VIA PRESS RELEASE | Neal Casal’s second studio album, Rain, Wind And Speed, has been announced for December 2nd reissue on limited edition vinyl via the Neal Casal Music Foundation (NCMF).
The 11-song collection—originally released in 1996—will be presented on three color vinyl variants of which 333 LPs of each will be pressed: Blue Rain, Peach Wind and Black Speed, along with previously unpublished photos and new liner notes by Casal’s longtime champion and former publishing representative Jim Cardillo who details the period in the late singer/songwriter’s life when the album was created. The announcement arrives just a few days ahead of the three year anniversary of Casal’s passing on August 26, 2019. Pre-order for Rain, Wind And Speed, in which all proceeds benefit the NCMF, is available here.
A sparse, plaintive and largely acoustic album, Rain, Wind And Speed was written and recorded in the months immediately following Casal being dropped from his recording contract with Zoo Records, the label who’d released his debut effort, Fade Away Diamond Time. As Cardillo explains in the reissue’s essay: “At first Neal couldn’t comprehend what this all meant. No European Tour? No video? No single to radio? No tour support? All of the label’s promises withered and died like bitter fruit left on the vine. It was a disorienting sucker punch that left Neal numb and reeling. Five years of hard work, demos, showcases, phone calls, meetings, no-money gigs, all the results of that labor evaporated.”
With the support of his manager Gary Waldman, Casal quickly picked up the pieces. Rather than search for a new major label recording deal, they decided to focus on releasing Casal’s music independently. German upstart label Glitterhouse Records, local New Jersey indie Buy Or Die and Casal’s song publisher Warner/Chappell helped generate the funding and infrastructure to record and release a new album.
After a handful of stops and starts, Casal made the conscious decision to not chase the exquisitely produced alt-country grandeur of his debut Fade Away Diamond Time, but to instead keep things simple. He’d record in a local New Jersey studio not far from where he was living, while the majority of the songs on the album were captured in one take with elemental, uncluttered song arrangements abetted only by John Ginty on piano and Hammond organ, Andy Goessling on mandolin and banjo, Fooch Fischetti on pedal steel guitar, and Chuck Wood on percussion. The resulting collection, Rain, Wind and Speed, contained some of Casal’s most enduring songs, including “All The Luck In The World,” “Virginia Dare,” and “Best To Believe.”
“We were pretty crushed when word came down that Neal was being dropped, as we’d been working towards Fade Away Diamond Time for years and to find out it was over just three months after it was released was hard to accept. It had started to get some attention and Neal was on tour opening for bands like Little Feat and Gov’t Mule and a fanbase was starting to build for him,” remembers Waldman. “But ultimately it resulted in an artistic success. Neal emerged in just five days with this sweet and warm acoustic collection. It was the first time he recorded complete guitar and vocals takes together in the studio with no overdubs. Neal was really proud of this record.”
“There was a time in the not too distant past that I would’ve never made a record like this one,” said Casal at the time. “You remember, the kind of record where someone sits down, sings and plays a song all the way through, leaves it just like it is, rough spots and all, without fixing a thing. It may not be perfect, but it’s got something.”
The Neal Casal Music Foundation has previously reissued Casal’s first album, Fade Away Diamond Time, along with the acclaimed 3-CD / 5-LP box set tribute album, Highway Butterfly: The Songs Of Neal Casal, featuring artists like Billy Strings, Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi, Marcus King, J Mascis, Leslie Mendelson, and Bob Weir. Along with preserving Casal’s artistic legacy, the 501c3 non-profit formed in 2020, provides musical instruments and lessons to students in New Jersey and New York state schools where Casal was born and raised, as well as, making donations to much needed mental health organizations that support musicians in need.