logo
John Fogerty Is Re-Recording Creedence Classics. We Asked Him Why

John Fogerty Is Re-Recording Creedence Classics. We Asked Him Why

Yahoo29-05-2025
As John Fogerty begins talking about his new album, a bemused smile comes over his face. 'I wanted to call it Taylor's Version,' he says during a recent visit to New York. 'I lobbied very much to the record company.'
Whether he's joking or not, Fogerty says his label passed on the idea. Then again, he had a point. Onstage at New York's Beacon Theatre Wednesday night, during the first of two 80th birthday celebration shows, Fogerty announced his upcoming LP, Legacy: The Creedence Clearwater Revival Years. Due Aug. 22, the album's 20 tracks aren't just covers of his best-known and beloved songs from his Creedence days. Rather, they're painstaking recreations of the original versions, down to Fogerty's singing and guitar parts and the original rhythm section, starting with 'Up Around the Bend' and continuing through big hits like 'Proud Mary,' 'Who'll Stop the Rain,' 'Bad Moon Rising,' and 'Down on the Corner,' and deep cuts like 'Porterville' and 'Bootleg.'
More from Rolling Stone
John Fogerty Celebrated His 80th Birthday With Cake, Confetti, and Loads of CCR Classics
Bruce Springsteen Jams With John Fogerty, Tom Morello, Smokey Robinson at American Music Honors
The Best of SXSW Day One: John Fogerty, Case Oats, Gloin, and More
'I'm still kind of waiting to hear feedback,' Fogerty says. 'But the first five or six people I've talked to who've listened to it all say it sounds 'fresher.' Maybe what they're saying is it's clearer, or the fidelity is better or something? That may be something I hadn't even counted on, but there's more dimension to it, more depth.'
Musicians have been releasing note-for-note covers of their older material for decades now, but for Fogerty, the thought arrived two years ago. With a push from his wife and manager, Julie, he finally acquired a majority interest in the publishing rights to his Creedence song catalog in 2023. It was Julie, he says, who then suggested a remakes album, although Fogerty admits he was skeptical. 'I didn't want to have anything to do with that,' he says. 'But then as time went on, I thought, 'Okay, I'll stick my toe in the water and see how that is.''
That process started with Fogerty and his son (and guitarist) Shane digging deep into the Creedence recordings. With the help of isolated audio tracks — known as 'stems' — they could listen separately to each vocal and instrumental part, including every aspect of Fogerty's singing, in order to create a precision copy. In that regard, Fogerty insists the project is different from his previous remakes albums: the all-star duets project Wrote a Song for Everyone and 2020's Fogerty's Factory, where he recut Creedence songs with members of his family. 'In those cases, I suppose I was simply singing the songs, whereas this time around the idea was to, I guess they call it 're-record,'' he says. 'Instead of going off on a tangent of 'Oh, let's do a folk music version' or something, the idea was to sound closely like the original.'
After cutting a few preliminary backing tracks with a band — Shane on guitar and session veterans Bob Glaub on bass and Matt Chamberlain on drums — Fogerty started by adding a new vocal onto the remade 'Proud Mary.' The moment proved pivotal to the project. 'I've been singing 'Proud Mary' for over 50 years, and I developed a lot of bad habits singing it, with no reference to the original,' he says. 'But here was the moment where I realized, 'John, that wasn't close enough. You're not really doing the song. You're doing a 'drive-by' version.' I had to relearn the song, with all the inflections in all the same ways. It's like people in New York don't go to see the Statue of Liberty, because it's right there. Shane was able to point out many times, 'Dad, I think that part is a little more complicated than you've been doing it.''
That process continued as more songs were recreated over a period of two years. Fogerty realized he was singing 'Lookin' Out My Back Door' with what he calls 'more syncopation' at his concerts. 'The way I had recorded it, because it was probably within a few weeks of me writing it, it was kind of straight,' he says. 'Kind of corny, you know? Then we listened to 'Born on the Bayou,' and it became a whole new thing. I said, 'Man, I like this better than the old way,' because the parts were very much like a jam band, but a really good jam band. Not waiting forever for something to happen.'
Adding to the revisiting-the-past process, Fogerty even played the same Rickenbacker guitar (with 'Acme' hand-painted on its body) that he'd used during his Creedence days. He'd given it away in the Seventies and had an opportunity to buy it back in the Nineties, he says, for $40,000. But he passed at the time, partly for financial reasons and partly emotional ones. It's no secret that Fogerty's relations with his former bandmates, as well as the late Fantasy Records head Saul Zaentz, have been fraught, clouded by lawsuits and hard feelings. So the memories attached to the guitar were, he says, too painful to revisit. 'I was hurt. I was damaged,' Fogerty says.
A decade ago, though, Julie Fogerty secretly bought the guitar back (for an undisclosed sum) and gave it to her husband as a Christmas present, after which he says the healing began. 'I started as a kid full of joy doing music, but during the time of Creedence, and shortly after that, it became certainly not joyful,' he says. 'The idea [behind Legacy] was to reconnect and feel that way about everything again. The guy who couldn't even stand to look at his own guitar in the Nineties or beyond would have never done that.'
Even if he didn't use a Swiftian title for the album, Fogerty says Legacy is nonetheless connected to the way Swift began remaking her albums after her back catalog was sold to Scooter Braun. (Similarly, Fogerty and his former bandmates in Creedence don't own the masters of their albums.) 'I understood her plight,' he says. 'She's had a wonderful career, and, of course, had saved a lot of money and was a major touring artist, so she was quite able to pay whatever amount the person that was going to sell it. I really felt for her at the time, because the guy was selling it to somebody else. That sort of thing has certainly happened to me. It's very much like what Saul Zaentz might do.'
Like Swift, Fogerty does own the masters of his remakes, which could result in a financial windfall if Legacy sells or streams well. (Tellingly, Legacy doesn't include the band's hit covers of 'Susie Q' or 'I Heard It Through the Grapevine,' neither written by Fogerty.)
Still, a question hovers over Legacy: Since these renditions faithfully mimic the recordings that longtime fans know, why would they need them? 'That's a great question, because I asked that myself,' he says. 'But there's a couple of things. Number one, there's probably no chance in the world I will ever have any part of the ownership of the old masters. This is kind of the Taylor Swift part. But another thing is, I think there's a joy quite evident in the music that may not be there in the original versions.'
In Fogerty's mind, certain songs have also benefited, especially lyrically, from the passage of time. 'When I listen to the finished vocal on 'Lodi,' it certainly sounds like the guy who lived that part, whereas I'm not sure the guy who sang it the first time did,' he says.
In 2021, Fogerty re-emerged with the gospel-style 'Weeping in the Promised Land,' his first newly written song in eight years. At the time, he told Rolling Stone that an album would likely follow, but it never did, and he now says fans expecting such a record may be disappointed.
'Do I have a bunch of songs written and recorded?' he says. 'No, I don't.' But he adds that participating in last month's American Music Honors, where Bruce Springsteen inducted him, proved to be inspiring — especially after Jackson Browne led some of the musicians in a version of 'Take It Easy': 'On our drive back to the hotel with my wife, I said, 'I'm like 10 feet off the ground. I want to go write songs and record them!''
For the moment, though, Fogerty chooses to revel in Legacy and its surprise announcement at his birthday show. 'When you're 80 years old, you finally are given the special key to the kingdom,' he says. 'I guess you can do whatever you want. And I decided this is what I wanted to do, to give myself a present.'
Best of Rolling Stone
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Taylor Swift has been saving up to buy her music masters since she was a teenager
Taylor Swift has been saving up to buy her music masters since she was a teenager

Business Insider

time13 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Taylor Swift has been saving up to buy her music masters since she was a teenager

How did Taylor Swift close one of the biggest deals of her career? With help from her mom and little brother. Swift gave a behind-the-scenes look at how she was able to buy back her music masters during an episode of "New Heights," the podcast hosted by her boyfriend, Travis Kelce, and his brother, Jason Kelce. The episode aired on Wednesday and had over 1.3 million viewers on YouTube as of this writing. Swift, who bought her masters earlier this year for a reported $360 million, said she'd been saving for that moment since she was a teenager. "It's always been a huge thing for me. Since I was a teenager, I've been actively saving up money to buy my music back and to ever own it in the first place because it's usually the label that owns it," she said. "I've always wanted this to happen." Swift said she signed a record deal when she was 15 and that typically, such deals are set up so the artist does not own their master recordings: "Owning your master records means that you have complete control and power over distribution, licensing, and essentially the way your legacy is shaped," she said. The masters for Swift's first six albums had several owners over the years, including Big Machine Records and Scooter Braun's Ithaca Holdings. She said the first time they were sold, it "really ripped my heart out of my chest." "I thought about not owning my music every day. It was like an intrusive thought that I had every day," she said. That motivated her to rerecord the albums, releasing them one at a time with the appended title of "Taylor's Version." She released four of the rerecorded albums before buying back her masters this year. The rereleases were a huge success for Swift. They were praised by critics and loved by fans, garnering more streams than the original versions. Buying her music back after the Eras Tour After the Eras Tour, Swift said her team thought it might be a good time to approach the then-owners of her masters, a private equity firm called Shamrock Capital, to see if she could buy her music outright. "I don't want to be in a partnership. I don't want to own 30% of it. I want to own all of it," she said. "But it was a long shot to think that they would do that — that they would sell that asset to me." Swift said she wanted to approach the purchase from a personal place because it was more than a business transaction to her. So rather than sending a team of lawyers or managers, Swift said she sent her mom and brother, who she said she also works with, to meet with Shamrock Capital. "They told them the whole story — of all the times we've tried to buy it, all the times it's fallen through, all the times we had gotten plans together and figured out something we thought was going to work and it didn't at the last minute," she said. Eventually, some time after the meeting and a couple of months after the Super Bowl, Swift said she got the call from her mom. "She's like, 'You got your music.' And I just very dramatically hit the floor, for real," Swift said. "Like, honestly, just started bawling my eyes out, and I'm just like weeping." "This changed my life. I can't believe it still," she added. Swift announced her coming album, " The Life of a Showgirl," in a preview clip from the podcast that was shared shortly after midnight on Tuesday.

Here's everything we know about Taylor Swift's new album ‘The Life of a Showgirl'
Here's everything we know about Taylor Swift's new album ‘The Life of a Showgirl'

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Here's everything we know about Taylor Swift's new album ‘The Life of a Showgirl'

Step aside, tortured poets. It's a showgirl era now. On Tuesday morning, Taylor Swift announced her new LP, 'The Life of a Showgirl,' and here's everything - a meagre bounty, for now - that we know about it. 1. Word arrived after a countdown clock to 12:12 a.m. - an apropos debut for news of her 12th album. Swift made the announcement on 'New Heights,' the popular podcast co-hosted by her boyfriend and Kansas City Chiefs' tight end Travis Kelce. 2. While there's no information yet about a tracklist or collaborators, shortly after the news, a string of billboards in New York and Nashville directed fans to a Spotify playlist titled 'And, baby, that's show business for you.' It's full of previously-released Swift hits produced by Max Martin and Shellback - suggesting the pop superproducers had prominent roles on the new record. 3. There's no release date but it's available for pre-order on Swift's website now. The cover art is - assuming this isn't some misdirection - a cryptic minty green background and sparkly orange padlock. 4. Swift has been relentless in releasing new music over the last few years. In 2024, she releases'The Tortured Poets Department,' followed by a massive 'Anthology' edition of bonus tracks, which made 'Poets' the bestselling album of the year. 5. Additionally, she re-purchased her back catalog of master recordings, first released through Big Machine Records, from investment group Shamrock Capital for a rumored nine-figure sum. Swift's re-recorded 'Taylor's Version' editions of those albums were a popular rebuttal to her old nemesis Scooter Braun's purchase of her catalog. While two of those 'Taylor's Version' LP's remain unreleased or unfinished (her self-titled debut and 'Reputation,') she now plans to re-issues the originals as well.

Taylor Swift announces 12th studio album, ‘The Life of a Showgirl'
Taylor Swift announces 12th studio album, ‘The Life of a Showgirl'

Chicago Tribune

time2 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Taylor Swift announces 12th studio album, ‘The Life of a Showgirl'

NEW YORK — Look what you made her do — Taylor Swift has announced her 12th studio album, 'The Life of a Showgirl.' Swift announced the album on her website shortly after a countdown timer expired at 12:12 a.m. Tuesday. No release date was announced, but her site said vinyl editions of the album would ship before Oct. 13. Fans have long theorized that Swift's 12th album would soon arrive. On Monday, Taylor Nation — an official branch of the pop superstar's marketing team — posted a TikTok slide show of 12 images with the caption 'Thinking about when she said 'See you next era…'' Swift is seen wearing orange in every image. A special limited vinyl edition of the album will be released in 'Portofino orange glitter,' according to a pre-order page on her site. A special cassette edition is also available for pre-order. Sensing a pattern, eagle-eyed fans noticed that 12 minutes earlier, the popular 'New Heights' podcast posted a tease for Wednesday. The show, hosted by Swift's boyfriend and Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce alongside his brother, former Eagles center Jason Kelce, posted an orange image on social media with a mysterious silhouette, many believing to be Swift. The podcast announced early early Tuesday that Swift would would appear on 'New Heights' and a teaser video posted about her appearance showed her pulling the album from a briefcase. The actual album artwork, just as it is on her website, is blurred. 'The Life of a Showgirl' follows last year's 'The Tortured Poets Department,' announced during the 2024 Grammys and released during her record-breaking tour, which raked in over $2.2 billion across two years and five continents, making it the highest-grossing tour of all time. The album is also her first release since Swift regained control over her entire body of work. In May, that pop star said she purchased her catalog of recordings — originally released through Big Machine Records — from their most recent owner, the private equity firm Shamrock Capital. She did not disclose the amount. In recent years, Swift has been rerecording and releasing her first six albums in an attempt to regain control of her music. The project was instigated by Hybe America CEO Scooter Braun's purchase and sale of her early catalog and represents Swift's effort to control her own songs and how they're used. Previous 'Taylor's Version' releases have been more than conventional re-recordings, arriving with new 'from the vault' music, Easter eggs and visuals that deepen understanding of her work. So far, there have been four rerecorded albums, beginning with 'Fearless (Taylor's Version)' and 'Red (Taylor's Version)' in 2021. All four have been massive commercial and cultural successes, each one debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. Review: In the first of 3 sold-out shows at Soldier Field, Taylor Swift makes the whole place shimmerSwift's last rerecording, '1989 (Taylor's Version),' arrived in October 2023, just four months after the release of 'Speak Now (Taylor's Version).' That was the same year Swift claimed the record for the woman with the most No. 1 albums in history.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store