Episode

Marc Ribot

Podcast
Caropop
Published
Jan 29, 2026
Duration seconds
3875
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://rss.com/podcasts/thecaropopcast/2502365
Audio
https://content.rss.com/episodes/81118/2502365/thecaropopcast/2026_01_29_05_32_38_32f024ce-92f7-4fc1-9a7c-7ab9ff2ea02f.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/caropop-4326665/episodes/marc-ribot
Markdown
/podcast/caropop-4326665/marc-ribot.md

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Summary

I first noticed Marc Ribot’s slinky, spiky guitar playing as “Jockey Full of Bourbon,” from Tom Waits’ Rain Dogs, slithered over the opening of Jim Jarmusch’s Down By Law. Rain Dogs was a breakthrough for Ribot, who previously had played in Brother Jack McDuff’s soul-jazz band, backed Wilson Pickett and Solomon Burke, and been a member of the Lounge Lizards. More Waits collaborations followed, as did work with Elvis Costello, Sam Phillips, McCoy Tyner, Yoko Ono, Robert Plant and Allison Krauss, Elton John and Leon Russell, and many others. Here Ribot reflects on his robust studio-musician and solo career; his love of Latin American music; the creative leeway that Waits, Costello and others gave him; the impact of producers such as T Bone Burnett and Hal Willner; his decision to sing lead for the first time on his long-gestating 2025 album, Map of a Blue City ; and his fight for indie musicians’ rights with the Music Workers Alliance. (Photo by Eric van den Brulle.)