Mule Variations
Mule Variations is the thirteenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Tom Waits, released on April 16, 1999, by Anti- Records, marking his first full-length studio recording in seven years since Bone Machine (1992).[1][2] Produced by Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan, the album was recorded at Prairie Sun Recording Studios in Cotati, California, during 1998, and features 16 tracks that blend raw blues, experimental rock, folk balladry, and surreal storytelling, often evoking rural Americana and personal introspection.[3][2] It includes notable songs such as the gritty stomp "Get Behind the Mule," the tender ballad "Hold On," and the spoken-word piece "What's He Building?," showcasing Waits' signature gravelly vocals, unconventional instrumentation like marimba and chamberlin, and found-sound effects captured in ambient studio spaces.[4][3] The album's production emphasized analog warmth with selective digital enhancements, involving a core band that included bassist Larry Taylor, guitarist Marc Ribot, and harmonica player Charlie Musselwhite, alongside contributions from engineers like Oz Fritz and Jacquire King.[3][2] Tracks like "Filipino Box Spring Hog" incorporate looped samples and outdoor recordings, while others, such as "Chocolate Jesus" and "Picture in a Frame," highlight Waits' poetic lyrics on themes of redemption, loss, and resilience.[4][3] Mule Variations received widespread critical acclaim for bridging Waits' early jazz-blues influences with his later avant-garde style, earning a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album in 2000 and a nomination for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for "Hold On."[5][6] It has been certified gold by the RIAA, selling over 500,000 copies in the United States, and remains a cornerstone of Waits' discography for its emotional depth and musical innovation.[5]Background and recording
Development
Mule Variations is the thirteenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Tom Waits, marking his first full-length release in six years following The Black Rider in 1993.[3] This extended hiatus allowed Waits to reflect on his evolving artistry, culminating in a project that sought to integrate diverse elements from his catalog. The album's conception emphasized a return to roots while pushing experimental boundaries, informed by Waits' deliberate withdrawal from the music industry during the mid-1990s to focus on family and selective collaborations.[2] The development drew heavily on influences from Waits' prior works, blending the raw, percussive experimentalism of Bone Machine (1992) with the intricate songwriting craftsmanship of Rain Dogs (1985) and his foundational blues roots.[3] This synthesis aimed for a "surrural" aesthetic, evoking rural Americana and early 20th-century blues traditions to create a gritty, narrative-driven soundscape.[2] Additionally, Waits' renewed interest in comic books—reintroduced through conversations with actor Nicolas Cage—infused the project with vivid, surreal imagery drawn from graphic storytelling.[7] From the outset, Waits collaborated closely with his wife, Kathleen Brennan, as co-producer, a partnership that shaped the album's direction toward a mature consolidation of his career phases, collaborating with Brennan on just about all of the songs.[2] The initial vision was for a expansive double album, yielding around 25 songs during pre-production, but it was ultimately pared down to 16 tracks, with the surplus material later repurposed for the 2006 compilation Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards.[3] This selective process underscored Waits' intent to balance accessibility with his signature eccentricity, setting the stage for the album's thematic and sonic explorations.[2]Recording process
Mule Variations was recorded in 1998 at Prairie Sun Recording Studios in Cotati, California, a facility originally built as a chicken ranch and known for its rustic, adaptable spaces conducive to experimental recording.[3][2] The sessions emphasized a primarily analog approach to capture raw, organic sounds, with digital tools like Pro Tools employed selectively for elements such as loops, notably in tracks like "Big in Japan," which incorporated a cassette loop and collaboration with Primus bassist Les Claypool.[3] Recordings took place in non-traditional environments within and around the studio to enhance sonic texture, including the "Waits Room"—a custom space built during sessions for Waits' previous album Bone Machine—and "The Corn Room," a concrete-walled area with a wooden ceiling used for intimate live takes. Outdoor areas were also utilized for ambient capture, such as rustling leaves and distant airplane noises in "Chocolate Jesus," achieved via shotgun microphones to isolate natural elements. Unconventional techniques abounded, including a rusty gas tank serving as a kick drum in "Chocolate Jesus," a megaphone for vocal distortion, and found sounds like train recordings and parking garage percussion integrated into the mix.[3][2] The production prioritized minimal overdubs and live band performances to maintain immediacy, with chief engineer Oz Fritz overseeing the analog workflow and Pro Tools specialist Jacquire King handling digital integrations. For instance, "What's He Building?" was captured in a single take in The Corn Room using homemade instruments for percussion, underscoring the album's emphasis on spontaneous, unpolished energy. As King noted, "Tom is a collector of sounds; a lot of found sounds," reflecting Waits' approach to incorporating everyday and environmental audio into the sessions.[3]Composition
Musical style
Mule Variations is a 70:33-minute album comprising 16 tracks that fuses blues with elements of experimental rock, folk, and unconventional percussion, creating a rural gothic atmosphere reminiscent of shadowy, nightmare-like rural landscapes.[8][9][2] The album's instrumentation heavily features acoustic guitar, harmonica, upright bass, and improvised percussion such as trash cans and bones, blending tender ballads with noisy, clanky exercises that evoke a haphazard, low-to-the-ground twang.[3][9][2] This setup draws from blues influences like Leadbelly and Blind Lemon Jefferson while incorporating jazz and abstract cinematic styles, resulting in a "surrural" sound that mixes surrealism with rural grit.[2][10] Specific tracks highlight this stylistic range: "Hold On" serves as a marketable acoustic ballad with heartland rock optimism and low-clicking percussion; "Get Behind the Mule" employs gritty Wurlitzer organ tones alongside gospel-like moans and conga rhythms resembling ping-pong samples; while "Big in Japan" integrates digital loops, funk guitar, horn punches, and comic-book-inspired whimsy with contributions from Primus members.[10][3] Building on the raw clatter of Waits' earlier phase in Bone Machine, Mule Variations tempers industrial aggression with more structured songcraft, pushing boundaries through literary jazz-modern hybrids that balance accessibility and experimentation.[9][10]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Mule Variations evoke the rural Americana of the early 20th century, portraying a world of downtrodden existence marked by hopelessness, isolation, and fleeting redemption through blues-infused tales of depression and resilience.[9][11] Tom Waits' songwriting draws on folk traditions and surreal vignettes, often blending grotesque imagery with poignant observations of human frailty, creating a consistent thread of endurance akin to the album's titular "mule" metaphor for laborious perseverance in the face of adversity.[12][13][14] In "Georgia Lee," a haunting ballad co-written with Kathleen Brennan, Waits recounts the true story of 12-year-old Georgia Lee Moses, a runaway found murdered near San Francisco in 1997, questioning societal neglect and the cruelty that allows such tragedies to befall the vulnerable: "Why wasn't God watching? Why wasn't God listening? Why wasn't God there for Georgia Lee?"[2][15][16] The song's chorus pleads for innocence spared from hardship, underscoring themes of isolation and lost potential in a indifferent world.[15] "House Where Nobody Lives" uses the metaphor of an abandoned, decaying home to symbolize emotional desolation and the absence of love, with lines like "Well, the paint is all cracked, it was peeled off of the wood" and "It looks like it's haunted with the windows all cracked" equating physical ruin to a loveless life devoid of vitality.[17][18] Similarly, "Lowside of the Road" depicts a weary traveler's descent into emotional and moral weariness, evoking the blues tradition of endless, lonesome journeys through imagery of rattling elevators and laughing dice that mock human struggles.[19] Waits' literary approach favors vignette-like narratives infused with bizarre, grotesque elements—such as red moons, black elevators, and axe-wielding figures—reminiscent of comic book surrealism and folkloric tall tales, which heighten the album's thematic unity around resilience amid despair.[13][12] This style maintains consistency across tracks, where the "mule" embodies stubborn endurance, as Waits noted: "Get behind the mule... We all have to get up in the morning and go to work."[14][11] Brennan's collaboration significantly shaped the lyrics, refining them for greater emotional depth and variety by balancing tender reflections with outlandish grotesquerie; of the album's songs, only four were written solely by Waits, while the rest emerged from their joint efforts to infuse personal and poetic nuance.[2][20] The sparse musical accompaniment often amplifies these themes, allowing the words' raw poetry to resonate amid minimalistic blues structures.[11]Release and promotion
Release details
Mule Variations was released on April 16, 1999, by Anti- Records, a sister label to Epitaph Records founded specifically to accommodate diverse artists outside the punk genre.[21][22] This marked Tom Waits' first studio album with Anti-, serving as the inaugural release for the independent label and signaling a shift from his previous associations with major labels like Island Records.[23] The album's packaging featured artwork by illustrator Matt Mahurin, incorporating mule imagery that aligned with the title's thematic nod to stubborn resilience and rural Americana, presented in a rustic design evoking weathered, vintage aesthetics.[24] The CD booklet included printed lyrics alongside illustrations that reinforced a Dust Bowl-era visual style, complete with sepia-toned drawings and textual elements suggesting nomadic, hardscrabble life.[25] In marketing, the album was positioned as a return to Waits' raw, studio-based songwriting roots following a decade dominated by theatrical productions and stage works in the 1990s, emphasizing a blend of accessible ballads and experimental grit to reengage longtime fans.[26] The initial single, "Hold On," was highlighted as the first official release from Anti- Records, with its accompanying music video directed by Mahurin underscoring the track's melodic, hopeful tone to broaden appeal.[27][28] Distribution encompassed a worldwide rollout in both CD and double vinyl formats.[29] A remastered edition, overseen by Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan, was issued on October 25, 2017, to improve sonic clarity across digital platforms and physical reissues.[22] In 2024, to mark the album's 25th anniversary, Anti- Records reissued it as a limited-edition double LP on 180-gram silver-colored vinyl.[30] Additionally, in August 2024, a previously unreleased version of "Get Behind the Mule (Spiritual)" was made available digitally as part of anniversary promotions.[6]Touring and media appearances
Following the April 1999 release of Mule Variations, Tom Waits embarked on the Get Behind the Mule Tour, his first major concert tour since 1987, spanning Europe and North America from June 1999 to May 2000.[31] The tour featured full-band performances emphasizing material from the new album, with Waits supported by a ensemble including bassist Larry Taylor, guitarist Smokey Hormel, keyboardist Danny McGough, and drummer Andrew Borger.[31] Key stops included multi-night residencies at venues such as the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles (June 12–14, 1999), Cirkus in Stockholm (July 13–14, 1999), Teatro Comunale in Florence (July 23–25, 1999), Beacon Theatre in New York City (September 23–27, 1999), and Le Grand Rex in Paris (May 29–31, 2000), where the tour concluded.[31] These shows highlighted Waits' raw, theatrical delivery, blending blues-infused tracks like "Get Behind the Mule" with earlier catalog staples in energetic, full-production sets.[32] In addition to the tour, Waits made a rare television appearance on VH1's Storytellers series in 1999, delivering an intimate acoustic performance accompanied by minimal instrumentation.[33] The episode showcased stripped-down renditions of Mule Variations songs such as "Get Behind the Mule" and "Chocolate Jesus," interspersed with Waits' anecdotal storytelling that illuminated the tracks' inspirations and his creative process.[34] This format aligned with the album's narrative-driven aesthetic, offering fans a closer look at Waits' gravelly vocals and improvisational flair without the full band's intensity.[33] Promotional efforts included select interviews that delved into the album's creation, with Waits emphasizing its bluesy, mature tone rooted in influences like Leadbelly and early rock figures such as Bob Dylan and James Brown.[2] In a Q&A conducted by journalist Rip Rense, Waits highlighted the collaborative role of his wife, Kathleen Brennan, who co-wrote roughly two-thirds of the songs and infused the material with rhythmic vitality and emotional depth, describing her as a key "cook" in their songwriting partnership.[2] These discussions underscored the album's "surrural" blend of surrealism and rural Americana, achieved through analog recording techniques at Prairie Sun Studios.[2] Waits' promotional approach remained characteristically restrained, limiting media engagements to a handful of outlets and performances to preserve his enigmatic persona, consistent with his long-standing reclusive public image.[35] This strategy focused on the tour and targeted appearances like Storytellers to generate buzz organically, avoiding extensive press circuits in favor of letting the music's authenticity drive interest.[35]Critical reception
Initial reviews
Upon its release in April 1999, Mule Variations received widespread critical acclaim for revitalizing Tom Waits' career through a potent blend of accessible blues and folk elements with his characteristic experimental edge. AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine stated that "the album uses the ragged cacophony of Bone Machine as a starting point," while noting its blend of raw energy and melody.[36] Key reviews highlighted the album's stylistic range and thematic depth. Rolling Stone emphasized its blues revival, describing how Waits' "arty, seasick imagination turns a rural American song form into a garish, surreal fantasy," marking a bold return after a six-year studio hiatus.[26] Pitchfork, awarding it 9.5 out of 10, noted some unevenness relative to peaks like Rain Dogs, ultimately deeming it a standout effort with standout ballads such as "Hold On" and "Come On Up to the House."[37] The album's strong reception was affirmed by Grammy recognition at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards in 2000, where it won Best Contemporary Folk Album and earned a nomination for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for "Hold On."[38]Retrospective assessments
In the years following its release, Mule Variations has been increasingly recognized as a pinnacle of Tom Waits' career, often cited for its maturity and synthesis of his diverse influences. In Rolling Stone's 2012 edition of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, the album ranked at number 416, praised for its rawboned bluesy art rock that marked Waits' triumphant return after a six-year hiatus.[39] Critics have frequently highlighted it as Waits' most mature work, blending his experimental edge with accessible Americana roots, a perspective solidified by its 2000 Grammy win for Best Contemporary Folk Album. Anniversary retrospectives have further elevated the album's status, emphasizing its emotional tenderness and stylistic variety. A 2024 PopMatters piece marking the 25th anniversary described Mule Variations as Waits' most mature album, a career high in tenderness through ballads like "Georgia Lee," which convey profound sorrow and empathy amid themes of misery and regret.[9] Similarly, Billboard's 2019 track-by-track retrospective for the 20th anniversary underscored the album's emotional depth and eclectic range, from bluesy roars in "Big in Japan" to introspective hauntings in "Hold On," positioning it as a standout for its innovative fusion of jazz, folk, and rock.[11] In 2024, to mark the 25th anniversary, Waits released a previously unreleased spiritual rendition of "Get Behind the Mule," which received positive coverage for highlighting the album's enduring appeal.[6][40] Cultural and academic analyses have noted the album's thematic consistency in blues and Americana traditions, viewing it as a boundary-pushing synthesis of Waits' oeuvre. A 2004 re-review in Treble praised its literary depth, comparing the spoken-word track "What's He Building?" to Thomas Pynchon's narrative style and highlighting experimental elements like James Brown-inspired horns that expand blues boundaries.[41] In a 2019 analysis, In Review Online described it as Waits' most explicit engagement with American roots, evident in Delta blues abstractions like "Lowside of the Road" and collaborations with blues figures such as John Hammond Jr., creating a cohesive exploration of hard-luck nostalgia and spiritual resilience.[42] Over time, praise has evolved from early perceptions of unevenness to widespread appreciation as a capstone that distills Waits' gritty, vaudevillian persona into a unified artistic statement.[41]Commercial performance
Chart performance
Mule Variations entered the US Billboard 200 at number 30 in the week ending April 24, 1999, becoming Tom Waits' highest-peaking album on that chart to date. It spent a total of nine weeks on the listing, maintaining a mid-tier presence amid competition from mainstream pop and rock releases. The album performed more strongly in Europe, where it benefited from Waits' concurrent tour promoting the record. It topped the Norwegian Albums Chart upon release.[43] In the United Kingdom, Mule Variations debuted and peaked at number 9 on the Official Albums Chart, charting for five weeks.[44] It reached number 7 on the Swedish Albums Chart (Sverigetopplistan), with a 10-week run.[45] In Finland, the album peaked at number 11 and stayed on the chart for seven weeks.[46] Overall, Mule Variations charted in 49 countries, showcasing Waits' enduring international appeal particularly in Scandinavian and Western European markets.[47] On year-end charts for 1999, the album ranked number 75 on Germany's Offizielle Top 100, number 83 on Belgium's Ultratop Flanders Albums, and number 93 on the pan-European Music & Media Top Albums chart, reflecting its sustained regional momentum in alternative and folk-leaning categories.[47]| Country | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States (Billboard 200) | 30 | 9 | elpee.jp |
| Norway (VG-lista) | 1 | N/A | ukmix.org |
| United Kingdom (Official Albums) | 9 | 5 | officialcharts.com |
| Sweden (Sverigetopplistan) | 7 | 10 | swedishcharts.com |
| Finland (Suomen virallinen lista) | 11 | 7 | finnishcharts.com |
Sales and certifications
Mule Variations has sold 1,064,290 copies worldwide, making it Tom Waits' best-selling studio album.[47] In the United States, the album was certified Gold by the RIAA in 2013, denoting shipments of 500,000 units.[48] This certification marked Waits' strongest commercial performance in the US market since his 1970s releases, aided by its distribution through Anti- Records, the punk-oriented imprint of Epitaph Records.[22] The album also received certifications in several other markets, reflecting its broad international appeal. In Canada, it earned Gold status from Music Canada for 50,000 units in 2000.[47] The Netherlands awarded it Platinum certification by NVPI for 50,000 copies, while the United Kingdom granted Silver certification by the BPI for 60,000 units.[47] Additionally, it achieved Platinum status from the Independent Music Companies Association (IMPALA) for combined European sales exceeding 500,000 copies.[47]| Country | Certification | Units Sold | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Gold | 50,000 | 2000 |
| Netherlands | Platinum | 50,000 | - |
| United Kingdom | Silver | 60,000 | - |
| United States | Gold | 500,000 | 2013 |
| Europe (IMPALA) | Platinum | 500,000 | - |
Legacy
Cultural impact and influence
Mule Variations has significantly influenced subsequent generations of musicians, particularly in the realms of blues-rock revivalism and experimental folk, through its innovative genre-blending of raw blues, junkyard percussion, and narrative-driven songwriting. Artists such as Phoebe Bridgers, Aimee Mann, and Iris DeMent have covered tracks from the album on the 2019 tribute album Come On Up to the House: Women Sing Waits, such as "Georgia Lee," "Hold On," and "House Where Nobody Lives," adapting its gospel-tinged folk elements into their own introspective styles, demonstrating the album's role in shaping contemporary Americana and indie folk scenes.[9] Similarly, the album's rustic, blues-infused sound has been cited as a touchstone for revivalists exploring American roots music, with its unpolished production inspiring acts that merge traditional forms with avant-garde experimentation.[49] This genre-blending approach also resonates in the rural gothic aesthetics of musicians like Nick Cave, whose post-1999 work echoes Mule Variations' themes of decayed Americana and existential grit, though Cave's style draws broader from Waits' oeuvre.[9] The album reinforced Tom Waits' status as an icon in Americana and alternative music circles, capturing the cultural zeitgeist of late-1990s outsider artistry amid the rise of eccentric, MTV-era surrealism. Its themes of endurance, poverty, and marginalization—portrayed through vivid depictions of rural hardship—have echoed in 21st-century narratives of economic downturn and social fragmentation, offering a dissenting voice against neoliberal individualism.[50] By celebrating solidarity among the overlooked, Mule Variations provided a counterpoint to mainstream materialism, resonating with audiences grappling with post-recession precarity and reinforcing Waits' legacy as a chronicler of American underbelly life.[9] In academic contexts, Mule Variations has been featured in studies of outsider music, where scholars analyze its sonic landscapes as critiques of modernity and existential alienation. The album's evocation of rural early-20th-century life through geographic imagery and sound design—such as creaking pianos and industrial clatter—maps themes of dwelling and displacement, positioning it as a key text in media geography and cultural dissent.[51] These analyses highlight its thematic consistency in portraying authentic American narratives, influencing discussions on how music reflects societal unease.[50] Regarded as a pivotal bridge between Waits' earlier jazz-cabaret phase and his later industrial experiments, Mule Variations maintains enduring appeal through its mature blend of tenderness and grit, which has subtly shaped sound design in independent film scores by emphasizing atmospheric, found-object percussion.[3] Retrospective assessments often rank it among Waits' career highs for its emotional accessibility and hopeful undertones.[9]Reissues and alternate versions
In 2017, to mark the album's ongoing legacy, Anti- Records issued a remastered edition of Mule Variations, supervised by Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan, which enhanced the audio dynamics and detail while preserving the original analog warmth of the 1999 recordings.[52] This version became available on CD and 180-gram vinyl, allowing listeners to experience the gritty blues and experimental elements with greater fidelity.[53] Several limited-edition vinyl reissues have followed, catering to collectors and emphasizing the album's raw, analog character. In 2024, for the 25th anniversary, Anti- released a special 180-gram silver-colored double LP limited to a small run, alongside an exclusive clear and black smoke variant pressed in just 750 copies and available through select retailers like Newbury Comics.[54] These pressings highlight the enduring appeal of the original mastering, noted for its superior sound quality over digital counterparts.[55] Outtakes and alternate material from the Mule Variations sessions surfaced on Waits's 2006 compilation Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards, including tracks like "Fish in the Jailhouse" and "Buzz Fledderjohn," which were recorded during the same Prairie Sun sessions but excluded from the final album. The full album has been widely available for streaming on platforms such as Spotify since the early 2010s, broadening access to its 16 tracks.[56] In August 2024, Waits released "Get Behind the Mule (Spiritual)," a previously unreleased alternate take of the album's standout track, featuring a stripped-down arrangement with only Waits's raw, gospel-inflected vocals over a gritty Wurlitzer piano, amplifying the song's themes of hardship and redemption.[57] Issued as a digital single via Anti-, this version slightly alters the lyrics for a starker narrative and was later included in a Record Store Day 2025 7-inch vinyl pressing pairing it with the original.[58]Track listing and personnel
Track listing
Mule Variations features 16 tracks, all written by Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan, with a total runtime of 70:33.[52]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Big in Japan" | Waits/Brennan | 4:05 |
| 2. | "Lowside of the Road" | Waits/Brennan | 2:59 |
| 3. | "Hold On" | Waits/Brennan | 5:33 |
| 4. | "Get Behind the Mule" | Waits/Brennan | 6:52 |
| 5. | "House Where Nobody Lives" | Waits/Brennan | 4:14 |
| 6. | "Cold Water" | Waits/Brennan | 5:23 |
| 7. | "Pony" | Waits/Brennan | 4:32 |
| 8. | "What's He Building?" (spoken word) | Waits/Brennan | 3:20 |
| 9. | "Black Market Baby" | Waits/Brennan | 5:02 |
| 10. | "Eyeball Kid" | Waits/Brennan | 4:25 |
| 11. | "Picture in a Frame" | Waits/Brennan | 3:39 |
| 12. | "Chocolate Jesus" | Waits/Brennan | 3:55 |
| 13. | "Georgia Lee" | Waits/Brennan | 4:24 |
| 14. | "Filipino Box Spring Hog" | Waits/Brennan | 3:09 |
| 15. | "Take It with Me" | Waits/Brennan | 4:24 |
| 16. | "Come on Up to the House" | Waits/Brennan | 4:36 |
Personnel
Mule Variations was produced by Tom Waits and his wife Kathleen Brennan.[52][59] Musicians:- Tom Waits – vocals, guitar, piano, percussion, organ, chamberlin
- Larry Taylor – bass (most tracks)
- Marc Ribot – guitar (multiple tracks, e.g., 3, 5)
- Smokey Hormel – guitar (e.g., 4)
- Joe Gore – guitar (e.g., 3)
- Bryan "Brain" Mantia – drums (1)
- Stephen Hodges – percussion, drums (e.g., 3, 4)
- Victor Bisetti – drums, percussion (multiple tracks)
- Christopher Marvin – drums (e.g., 6)
- Andrew Borger – drums (9, 14, 16), percussion (14)
- Les Claypool – bass (1, 10)
- Ralph Carney – saxophone, trumpet, clarinet, reeds (multiple tracks, e.g., 1, 8, 11)
- Charlie Musselwhite – harmonica (4)