i could speak now maybe in another tongue
and the calling of the wolf down the highway
through the forest singing like a symphony
anonymously
drunken finger poetry in the sky
like a hero singing to eternity
keep a secret courage and fidelity
and who would know
home voodoo
home it’s down
here voodoo
home
take a stone and skip it on the water
go tripping stumble and falter
come wisdom and sadness and madness
a sparkling day
watch out get caught your tail in the door
give us bountiful daily bread and wine
give us never ending love and tons of time
and then we go
home voodoo
home it’s down
here voodoo
home
c’est là-bas bas bas…
like a miracle walking with a passion
walking to the beat beating out confusion
dream upstream always dream upstream
or down
love to find us love to bind us
and wish away weariness and loneliness
here we go now counting all our lucky stars
c’est la vie
home voodoo
home it’s down
here voodoo
home
c’est là-bas bas bas…
it’s down here voodoo home
I welcome you and yours and trust you like a friend
And then you take my life and call it to an end
Are you finished, are you saved?
Bang your head I got it, no surprise as if I
Die as if I die as if I die
As if I die as if I die as if I die
Now I lay me down, scattered to the floor
I move beyond my heart, hoping for the door
Like a sister, will you love me hidden ?
Naked and forgiven as if I
Die as if I die as if I die
As if I die as if I die as if I die
What I have loved and lost, I’ll know it at the end
Oblivion she sings her dancer’s darkest hymn
Leave me alone the sky, leave me alone the heart
Leave me alone the bone, leave me alone, as if I
Die as if I die as if I dies
As if I die as if I die as if I die
My shoes are going insane
My translation mostly to blame
I see a face when i face the day
The jangle jungle on its way
No one has to get you
What better place to sing my dark hymn
The forest calling that’s where I've been
Painting heaven with your breath
Dirt on my feet hiding from death
No one has to get you
True love true love trespasses
I never had a reason a reason to stay
A broken tongue with something to say
In the shadows the dancing bones
Meet your maker on your way home
No one has to get you
This is my temperament today
This is my temperature today
This is my testament today
This is my trespass
about
ABOUT VOODOO HOME
Somewhere between the dignified wilderness and soul-struck portraiture of a Rosa Bonheur painting, and the hallowed seconds between interior impulse and exterior voice—blending like the pale light of a Nordic summer night in a country of his own mind—Stone Jack Jones casts a vision with the force of wind sweeping across the marshes of a long-lost Southern highway on Voodoo Home EP.
With the resolve of an artist casting his net into the unknown, searching for figures adrift on the surface that separates the seen from the unfathomable, his voice emerges like an echo from a haunted bluegrass tune—carried down from the mountains on high and across the murky waters of the lowlands. ‘Voodoo Home‘ builds a house among the strange, with “love to find us, love to bind us.” “This is my testament,” the venerable Stone intones within the comforting walls of the indecipherable on ‘No One’. And as the EP draws to its centerpiece, his voice bellows across ‘As If,‘ “Oh brother, I am here.”
A testament to a life of restless experimentation, Voodoo Home EP is not the culmination of self-discovery, but rather the sober, vivid reflection upon the mystery itself—staring deep into the unknown and finding solace in its embrace.
ABOUT STONE JACK JONES
There’s only a handful of things people know about Stone Jack Jones. One of them is this: He’s always moving.
After his family discouraged him from becoming a 5th generation coal miner in West Virginia Jones basically became a vagabond: A travelling musician with no particular place to go, Jones spent time in Ft. Worth, Baltimore, New York City, and Atlanta before settling in Nashville sometime in the early 90s to take a job with a railroad and raise a family. He kept making music, too, and formed a tight bond with a core group of fellow Music City outsiders, including Lambchop mastermind Kurt Wagner, singer-songwriter Patty Griffin, and -- crucially -- producer-engineer Roger Moutenot (Lou Reed, Yo La Tengo, Sleater-Kinney, Bob Dylan).
At 76 years old, Jones is still moving, though it’s been a while since he’s graced listeners with his signature psychedelic country noir. Aside from a collaboration with Nashville firebrand Adia Victoria in 2021, Jone’s last full-length was 2019’s undulating meditation on memory, Black Snake. Where that record gleefully limns the territories between the past and the present, his new EP, Voodoo Home, looks somewhere gladly beyond.
Where Black Snake boasted a lush and ornate production, Voodoo Home is decidedly skeletal but no less psychedelic -- spectral folk that’s more Spacemen 3 than Spiritualized. “Voodoo Home” sets the tone with hypnotic banjo and lyrics that recall the tail-end of a hero’s journey before a joyous deluge of rhythm -- something in-between a Lee Hazlewood production and a New Orleans second line parade -- carries us to some golden shore. “As If” takes the same instrumentation to a dramatic and hypnotic precipice -- a song that serves both as a plea and a bit of sinister reassurance. This transitions seamlessly to “No One” -- a slithering coda that dissipates into the ether guided by Kelly Diehl’s reassuring, doula-like vocals. “This is my trespass” sings Jones before the song ends with a sibilant gasp.
“It was not a conscious decision,” says Jones of the EP’s minimalist approach. “A lot of things have caused me to be still of late. Musing with music, I was hearing patterns that were haunted with bluegrass and Phillip Glass.
That said, Voodoo Home was fostered in a familiar way for Jones: Gathering his friends -- frequent collaborators, Mountenot, Diehl, and banjoist Kyle Hamlett -- on his back porch and letting the songs discover themselves. “Recording with Roger has always been such a great collaboration. He’s very much in the spirit of playing music. Playful. We’re not in isolated rooms, we’re all together. Kyle and Kelly and Roger all helped to paint it in the air, while hanging out on the back porch.”
As a result, the three songs that comprise Voodoo Home play like a suite: A gothic Appalachian song cycle that shivers with mortality and the beauty of release. The darkness is always tempered by the light.
“I have seen love bring light to darkness,” says Jones. “How could we live otherwise? Love will trespass in.”
credits
released May 1, 2025
All songs written by Stone Jack Jones
Produced, recorded and mixed by Roger Moutenot (except for No One, mixed by Marcello Giuliani)
Mastered by John Baldwin
VOODOO HOME
Stone Jack Jones: voice, guitar, harmonica
Kyle Hamlett: banjo, vocals
Kelly Diehl: vocals
Marcello Giuliani: bass
Roger Moutenot: drums, pedals
AS IF
Stone Jack Jones: voice, guitar, piano, bass, tambourine
Roger Moutenot: synth, drums
Kyle Hamlett: banjo, vocals
Kelly Diehl: vocals
NO ONE
Stone Jack Jones: voice, guitar
Kyle Hamlett: banjo, vocals
Kelly Diehl: vocals
Roger Moutenot: synth
Marcello Giuliani: bass
Ian Aledji: keyboard
Album Art, Detail from “Leisure Time” by Ulrike Theusner
VIDEO CREDITS
VOODOO HOME
Filmed, edited, and co-directed by Brooke Bernard
Co-directed by Elle Long
NO ONE
Artwork and camera: Maïa Bunge
Editing: Fernanda Scarafia
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