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A.J. Croce brings late father Jim Croce’s songs to life
Son of folk, rock singer-songwriter to play mix of own music, father’s songs
Dave Gil de Rubio
Jun. 2, 2025 7:18 am, Updated: Jun. 2, 2025 8:04 am
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Never let it be said that A.J. Croce used nepotism as a crutch towards crafting his own solo career. As the son of late singer-songwriter Jim Croce, it would have been easy for the former to come out of the gate trading on his father’s legacy and song canon.
Instead, A.J. Croce kicked off his career with a self-titled 1993 debut produced by storied names T-Bone Burnett and John Simon that was a 12-song jazz outing that cracked the Top 10 jazz charts. Three decades-plus later, the younger Croce has released his 11th album, the Shooter Jennings-produced “Heart of the Eternal.”
Croce is proud of the new album, particularly considering he got to do it with his touring band and old friend Jennings.
“I hadn’t seen Shooter in something like 20 years, so I cold called him and asked if he would be into doing a record,” Croce said in a recent interview. “He said he just took over Studio 3 at Sunset Sound and he’d love for this to be the first record. I sent him a few raw demos and that was that. We dove in and had a blast.”
Croce and Jennings go back to the 90s, when the former was introduced to the late Waylon Jennings when both were playing consecutive nights at L.A.’s House of Blues. “I remember Waylon came backstage wearing one of my t-shirts, and I was like, ‘Oh my God,’” Croce said.
Croce subsequently met the Highwayman’s progeny Shooter as a shy and sweet 16 year old. One thing both men have in common is not only being the second generation of accomplished musical fathers, but how both blazed their own paths and eschewed the pitfalls of being nepo-babies who relied on their respective parents’ own legacies. Croce agreed with that observation when it was presented to him.
“We both worked for anything we accomplished,” Croce said. “Neither of us had an inheritance, and it was different than some people’s experiences being second generation.”
That said, his recent tours have been “Croce Plays Croce” shows, in which he played a complete set of classics by his late father mixed in with some of his own songs. His current tour is something of a sequel, billed as “Croce Plays Croce: Where the Songbook Ends, The Story Begins: A New Chapter in a Musical Odyssey.” The show will feature a mix of his own material and songs by his father.
For the Pennsylvania native, the choice to dip into the Jim Croce catalog was a long time coming and a venture he admits he held off doing, despite how financially unwise it may have been to wait so long to go down this path.
If you go
What: A.J. Croce presents “Croce Plays Croce”
When: 7:30 p.m. Thursday, June 12
Where: The Englert Theatre, 221 E Washington St., Iowa City
Cost: $30 to $79
Tickets: (319) 688-2653; englert.org
“I had grown up with my father’s records, and the huge influence I felt was predominantly from the music he owned — his record collection,” Croce said. “Working with Leon Russell, we connected on all this music, and I realized that he and my father were the same age, the same generation. They were listening to older music and finding a way to turn their influences into something completely original. I think it was in that moment that I recognized that it was something I had in common with my father — this deep love of music in a way that didn’t matter that it wasn’t about recognition. It was about the pure love of this art. Just when no one expected me to play my father’s music is when it became fun to play.”
For the current tour, Croce is hitting the road with a longtime crew of sidemen that includes drummer Garry Mallaber (Van Morrison, Steve Miller Band), bassist David Berard (Dr. John) and guitarist/violinist/fiddler James Pennebaker (Delbert McClinton). And given how deep even his own catalog is, Croce said it’s quite a balancing act to provide a broad scope of past and present to his audience.
“Given the fact that there have been 21 songs of mine to date that have charted in different categories and genres, how do I pick and choose what to play?” he said. “I have to keep those in mind as a factor because they clearly connected with people at one time or another. I also look at songs that help to tell a story for the arc of the performance. I try and keep a really good balance of new and old, so people get to hear things that are familiar and also hear things that are deeper cuts they may have forgotten about.”
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