
Things have slowed down for power pop legend Marshall Crenshaw with time. There were six albums of original material in his first decade as a professional musician, two in each of the subsequent decades, and then none over the last decade and half. But that doesn’t mean he’s been idle. Tired of the major label rat race, he decided to release a series of six EPs offering fans a new song, a cover song, and re-recording of an older song, eventually pulling the new material and few covers together on an album entitled #392: The EP Collection on indie label Red River Records. Since then Crenshaw has focused a lot of attention on curating definitive releases of his catalogue and now it appears that project has led him back to the EP material, repackaging them in album form as From the Hellhole.
Content-wise 11 of the 14 songs here appear on both collections so if you bought the EPs or #392: The EP Collection you may not want or need to buy them again, though the versions here have been remixed. From the Hellhole is also available on vinyl, unlike #392: The EP Collection. The three different tracks included on the new release include a demo of “Walkin’ Around,” a song that appeared on 1991’s Life’s Too Short, and covers of Rare Earth’s “I Just Want to Celebrate” and Todd Rundgren’s “Couldn’t I Just Tell You.” For collectors, completists, or those who missed the EPs as they came out From the Hellhole is the missing album covering Crenshaw’s last decade and half. And it goes without saying, the songs are great, both original and covers. “Move Now” and “Grab the Next Train” both sound like classic Crenshaw should-be hits, with his signature economical lead guitar work and Everlys vocal vibe. “Couldn’t I Just Tell You” has a folk rock kick, both the 12 string guitar and vocals hitting all the marks. And the demo of “Walkin’ Around” comes off lighter and more spontaneous. On the covers front, his take on The Carpenters “(They Long to be) Close to You” was a surprise to me when I first heard it and it surprises me still. Let’s just say, Karen Carpenter and Marshall Crenshaw come at singing in very different ways. But Crenshaw’s understated approach really does the song justice. Meanwhile, the cover of Bobby Fuller’s “Never To Be Forgotten” is now the definitive version.
There are MC fans who are going to celebrate any new release, regardless of how much new it really offers. For many, From the Hellhole will fill a real gap for a lot of fans. For those who want more new material, I suspect there’s stuff in the vaults that could see the light day at some point in the future. There are songs he wrote for others that never got the Marshall treatment and a variety of one-off contributions to soundtracks and tribute albums that deserve to gathered together. So here’s hoping for more Crenshaw down the line.
You can spend time with Marshall at his internet bolt hole or Bandcamp page.