"It's funny," Jayhawks co-leader Gary Louris said, "there was always a lot of time between records when we were still very active. Now, all of a sudden, there's all this material coming out after years of inactivity."
A band that always seemed to suffer from strange timing, the Minneapolis twang-rock heroes might finally be benefiting from coincidence as it sees four albums issued over the course of one unpredictably action-packed year -- a nice setup to the release of their all-new record this summer.
First came Lost Highway's reissue last summer of their little-heard 1986 eponymous debut, aka "The Bunkhouse Album." The run continued last week with Sony/Legacy's reissue of two of their best-remembered discs, 1992's "Hollywood Town Hall" and 1995's "Tomorrow the Green Grass," each bulked up with bonus tracks, photos and new liner notes.
The band's other chief singer/songwriter, Mark Olson, said the expanded editions prove "we really spent so much time and poured our soul into those records."
From one reissue that captured the little-band-that-could to two that show off what they did best, the Jayhawks will then quickly move on to releasing a record that demonstrates what they might have done had their mid-'90s lineup stayed intact.
The still-untitled new album, completed in November, will be the first Jayhawks disc with both Louris and Olson on it since 1995, when Olson quit the band. (Louris led it through eight more years and three more albums.) As was the case at their three First Avenue reunion shows last summer -- and will be when they return to the club Saturday and Sunday to wrap up a short tour behind the reissues -- the lineup is the same as when Olson bowed out, with bassist Marc Perlman, drummer Tim O'Reagan and keyboardist Karen Grotberg.
Talking by phone three weeks ago from Tucson, Ariz., where he was mixing the album, Louris confirmed that the timing of all this was mostly coincidental. Last summer's First Ave shows to promote the "Bunkhouse" record, he said, were "just kind of a love fest between the band and audience, and within the band. We realized we were still a great band."
Reissuing the early-'90s albums backs up their claim of "unfinished business," and the new one will drive it home, he said.