MUSIC NEWS - Sonny Landreth’s 2000 release Levee Town, originally issued on Sugar Hill Records, will be reissued on April 21, 2009 on his own Landfall Records (thru Ryko's Virtual Label) in an "Expanded Edition". The re-mastered reissue will have five previously unreleased tracks from the original sessions (“Pedal To Metal,” “Road A Plenty,” “Old Flame,” “Fare You Well” and a co-write with Will Jennings, “For Who We Are (The Nightbird Sings),” with guest Jennifer Warnes. This album is a poetic tale of life in Lousiana that mixes myth and mojo to conjure up music that rocks hard and runs deep. The album features guests Bonnie Raitt, John Hiatt and BeauSoleil’s Michael Doucet.
“Along with the two records that preceded it (Outward Bound, 1992; and South of I-10, 1995), I feel like Levee Town was part of a three–album trilogy,” Landreth says. “I wanted to dig even deeper into the built-in mythology and mystery of the Deep South. It’s really inspirational to live here. And the deeper I go, the more inspired I get.”
The reissue follows From the Reach, his 2008 release that is Landreth’s most critically acclaimed album to date. That album featured such guests as Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler, Dr. John and Jimmy Buffett, among others.
Levee Town was co-produced by TV music kingpin Mike Post, a strange pick for a roots record; but the pairing worked. “I had played for Mike’s wedding and he ended up inviting me out to L.A. to work on a show he was writing,” Landreth says. “Then, he called me and said he wanted to get me in a studio and get this record off the ground. He was a tremendous help.” Landreth later took the tracks he’d co-produced with Post and went back to Lafayette, La., adding guitars before moving to nearby Dockside Studio and bringing in producer R.S. Field to help complete the project. “For me, working with both those guys was a real creative experience, and I’m thrilled with the results,” he says.
Landreth throws down the musical gauntlet in the first few bars of “Levee Town,” the album’s epic lead track. The song chronicles a time back in the early ‘70s when the government decided to ease the Mississippi River’s high levels by opening the Morganza Spillway above New Orleans. Background vocals on the track are handled by John Hiatt, who hired Landreth and his band — renamed the Goners — to tour for two years and record 1988’s Slow Turning, which paved the way for Landreth’s 1992 solo debut album.













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