Title: Song-by-Song Breakdown of the Self-Titled '98 Album Post by: walktall2010 on December 22, 2010, 05:27:05 pm Mellencamp's songs convey moral message
By David Lindquist, Star/News Staff Writer 10/6/98 Recording sessions for John Mellencamp took place from early April to late July, with breaks occurring only on weekends. John Mellencamp produced the album. Paul Mahern and longtime Mellencamp guitarist Mike Wanchic are credited as co-producers. Mellencamp says Mahern was hired in the role of engineer, but cited the Bloomington resident's diligence, humor and fruitful suggestions as crucial contributions in the making of the album. In sequencing the order of songs, Mellencamp became frustrated with the single-side format of the compact disc. Having recently rediscovered an appreciation of vinyl, Mellencamp says he approached John Mellencamp as a two-sided LP -- an exercise that is reflected below. Side one Fruit Trader -- Mellencamp says this is his favorite song on the album. It begins with an argument between biblical brothers Cain and Abel. It closes with cries of a person lacking purpose, direction and morals. "I think that's the way we are now," Mellencamp says. "For whatever reason, we're in the wind. America is in the wind." Your Life Is Now -- When Mellencamp shipped the first single from John Mellencamp to rock radio stations, electric guitars replaced a violin segment that permeates the album version. Mellencamp says he did so at the urging of Jim DelBalzo, Columbia's senior vice president for rock promotion. "'I love the song, but those violins are going to scare (radio programmers) off,'" recalls Mellencamp, who has known DelBalzo for 24 years. "'To be honest, you've been scaring them off with these violins since The Lonesome Jubilee (Mellencamp's 1987 album).'" Positively Crazy -- Mellencamp says he encouraged the members of his band to write material for this album. Guitarist Andy York penned the music for this bittersweet love song, while Mellencamp and lyrics collaborator George Green came up with the words over the course of a day. "I just loved (York's) chord progression," Mellencamp says. I'm Not Running Anymore -- This upbeat meditation on faded youth most likely will be John Mellencamp's second single. Mellencamp's sons Hud and Speck are the mischievous focus of the second verse: "They are the hoodlums of my third wife. / Whatever I say they will oppose." Mellencamp admits to laughing out loud as he composed the verse. "It's really good when you can write songs that entertain yourself," he says. It All Comes True -- In this song about sealed fates, Mellencamp portrays a disadvantaged African-American man from East Chicago and a restless woman who wants more from life. "I'm a reporter," says Mellencamp, who wrote the song with Green. "When we wrote "Rain on the Scarecrow," George and I didn't make that up." Eden Is Burning -- After 16 years, the fabled characters of "Jack and Diane" return. "For years, people have suggested to me that I write about these people again," Mellencamp says. "It never made sense to me. ... But when I looked at (the completed "Eden Is Burning"), I thought, 'I don't feel funny or weird about this.'" Listeners shouldn't, however, expect happily ever after. Side two Where the World Began -- Mellencamp says the first line of this rocker succinctly captures his feelings about making records for his former label, Polygram: "I'm tired of being grateful for the chance to take a dive." Miss Missy -- This is a rescued artifact. In 1991, Mellencamp convened a recording session with his bass player, Toby Myers, and two guests -- drummer Stan Lynch (then a member of Tom Petty's Heartbreakers) and guitarist Izzy Stradlin (then a recent ex-member of Guns 'N' Roses). "There were three or four sessions," Mellencamp says. "I thought nothing had come of it." During the making of John Mellencamp, however, Mahern came across the long-shelved tape and asked Mellencamp about "Miss Missy." "I had forgotten I had even written or recorded that song," Mellencamp says. Chance Meeting at the Tarantula -- "I've done my share of running around with girls," Mellencamp says during a discussion of this song, which involves a pair of ex-lovers who have differing thoughts about the old days. Mellencamp says he believes the narrative has a quality reminiscent of the work of playwright Tennessee Williams. Break Me Off Some -- Keyboard player and loops guru Moe Z. MD co-wrote this modern R&B workout with Mellencamp and Green. It was in the running to be the first single, but Mellencamp said the funk-flavored track wouldn't be a fair representation of the album. Summer of Love -- Co-written by York, this song's lyrics were inspired by Mellencamp's Los Angeles adventures during the '70s. He and a friend would camp out Sunday mornings on Sunset Boulevard with the sole purpose of watching people -- primarily women -- return to their homes after one-night stands. "I see everything in that song very vividly," Mellencamp says. "I see the guy. You know these people don't know each other. There's no commitment involved here." Days of Farewell -- Myers co-wrote this song that's propelled by a Talking Heads-esque rhythm. The sister of Moe Z. MD provides additional vocals that prompted a debate between Mellencamp and Green, who believed her intense spiritual monologue didn't fit on the album. "George and I had hundreds of conversations about whether that should be on the record," Mellencamp says. "Of course -- since it's my record -- he lost. |