Ultimate Class Rock Magazine: 25 Years Ago - John Mellencamp Releases Big Daddy
Called “an exercise in consolidation and continuity and craftsmanship” at the
time, it’s clear now that John Mellencamp‘s ‘Big Daddy’ was instead a forebear
to the stripped-down, more serious-minded recordings of his most recent era.
At times, this recording — issued on May 9, 1989 — echoed the folky inclinations
of 1987′s ‘Lonesome Jubilee,’ but Mellencamp was moving toward darker themes and
deeper ambitions. That began with his name. ‘Big Daddy’ would be the last to
include the ‘Cougar’ moniker that had been thrust upon him as an up-and-coming
rocker. There are also the first hints of a leaner — almost Rolling Stones-ish –
feel as Mellencamp began focusing more on the hard-eyed playing styles of
guitarist Larry Crane and drummer Kenny Aronoff, than the throwback Appalachian
flourishes of fiddle and accordion that dominated his most recent release.
In some ways, this stark turn was keyed by issues in his private life, as
Mellencamp worked through his divorce on songs like ‘Void in My Heart‘ and ‘Big
Daddy of Them All.’ But, in a larger sense, ‘Big Daddy’ seemed to have sprung
from the still-fertile imagination of an ever-more-mature songwriter. Mellencamp
dug deeper into the introspective socio-political themes he’d begun exploring
with ‘Jubilee’ and 1985′s ‘Scarecrow,’ even as he told searing truths about his
own life.
It all came together to produce one of Mellencamp’s nerviest, most brutally
honest, though most often-forgotten projects.
“That album was an accident,” Aronoff told this author in 2012. “We were in
between big records, and John was going through a lot of stuff so he had all of
these lyrics. At that point, I had learned so much from being in that band. When
he played those songs, he would do it on acoustic guitar — that was it, in a
dark-lit room. I looked at myself like an actor in a movie. I had to get into
character. I took a turn toward percussion, and minimal stuff. I opened up my
mind and heart and just did things that were out there, but simple.”
There weren’t any huge hits — ‘Pop Singer‘ peaked at No. 15, ‘Jackie Brown‘ at
No. 48 — but that in itself isn’t surprising, considering the edgier subject
matter. ‘Jackie Brown,’ after all, was an exploration of the hardships
experienced by the poor. ‘Pop Singer’ decried our throw-away culture. ‘Country
Gentleman‘ took on the Reagan administration, while ‘J.M.’s Question‘ dealt with
the environment and with gun violence.
“I’ve heard the word dark used to describe it,” Mellencamp told Rolling Stone,
“but I think sober is more like it. That record was based very firmly in my
reality — if reality is dark, then I’m sorry.”
Mellencamp would continue modifying and updating his sound, eventually shifting
band lineups and even dabbling with dance rhythms into the ’90s. Ultimately,
however, ‘Big Daddy’ would provide the template for a creative resurgence into
the ’00s. Mellencamp reeled off a trio of albums, beginning with 2007′s
‘Freedom’s Road,’ that brought him back to the Billboard Top 10 for the first
time in some two decades — and he did so making crunchy, uncompromisingly
introspective songs. Equal parts political and personal, they sound of a piece
with this typically overlooked 1989 triumph.