Native Sons | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | the Long Ryders |
Cover: | Native Sons (The Long Ryders album) cover.jpeg |
Recorded: | Summer 1984[1] |
Studio: | A&M (Hollywood) |
Length: | 33:18 |
Label: | Frontier |
Prev Year: | 1983 |
Next Title: | State of Our Union |
Next Year: | 1985 |
Native Sons is the debut album by American band the Long Ryders, released in October 1984 by record label Frontier.[2] The album and the single "I Had a Dream" reached number 1 and 4 on the UK Indie Chart, respectively.[3] Musically, the album fuses 1960s style garage rock and folk rock with country rock.[4] Rolling Stones David Fricke described Native Sons as an album "where Nashville, ’77 London and the mid-Sixties Sunset Strip converge in songs of pioneer aspiration and outlaw bonding."[5] Native Sons features former Byrds member Gene Clark guesting on the track "Ivory Tower".[6]
Native Sons was recorded at A&M Studios in Los Angeles during the 1984 Summer Olympics that took place in the city between July 28 and August 12.[7] The Long Ryders had learned that the studio was available at a rock-bottom rate, because A&M was concerned that no artists would want to record during the Olympics.[1] As the album's co-producer with A&M engineer Paul McKenna, the Long Ryders chose veteran producer Henry Lewy, whose past credits includes engineering Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues" and multiple albums by Joni Mitchell and co-producing an album with Leonard Cohen, as well as the first Flying Burrito Brothers album.[8] [9] Guitarist Stephen McCarthy told Billboard magazine in 1984 that the Long Ryders didn't set out to capture the Burrito Brothers' sound in the studio, although they certainly respected the band's work. "We have a feel for American roots music," McCarthy said, "and we just want to sound like a real American band."[8] In 2019, guitarist Sid Griffin said of Native Sons: "Psychedelia was toned down save the atmospheric "Close to the Light" and country, bluegrass and Sun Records rock and roll was emphasized."[1]
The album marks the debut of bassist Tom Stevens, who had joined the band in January 1984.[10] In 2004, he talked to the Lama Workshop website about the Long Ryders' musical transition from the 10-5-60 EP to Native Sons: "From the start the Long Ryders were all about hybrids of pure American styles of music, as mostly defined by 1960s bands, both rock and country. That all distilled through skilled songwriting into more of the classic style that you hear on Native Sons."[11]
"Final Wild Son" is a lyrical homage to Jerry Lee Lewis, and the title is a phrase taken from Nick Tosches' 1982 biography of Lewis, Hellfire.[12] [13] Matthew Greenwald of AllMusic described "Run Dusty Run" as an "episodic tale of desperation, gambling, and romance on the run."[14] In the liner notes for the Final Wild Songs box set, Sid Griffin wrote of "Run Dusty Run": "Stephen [McCarthy] channels Carl Wilson's "Fun, Fun, Fun" solo and the NME is amazed he updated "the Chuck Berry lick" to the punk era. Any song about a horse race is fine with me."[15]
"Ivory Tower" was written by original bassist Barry Shank, who left the band in 1982 prior to their recording career. Al Campbell of AllMusic called it "the greatest song the Byrds never wrote and one of the most sincere tributes to that band's sound." Matthew Greenwald concurred, calling it "possibly one of the finest folk rock efforts of the mid-1980s." Greenwald felt that it "sounds like a brilliant outtake from Turn! Turn! Turn!, but the band's overall vitality makes it wholly new and original as well." He also felt that it was "heavily influenced by the densely packed wordplay utilized by Gene Clark during the early Byrds career." Clark himself guests on the track, adding a harmony vocal to Stephen McCarthy's lead.[6] "Gene was someone we all really admired," drummer Greg Sowders told The Spill Magazine in 2019. "He was around in LA, and we all knew him," he said.[16] In 2013, Tom Stevens recalled the recording session with Clark: "We all gathered in the control booth with our producer Henry Lewy, listening to Gene sing. There was that beautiful voice I heard so many years ago. But now it was tired and damaged by too much that still rode with him, whether he wanted it to or not. Somebody compared his earliest attempts at getting a take to the vocalisms of Wild Man Fischer. Gene's vocal, doubling a previously-recorded one by Stephen McCarthy, had to be recorded over and over again, but finally we got something that truly added to the song. That quality I recognized years ago was still intact."[17] According to Barry Shank in the liner notes for Final Wild Songs, "Ivory Tower" began as a homage to the Beau Brummels' "Laugh, Laugh", but became more Byrds-like after he left the band and Stephen McCarthy started singing it.[15]
Originally recorded by Mel Tillis in 1966, "(Sweet) Mental Revenge" was discovered by Sid Griffin in 1983 on a Flying Burrito Brothers bootleg tape recorded in 1969.[18] [15] Matthew Greenwald wrote that the Long Ryders' performance "sounds not unlike the Flying Burrito Brothers on steroids," adding that "an air of humor in the melody juxtaposes one of the ultimate kiss-off songs of all time, as well as the bitter undercurrent of the lyrics."[19] The song features Dave Pearlman, known for his work with Dan Fogelberg, Phil Everly and Hoyt Axton, on steel guitar.[20]
"Fair Game" was written in the style of the Everly Brothers, according to Sid Griffin, and a staple of the Long Ryders' acoustic shows at the time.[15] In the liner notes for Final Wild Songs, Griffin wrote about the origin of "Tell It to the Judge on Sunday": "Back in Kentucky I saw a guy walk up to a county judge to ask him something one Sunday afternoon. The judge replied, "Son, you don't tell nuthin' to a judge on a Sunday." I guess it doesn't take much to inspire me."[15] Veteran British session musician Phil Kenzie[21] plays tenor and baritone saxophone on the track.
Joe Sasf of the Washington Post wrote that the "death" ballad[12] "Wreck of the 809" "convincingly reaches back past the 1950s, deep into America's folk heritage, recalling "Wreck of the Old 97," one of the first rural songs to be recorded."[22] Tom Stevens: "Probably half to two-thirds of the songs on Native Sons were already written by the time I joined, but I got in just in time to write the words and melody to "Wreck of the 809", for which Stephen already had the chords, and "Too Close to the Light"’s "taught us how the wrong could be right" part."[11] According to Matthew Greenwald, "Too Close to the Light" is "one of the most ambitious recordings of the Long Ryders' catalog." It moves through "several vastly diverse musical movements" and "combines an almost Kinks-inspired hard rock riff with some gorgeous, modal verses." He also noted the song's "exquisite harmonies", which he called "some of the finest in the band's career."[23] According to Sid Griffin, the band downplayed the psychedelic side of their music on Native Sons, "but this slipped through the net," he said.[15]
Griffin's personal favorite from the band's catalog, "I Had a Dream", was described by Matthew Greenwald as "an extremely well-arranged and performed track including chiming 12-strings, distorted six-strings, and a positively devastating performance from the rhythm section." He felt that the song brings together the band's different influences from rock, punk, and country.[24] "What sounded like a personal relationship was really about two countries and their willingness to annihilate each other at the expense of their citizens," McCarthy, the song's writer, explained.[15]
The album cover is a recreation of the abandoned Buffalo Springfield album, Stampede, which was set to be released as their second album in 1967, going as far as to have a cover photo taken.[25] The photo for Native Sons was shot by noted punk rock photographer Ed Colver who had also shot the cover for the band's 10-5-60 EP[26] [27] as well as covers for Black Flag and Bad Religion.[28]
Native Sons was released in the US in October 1984 by Los Angeles-based independent record label Frontier Records.[2] For the album's UK release in March 1985,[29] the Long Ryders signed a distribution deal with London's Demon Records who released it through their Zippo sublabel.[1] [30] Zippo also released "I Had a Dream" as a UK-only single,[30] while French label Lolita released "Tell It to the Judge on Sunday" in France.[31]
Native Sons was reissued on CD in 1987 and 1992 through Zippo and Frontier, respectively, and included the band's 1983 10-5-60 EP as bonus tracks.[32] In 2011, Sid Griffin's Prima Records released a deluxe reissue of the album, which included 10-5-60, the Radio Tokyo demos (named after the studio they were recorded in), and tracks from an abandoned album titled 5x5.[33]
An expanded 3CD edition was released in January 2024 by Cherry Red Records, again featuring 10-5-60, the Radio Tokyo demos, and the 5x5 session tracks plus previously unreleased demos from the era and a 1985 live recording.[34] [35]