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NO DEPRESSION

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If you prefer your country music shrink-wrapped by Nashville, look elsewhere. ... an introduction to alternative country music (whatever that is) / Edited by ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NO DEPRESSION


1
NO DEPRESSION
  • George Babcock
  • Library 155
  • Fall 2003

2
WHAT IS ALTERNATIVE COUNTRY?
  • In the introduction to the book No Depression,
    Alternative Country is by artists too old, too
    loud or too eccentric for country radio.
  • A local radio program is produced each week which
    may be clue in those interested in Alternative
    Country. The program, Swinging Doors, airs
    Thursday nights on KEXP (90.3 FM) from 6PM to
    9PM. Play lists are available at kexp.org
  • News Flash! Faith Hill is not country!

3
THE ORIGIN OF THE TITLE
  • No Depression (in Heaven) by The Carter Family
  • No Depression by Uncle Tupelo

4
THE CARTER FAMILYNo Depression (In Heaven)
1936(A.P. Carter, S. Carter, M. Carter)
  • For fear the hearts of men are failing,For these
    are latter days we know.The Great Depression now
    is spreading,God's word declared it would be so.
  • CHORUSI'm going where there's no depression,To
    the lovely land that's free from care.I'll leave
    this world of toil and trouble,My home's in
    Heaven, I'm going there.
  • In that bright land, there'll be no hunger,No
    orphan children cryin' for bread,No weeping
    widows, toil or struggle,No shrouds, no coffins,
    and no death.
  • This dark hour of midnight nearingAnd
    tribulation time will come.The storms will hurl
    in midnight fearAnd sweep lost millions to their
    doom.

5
UNCLE TUPELONo Depression (A.P. Carter, S.
Carter, M. Carter)
  • Released in 1990
  • Rockville Records
  • Re-mastered and re-released with bonus tracks in
    2003.
  • Columbia/Legacy Recordings

6
VITAL STATISTICS
  • Frequency Bi-Monthly.
  • ISSN 1088-4971.
  • Published by No Depression, Inc.,
  • 5816 9th Ave. NW, Seattle, WA 98107.
  • Current Publication of 27000 Copies.
  • Newsstand Price 4.95.
  • Subscription Price 18.00/year 2nd Class,
    30.00/year 1st Class.

7
CHIEF PERSONEL
  • Kyla Fairchild (Seattle, WA) Advertising
    Distribution Director. Marketing and promotion
    inquiries should be sent to Kyla.Mary Schuh
    (Seattle, WA) Subscriptions Finance. Please
    contact Mary with questions about subscriptions
    and merchandise, to change your address, and to
    check on missing issues. Trish Wagner (Austin,
    TX) Advertising Representative and Marketing
    Assistant. All advertising inquiries should be
    sent to Trish. Peter Blackstock (Durham, NC)
    Co-editor. Please query Peter with new review
    questions.Grant Alden (Nashville, TN)
    Co-editor Art DirectorMarcia Smith
    (Nashville, TN) Web Slave. Please leave Marcia
    alone unless theres an issue with the website
    itself that she can resolve.

8
REGULAR COLUMNS
  • Front Porch Letters, Editorial Comment,
    Artist Obituaries, etc.
  • Miked Live Reviews.
  • Town and Country Regional Scene Reports.
  • A Place To Be Regional Portrait.
  • Dont Ask Me No Questions Interviews.
  • The Long Way Around Extended Features.
  • Sittin Thinkin - Essays
  • Not Fade Away Reissued Music Reviews.
  • Waxed Music, Film and Book Reviews.
  • The No Depression Top 40 Music Chart
  • Screen Door - Variety

9
AUDIENCE
  • The intended audience is Alt-Country musicians
    and fans.

10
THE FIRST ISSUE
  • Fall 1995.
  • Assembled in the Editors Seattle homes with the
    help of Kinkos Copies.
  • Originally a quarterly publication.

11
GOING BI-MONTHLY
  • After four issues, No Depression switches to a
    bi-monthly periodical.
  • Issue 5 covers September/October 1996.

12
LATEST ISSUE
  • Issue 48, November/December 2003.
  • The title reads just Depression in tribute to
    the passing of Johnny Cash.

13
ONLINE VERSION
  • An online version of the magazine can be found
    at http//www.nodepression.net/
  • Not all articles found in the printed version are
    available online.

14
REVIEWS
  • The ideal No Depression reader believes that
    Johnny Cash and Jeff Tweedy are both gods and for
    similar reasons they respect tradition enough to
    rebel against it. The same can be said for the
    magazine that covers them with a similar restless
    energy. Started in the mid-'90s as a vehicle to
    cover alt-country upstarts, No Depression has
    since broadened its range to include all kinds of
    roots music, including folk, blues, bluegrass,
    indie rock, and even the occasional classic-rock
    icon (but only when former Led Zeppelin singer
    Robert Plant is singing Bob Dylan and Bukka White
    covers). It's fitting that the name of the
    magazine comes from a 1990 Uncle Tupelo album
    title, which in turn was borrowed from a Carter
    Family song lyric from the '30s, because No
    Depression is interested in music that draws on a
    rich rural history but is now played and enjoyed
    by urban hipsters as well as roots
    traditionalists. Although the writing and design
    tend to be as utilitarian as a pair of denim
    overalls, each issue is jammed full of reviews
    (of CDs, concerts, movies, and books), short
    profiles of regional musicians, and lengthy
    features devoted to major artists (recent
    subjects have included Guy Clark, Dolly Parton,
    Linda Thompson, and Rhett Miller). If you prefer
    your country music shrink-wrapped by Nashville,
    look elsewhere. However, if you think Austin,
    Texas, is the music world's mecca, No Depression
    is probably for you. --Keith Moerer From
    amazon.com review.

15
REVIEWS
  • The alternative country movement, which
    comprises cowpunkers, folkies, Bakersfield sound
    revivalists, anyone "too old, too loud or too
    eccentric for country radio is still waiting for
    a magazine to do for it what Rolling Stone did
    for rock and roll. In the interim, the jovially
    amateurish fanzine, No Depression, founded in
    1995 by Seattle writers Alden and Blackstock and
    named after an A.P. Carter song, fills the gap.
    Publishers Weekly

16
  • I suppose I should start by coming out with my
    confession that I have always had, well, some
    slight problems with "No Depression"... To
    wit, I (and a few other people) have long
    regarded the magazine as more of a booster
    society for twangcore than as a vehicle for
    critical commentary... the reviews are generally
    non-critical and often adulatory of even the most
    marginally talented of bands. Such boosterism is
    all very well and fine -- it's a matter of
    preference, and in some ways is a refreshing
    change of pace from the snarkiness of say, "SPIN"
    or various indie-rock zines. But at the same
    time, there is something to be said for offering
    sincere criticism if no one will point out the
    flaws in an artform, how can it be expected to
    grow? In a similar vein, the editorial slant at
    ND seems to encourage loose, personalized,
    expressive writing from its dozens of freelance
    contributors. Writers regularly interject
    themselves into their stories, or go out of their
    way to use quirky -- even show-offy --
    phraseology and other purposefully-amatuerish
    techniques that come out of the 'zine ethos. At
    times this is rewarding to the reader. More often
    than not, though, I find it distracting and
    difficult to get around if you're writing about
    Hank Williams, then tell me about Hank Williams
    don't try to write a Homeric ode in his praise.
    The editorial hand seems light at "No Depression"
    -- perhaps they're just unwilling to offend
    contributors by offering actual guidance -- but
    they also seem to overvalue dense or lengthy
    prose as a way to persuade the reader of the
    gravity of what is being discussed. Ironically,
    in this regard "No Depression" has little to
    worry about -- it is clearly the leader of the
    pack in the current twang craze, so as music
    historians of the future look back at today's
    country-roots revival, ND will doubtless take on
    the authoritative stature that it tries so hard
    to project in the present day. Amazon.com

17
MAGAZINE IN BOOK FORM
  • In 1998, a book was published which collected 37
    feature articles from the magazine.
  • No depression an introduction to alternative
    country music (whatever that is) / Edited by
    Grant Alden and Peter Blackstock.
  • 1998, Dowling Press, Nashville, TN

18
MY REVIEW
  • I like the music and the magazine covers it
    extensively.
  • I like the fact that it started as a zine and
    has gained widespread acceptance.
  • No Depression is an independent organization, not
    beholden to corporate interests. Bonus points in
    my book.

19
THE END
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