Mickey Newberry
Better Days
โFrisco Mabel Joy
Heaven Help The Child
Looks Like Rain
(DRAG CITY)
[Rating: 4.5 stars]
Letโs not mince words โ there are very, very few songwriters that are as influential and under-sung than Mickey Newbury. Not that people donโt know his songs โ itโs almost a guarantee that if youโre reading this magazine youโve got a bunch of Newbury-penned classics in your CD collection โ but the man behind classics by Elvis, Ray Charles, Kenny Rogers and literally more than a thousand others isnโt really the household name he should be. There just arenโt a lot of songwriters that find their songs being covered by shmaltz-king Andy Williams and arch-indie oddball Bonnie โPrinceโ Billy,ย kick off the careers of legends like Kristofferson and Townes Van Zandt and provide the soundtrack for The Big Lebowski, arguably the most important film of our times. Again, itโs impossible to understate the manโs influence โ the man changed the way American music sounds.
The proof is on Drag Cityโs recent reissues of Newburyโs classic, more-obscure-than-they-deserve-to-be late โ60s/early โ70s records Better Days, It Looks Like Rain, โFrisco Mabel Joy and Heaven Help The Child. In those four albums youโll find the blueprints for pretty much every roots-oriented sound that would appear in the forty years that followed their release โ outlaw country, alt-country, commercial country, country rock, folk rock, neo-folk, indie folk and pretty much any other combination of rock, folk and country you could imagine. As experimental as they are traditional, these four albums broadened the pallet of American popular music, expanded its intellectual heft andย got closer to the very essence of the human experience more than any other albums besides Dylanโs work from roughly the same period. These are benchmark records no matter which way you cut it.
Which makes it all the stranger that this work hasnโt seen a proper repackaging in more than a decade, that Newburyโs name doesnโt fall off the lips of every record store clerk in America, that he doesnโt pop up on every best-of-all-time lists. The subtly brilliant โRemember The Goodโ from โFrisco Mabel Joy, the extra-rainy recording of โSan Francisco Mabel Joyโ from It Looks Like Rain โ not to be confused with the more upbeat but just as awesome version of โMabel Joyโ from Heaven Help The Child โ and the lovelorn lullaby โLet Me Stay Awhileโ from Better Days are masterworks, examples of songs with a perfect emotional pitch. And then thereโs โI Donโt Want Me No Big City Woman,โ โAn American Trilogy,โ โShe Even Woke Me Up To Say Goodbye,โ โThe Futureโs Not What It Used To Beโ…. and the list keeps going. If we were to name every great song on these four records we would have to list, well, all of them. If we were to teach a course on the art and craft of impeccable songwriting, you can rest assured that these four albums would take up the better part of the syllabus. After all,ย there are very, very few songwriters that are as influential and under-sung than Mickey Newbury.

