That album is the aptly titled Long Time Coming. It is
Jonny’s third release, but it celebrates several noteworthy
firsts: this time around he not only wrote or co-wrote all but one
of the album’s tracks, and served as its co-producer, but also he
has made an album that he feels very honestly reflects who he is.
With a
four-year gap between his last album and Long Time Coming, many
people have questioned his whereabouts. Taking it in stride, Jonny
revealed his sense of humor and good nature by once joking with an
interviewer, “I promise it’ll come out before I’m 40.” Launching a
preemptive strike by naming it Long Time Coming, Jonny explains,
“Of course the title is about how long it’s been since I’ve had an album
out, and it’s pretty much about trying to be patient.”
A more fully
realized album than his earlier efforts, Long Time Coming has a
much greater emphasis on the songs than ever before. Jonny channeled an
autobiography of sorts into this album. And, as it turns out, Lang has
a gift in creating gritty heartfelt songs about relationships
precariously poised on the edge, and winsome love paeans. With the help
of co-producer Marti Fredrickson (Ozzy Osbourne, Aerosmith, Faith Hill),
he has been able to craft a dozen soulful and canny songs that are full
of nuances and emotion, conjuring up a spirit of Muscle Shoals and
Motown, filtered down through his own life experiences. “The album is
really a journal of my life for the past two years,” reveals Jonny.
Initially not
feeling up to the task of writing his own songs, after a single day in
the studio with Fredrickson he was convinced. “Marti and I got together
to do a song and the first song we did was Get Me Up Again and
everyone loved it. This album really is all about the songs. To me I
knew I succeeded when I could get them to sound just like you would say
them. Like in a conversation. They all seemed to make sense that way.”
Marti also
helped Jonny develop a new respect for his prodigious talent on guitar.
Though the blues guitar great Jimmy Thackery once commented about Lang,
“He plays so good, I want to break his fingers,” Marti pushed Jonny past
his comfort level.
“It really
humbled me working with Marti because it was the first time anyone
really critiqued my playing,” says Jonny. “Before I could just play
whatever, solo or whatever, little guitar riffs between vocal lines and
be like, ‘okay, cool, we’ll just keep that.’ But when I was in the
studio with Marti I’d play something and he’d be like, ‘That sucks. You
can do better than that.’ Of course I’m getting all offended. But
after a while I just really grew to just love him for that because I
learned I’m the kind of person who should be produced.”
And about the
album’s sole cover and first single Red Light, which he makes his
own, Jonny comments “It’s rare to cover a song and feel you’re really a
part of it. There are those times when you feel like you can really
relate to the song. And that’s what happened with it. It’s also great
to be able to record a song and have fun doing it.”
Working
alongside Fredrickson not only allowed Jonny to grow musically, but
encouraged some self-exploration as well. “It was incredible how well we
worked together. It was pure chemistry,” Jonny enthuses. “I felt like
he made me more of myself and for the first time, I felt like this is
the ‘real me.’”
Not without
impressive backing, Lang and Fredrickson commissioned the help of a rock
and roll great for this much-anticipated release by asking Steven Tyler
to contribute to a track, “Steven doesn’t sing, but he plays harmonica
on ‘Happiness and Misery.’” Explains Jonny, “He’s such a nice guy. He
is not a prima donna at all. We asked him to play and he was like,
‘Yeah man. Send me the tracks; I’ll do it right away.’”
With age and
maturity, Jonny is growing into his vocal gifts. When he began his
career at 13 years old, his voice, which sounded aged and weathered,
inspired U.S News World Report to write, “Don’t be fooled by that
peach-smooth face. Jonny Lang has the voice of a grizzled blues veteran
with a 20-year Marlboro habit – and guitar skills to match.” But on
Long Time Coming, there is more of an authentic expression of who he
is, passionately veering somewhere between rock and soul.
“This is the most complete thing I’ve done. I think
everything else has been okay up to now,” Jonny continues, “On my other
albums, I felt I was kind of pigeonholed as doing what a blues guitar
player dude should do, but in my mind, I’m not a blues singer. And I’m
not a blues writer either. This record is more rock than any of the
others, but there are a lot of different things going on in there.”
Now when Jonny Lang performs he feels more of a
connection to the songs and his audience. “I used to feel when I would
sing or play guitar it would all go off into thin air and disappear
somewhere. But now it feels like something is happening when I play
music. It’s not just to satisfy myself, but it’s about giving with my
music. And that makes all the difference.”
~Courtesy of U Music and A&M Records