2014’s most significant comebacks were probably D’Angelo, The Pixies, Funkadelic, and (most improbably) Linda Perhacs, 44 years after her 1970 album Parallelograms. Like Cold Fact, Red Hash and Just Another Diamond Day before it, Parallelograms was a little known LP from the early 1970’s that gained recognition and influence among a generation of listeners who weren’t even born when those albums were released to an indifferent public. The musicians were located and informed (often to their great surprise) of their newfound online fame, as well as the new interest in seeing them perform and hearing any unreleased songs that they may have to offer to the eager ears of a world that had once passed them by.
D’Angelo, on the other hand, had withdrawn from fame after his 2000 sophomore album Voodoo. 2014’s Black Messiah was a triumphant return, but it was also his final album (the artist born Michael Archer died in 2025). The Pixies had begun a series of reunion tours in 2004, but 2014’s Indie Cindy was their first new album of original songs since 1992. (The songs were first released as a series of three EP’s.)
Funkadelic’s return was a sprawling triple album of 33 songs (one for each of the 33 years since their last album in 1981). First Ya Gotta Shake The Gate included contributions (some of them posthumous) from first generation Funkateers (Bernie Worrell, Bootsy Collins, Cordell “Boogie” Mosson, David Spradley, DeWayne "Blackbyrd" McKnight, Eddie Hazel, Fred Wesley, Gary Shider, Jeff “Cherokee” Bunn, Jessica Cleaves, Michael Hampton, Rodney “Skeet” Curtis), plus some young folks with a strong Mothership connection (three generations of Clintons, plus Gary Shider’s son Garrett). Guests included Sly Stone and Del Tha Funkee Homosapien.
Another sprawling comeback was created by The Rentals. It was originally a much larger multimedia project called Songs About Time, which included music, films and photographs. The more traditionally structured songs were condensed into the 2014 album, Lost In Alphaville. Like The Pixies, The Rentals originally released their new music on a series of EP’s. And coincidentally, Joey Santiago played on both projects.
Kim Shattuck had briefly replaced Kim Deal in the Pixies in 2013, but she was fired before the recording of Indie Cindy. Proving once again that living well is the best revenge, Kim and The Muffs released an excellent album of new songs in 2014.
Other unexpected comebacks from 2014 included Curved Air (first album since 1976); The Boys (first since 1980); The Babys (first since 1981, but with a different singer); The Real Kids (first since 1983); and The Happy Refugees (first since 1984). The Electric Prunes also returned in 2014 with their first record since 1970 (a mix of new songs and old ones). The Van Pelt will appear again on Comeback Special 2023, and The Woodentops reappear on Comeback Special 2024.
I remember buying the Chrome and D’Angelo albums when they came out in 2014, and a friend of mine was really into the Cibo Matto record. Don’t think I heard any of the others back then, but there are some excellent songs on both of these hourlong sets.





