to start Shelter Records. Shelter was
headquartered in Hollywood.
"Carl
Radle got us the deal with Shelter," says Audie. "He called
Leon. He said, 'This album that Cale and Audie are working on is pretty
good. I think you ought to listen to it.' Leon said, 'Send me a tape.'
We ran off a reel-to-reel and sent it with Carl. I always thought
that Leon got us the deal, but I heard later that he didn't care for
the tape, but it got on Denny Cordell's desk, and Denny loved it."
The
first Shelter single, "Magnolia" backed with "Crazy
Mama," was released on July 5, 1971. It didn't make many waves,
except in Little Rock at KAAY, a 50,000 watt station, where dee-jay,
Wayne Moss, kept spinning the "B" side.
Wayne
kept calling Ashworth saying, "You guys are on the wrong side
of the record." Ashworth finally got the message to Cordell,
and just before Christmas Shelter reissued "Crazy Mama"
as an "A" side backed with "Don't Go to Strangers".
The new coupling got into the charts, peaking at No. 22 - - Cale's
all-time highest placing. The first album, Naturally, was released
soon after. Rolling Stone came to call, and Cale monosyllabled his
way through his first major write-up. Cordell got him on a Traffic
tour. On his day off, Cale would fly back to Tulsa to get his bearings.
Already, the mantle of stardom was sitting uneasily on him. Ashworth
remembers him saying, "Send me the money and let the younger
guys have the fame." Naturally created enough of a stir to present
Cale with the option of going for it, but he made a conscious decision
not to.
Work
began on the second album Really in April 1972. "We started it
at Quadraphonic in Nashville," says Audie, "and we did some
work in Muscle Shoals, and we put some horns on at the Barn. Cale
liked to visit different studios and pull players from different locations."
There was more commercial gloss to Really, but it was still clear
that Cale had a very unique notion of how to make a record. He reversed
the Nashville equation in which everything was factored around the
vocal. In a Cale mix, the soloing instruments and the voice just barely
rise out of the bed track, and they never stand apart from it. The
overall sound is surprising for so few instruments and so few notes.
According
to Audie, "Cale always wanted the voice mixed down. We'd be sitting
at the board and both of us were trying to get our hands on the faders.
He was always pulling back the fader on the vocal. He'd mix his voice
back in the bed. He said it made you want to lean into the music instead
of leaning back from it. It would pull people in. He had definite
ideas about mixes."
The
advantage of being with Shelter was the relative lack of corporate
pressure to meet album commitments. The albums came when they were
ready. Cale mostly wrote alone. "When the first album was a success,
we needed some more songs," says Ashworth, "and Cale said,
'I had thirty years to get that first group of song ideas together.'
There was a steady stream of tapes from people wanting to get a song
on a J.J. Cale album, but he usually rejected them. He'd say, 'You
know, I only have a three-note range. I can't do that song. It gets
too high in the bridge. Let's keep it simple so people can understand
it.' He'd say, 'I need to find a little niche that's just me.' Ashworth
describes Cale as "very conscious of trying to be original and
serious about trying to make records that stand the test of time.
He has a no nonsense approach to the studio. He brings the songs and
a bag full of ideas for arrangements. He usually runs the song down
with guitar calling the changes as he goes, but he's open to ideas."
The
third album, Okie, was much more a backporch record than Really. The
title track had literally been recorded on Cale's porch, and several
others had been recorded inside the house. "Cajun Moon"
was pulled as the first single. Nashville session ace Reggie Young,
a veteran of the Bill Black Combo, took the solo. Another track from
this album, "Anyway the Wind Blows" is an object lesson
in just how little you really need. It's one chord, a fifty-dollar
Harmony guitar (albeit one customized with hundreds of dollars worth
of hardware), and the simplest of all blues riffs. Cale paid a drummer
for the session, but it's a drum machine on the track.
After
Cale moved to Nashville in 1975, he and Ashworth set up their own
studio, Crazy Mama's, in Ashworth's house. "John said we'd rented
enough studios and paid enough rentals that we could own our own equipment,"
says Ashworth. "I'll bring the mixing console, you bring your
16-track Ampex. He picked out a bedroom, and he'd stay here occasionally.
He was very insistent on not making the studio too fancy. He moved
another console out to his house on the lake, and recorded out there
by himself."
Cale
bought a house near Andrew Jackson's old home in Hermitage, Tennessee.
It was far enough out that people wouldn't be dropping in on him,
he said. The purchase was probably made easier by the fact that Lynyrd
Skynyrd put "Call Me the Breeze" on their mega-platinum
Second Helping. There was plenty of work to be had in Nashville, but
Cale rarely did other people's sessions. He played on an album by
French singer, Eddy Mitchell and he worked on Neil Young's Comes A
Time and Art Garfunkel's Angel Clare. He produced Chicago bluesman
Jimmy Rogers for Shelter, but otherwise, as Ashworth says, "Cale
was busy being unbusy." He bought an Airstream trailer, and he'd
park it in a KOA trailer park near Opryland and live there from time
to time. He hated the Nashville winters, so he'd hook up the truck
and trailer then take off for Florida or California.
There
were two years between Okie and Troubadour. "Hey Baby" was
the first song pulled from Troubadour. It spent three weeks in the
Hot 100. The flip side was "Cocaine." Cale had brought the
song to Ashworth as a Mose Allison-style jazz piece. "You want
to make some money?" asked Ashworth. "He said, 'Yeah.' I
said, 'Well, let's make a rock 'n' roll song out of it.' He went home
and changed the arrangement, Cale overdubbed the riff three times,
single string at a time, then did the bass part. Reggie Young took
the solo. Again, we recorded it as he did the run down. Reggie said,
'Let me do it again. I can do it better.' Cale said, 'No you can't!
That's it!'"
In
April 1976, Cale overcame his fear of flying and went to Europe to
promote Troubadour. "I was in London playing at Hammersmith Odeon
when Carl Radle and Eric [Clapton] came and sat with us," he
told Nicky Horne on UK's Channel 4. "We all went down to the
studio, and Eric surprised us with his cut of 'Cocaine.' My version
had been out for a year, and I couldn't get anybody to play it. The
ironic thing was that for about five years after, you'd walk into
a bar and hear everybody play it." Clapton's version was issued
on Slowhand, and then on the flip side of "Tulsa Time."
Most writers would kill for one Clapton cut; Cale has had several.
Cale
and Don Williams were having a strong influence on Clapton at this
stage in his life. Clapton once said that "Lay Down Sally"
was as close as an Englishman could get to being J.J. Cale. For his
part, Cale never saw Clapton's success as success that should have
been his. "Eric Clapton was just picking up ideas," Cale
said later. "He picked up some of mine like I picked up some
from the people before me. It's very flattering that people of that
caliber are listening to what I do. It's always kind of nice when
people cut my songs and turn them into something that people really
like. For a lot of people, it's hard to listen to my version because
it's very raw, kinda rough around the edges and they may sound unfinished,
but that's the way I like it, not too slick."
The
success of "Cocaine" meant that Cale was once again at the
crossroads. He could have toured on the strength of it, and rushed
out another album. He was finding what he called a younger "boogie
crowd" at his shows. "They wanted someone up there bustin'
them one," he said. He could have picked up the tempo and gone
for it, but instead he went back to Nashville and worked on installing
a studio in his home. The next album, 5, didn't appear until 1979.
Audie Ashworth saw some AM potential for "The Sensitive Kind,"
and overdubbed strings. "I was hoping for airplay on that,"
he says. "I was digging for ideas to change it up." Radio
ignored Cale's version of "Sensitive Kind," but Santana
covered it and took it half-way up the Hot 100.
In
1980, New Musical Express in London sent a journalist, Philippe Garnier,
to interview Cale out at the lake. Cale seemed totally immersed in
studio hardware. "We kinda grow the flour to make the cake,"
Cale said, trying to explain why he now needed to master studio technology.
He wanted his records to be wholly his from the ground up. All in
all Garnier thought that Cale radiated contentment and seemed to have
no regret for the path his career had taken.
Cale
finally left Nashville and moved back to California in 1980. His sister
lived in southern California. Cale sold his boat, packed everything
into his Airstream trailer and moved to a trailer park in Anaheim.
For a while, he stayed put in the trailer. Anyone wanting to talk
to him would have to leave a message with Ashworth and wait for Cale
to call in. Cale might have had the latest digital gizmos, but he
didn't have a phone.
The
final Shelter album, Shades, was issued in 1981. Not long thereafter
Denny Cordell wound up Shelter Records. Cale's new label Phonogram
International subsequently acquired his 6 Shelter albums from Cordell.
In
1982, the first album on Phonogram's Mercury label, Grasshopper, was
released. It was a fine, varied album, which did very well in Europe,
though not as well in the US. It's successor, Number 8, released in
1983, sold modestly and if nothing else, was remarkable for the fact
that Cale had finally allowed a photograph of himself to go on the
front of the album.
It
wasn't until 1989 that Cale signed a new deal with Silvertone Records
in England, a company started by Andrew Lauder, the founder of Demon/Edsel
Records. Silvertone's first album with Cale was Travel-Log. Cale toured
to support the album. According to an interview he gave to Dave Hoekstra
at the Chicago Sun Times, he had spent the previous six years cycling,
mowing the lawn every Saturday, and listening to rap and Van Halen.
The years in Los Angeles had made his music "more rattly...more
uptown," he said. Hoekstra remarked on Al Capps' very full arrangement
on "New Orleans," which pitted a Dixieland parade against
a string section. "Al Capps knocked me out on that," said
Cale. "I liked it so well I was going to take my voice off it
and make it an instrumental." As always, he was happy to talk
about which model bass was patched into what amp, but beyond that
his conversation was couched with generalities.
In
1992 Cale issued his tenth album, titled with impeccable logic Number
10. The languid grace was still intact. "Artificial Paradise"
sported perhaps Cale's best ever solo. The usual precision and economy
were married to a flawlessly executed flow of ideas. The tone was
uniquely Cale's own. On "Jailer" Cale's guitar interweaves
with Spooner Oldham's organ for a much darker texture.
In
1994, Cale signed with Virgin Records. He had bought a house and several
acres in the semi-desert of southern California. The first Virgin
album, Closer to You, came with unexpected quickness. Cale had ordered
a new customized Martin guitar. "A good guitar will inspire you,"
he told Paul Trynka. "I wrote eight songs in one day. Then I
rented Capitol Studio in Hollywood and recorded the album in two days
with all the vocals cut live. Then I brought all the stuff home and
started over-dubbing."
It's
been almost twenty-five years since a dapper raccoon, looking like
a refugee from a Lewis Carroll story, introduced us to J.J. Cale.
He has probably lasted by pacing himself so well. Twelve albums. Maybe
fifty shows a year. Cale's records still seem remarkably fresh, untainted
by fads and rock music's urban frenzy. He once remarked that his records
were demos, recorded simply so that another musician would take interest
in them and record them. That way, he'd make more money. You can't
believe that, though. This is the art that conceals art. Plenty is
going on here. As always, Cale is very busy appearing to be unbusy.
The texturing, tweaking, and fine-tuning are hallmarks of the craftsman.
These are hand-made records, rich in nuance and detail. More individualistic
music cannot be found. J.J. Cale, truly an American original.