Jump to Content

Welcome! You’re browsing the No Depression Archives

No Depression has been the foremost journalistic authority on roots music for well over a decade, publishing 75 issues from 1995 to 2008. No Depression ceased publishing magazines in 2008 and took to the web. We have made the contents of those issues accessible online via this extensive archive and also feature a robust community website with blogs, photos, videos, music, news, discussion and more.

Close This

Town and Country - Shorter Artist Feature from Issue #34 July-Aug 2001

Teddy Morgan

Beyond the blues

TUCSON, AZ

No less a figure than Greil Marcus said of Teddy Morgan’s 1999 HighTone release Lost Love And Highways that he would “have Hank Williams and Kurt Cobain high-fiving if they weren’t so pissed they didn’t see this coming.” That’s some heavy freight, but possibly most significant in its omission of Lightnin’ Hopkins.

When Morgan left his hometown of Minneapolis ten years ago and headed for Austin, it was for the blues. Clifford Antone had lured him with a chance to record the music that had obsessed him since he got his first guitar at 14. His picking had been so inspired that by age 18 he was touring with the Lamont Cranston Band, bluesman James Harman and soulstress Lavelle White.

But a funny thing happened to Morgan on his way to being the next blues guitar legend. Even as he was releasing two critically favored blues records for Antone’s label, he was befriended by Gurf Morlix, who swept him up in the music of Lucinda Williams and Steve Earle.

Morgan was struck by how much music he’d missed while burrowed in the blues. “I was so into old, black blues, for a while I closed my ears to anything else, because I loved it so much and it was such a mystery to me. It just felt like if I was letting other things in, I wasn’t going to get where I wanted with this stuff.

“What happened I think was I got all I could from it,” Morgan says. “I learned everything I could that related to me.” Other friends began tuning him in to the likes of Dave Alvin, Wilco, and Joe Ely, and Morgan soon found his passion redirected to songwriting. Lost Love And Highways was the result.

Then he found love and highways. He met the girl of his dreams in Tucson and subsequently left Austin behind. The couple recently celebrated their first anniversary, and Morgan has released his first record on his own. It’s called Crashing Down, a title that could hardly be more opposite to his frame of mind.

“Being at the time I am in my life, just real settled and feeling really good about where I live, it’s kind of a different feeling for me,” Morgan says. “But it’s made my songwriting more restless because there’s always that — finding new influences, writing new songs.”

It didn’t take Morgan long to stumble into Tucson influences, thanks largely to the artist-magnet nature of a renowned local recording facility. “I found Wavelab in the phone book when I was calling a few studios to do demos,” Morgan explains. “Just moving here I’d never heard of Calexico or Giant Sand. I walked in on a session that Calexico was doing and [John] Convertino was bowing the vibes. It was such a beautiful, amazing sound!” Convertino’s Calexico collaborator Joey Burns wound up playing vibes and accordion on “Western Star” for Morgan’s album, which was made at Wavelab. The desert sky turns up again on “Moon So High”, and the instrumental “Joaquin” was inspired by Morgan’s dog: “He’s the gentlest soul,” Morgan says. “The way he moves through the desert, he never gets cactus in him.” “The Price I Pay” is among several songs Morgan has recently co-written with Tucson country crooner Troy Olson.

Morgan tips his hand, though, with his cover of Bob Dylan’s “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues”. Dylan’s music was his first love when he discovered his mom’s record collection at age 13. “I’m kind of a later bloomer when it comes to songwriting,” he says. “That’s the fun thing about it, the inspiring thing. It’s like everything I’ve listened to. The desert is workin’ for me, now.”

Enjoy the ND archives? Consider making a donation. Advertising helps defray our basic expenses, but doesn’t touch the over $150,000 invested to get this content online. Just $10 (or more!) from 15,000 of our fans and we will reach our goal. Thanks for your support.

Or send a check to: No Depression, PO Box 31332, Seattle, WA 98103

Discuss

Did you enjoy this article? Start a discussion about it, or find out what others are saying in the No Depression Community forum.

Join the Discussion »

Find out what's going on in roots music. Share concert photos and videos, learn about new artists, blog about the music you love.

Join the No Depression Community »

Originally Featured in Issue #34 July-Aug 2001

Buy our history before it’s gone!

Each issue is artfully designed and packed full of great photos that you don‘t get online. Visit the No Depression store to own a piece of history.

Visit the No Depression Store »


From the Blogs

  • A Tribute to The Doors Ray Manzarek 1939-2013
    "You don't make music for immortality, you make music for the moment, capturing the sheer joy of being alive on planet Earth... Everybody should live it that way."    Ray Manzarek   In the summer of 1967 The Doors played the Anaheim Convention Center. I was 12 years old. I was completely transfixed by the band. Having an older musician brother […]
  • Life At the Edge
    Brown Bird's Dave Lamb faces a crisis, and his fans have his back in a big way. Spend a few minutes hanging at the warm side of street musicians’ guitar case, lost in the rawness of word and melody, and a niggling sense will creep into your reverie: Playing for quarters and raggedy dollar bills is a scary way to make a living. That musician, however, mi […]
  • Down the Hiss Golden Messenger Stream: "Haw" and more
    Rivers flood broad expanses of the Southern imagination. The mythic Mississippi rolls through literature, our watery national spine, by turns torpid and apocalyptic. But there are countless intimate tributaries and every Southerner knows one. Flowing water provides blessed relief in summer, spiritual cleansing and profane recreation.  If you grew up messing […]
  • Freight Train Boogie podcast #211 featuring "The Moorings" by Andrew Duhon along with Deadstring Brothers, Samantha Crain and Free Range Folk
    FTB podcast #211 features The Moorings by New Orleans singer/songwriter ANDREW DUHON. Also new music from FREE RANGE FOLK, SAMANTHA CRAIN and HE’S MY BROTHER SHE’S MY SISTER. Here's the direct link to listen… […]
  • Roger Knox: Stranger in My Land (Bloodshot, 2013)
    Moving and socially significant Australian country music Though country music is most typically associated with the Southern United States, its impact has been felt all around the world. In addition to Nashville and Texas exports, a strong but little-known strain developed among Australian aboriginals in the second half of the twentieth century.… […]
  • The Great Escape, Brighton, 2013: day two
    It was definitely Billy Bragg's day, with a strong contender for performance of the year, not just of TGE. In comparison with the other stuff I saw, it's a bit like wondering how the rest got on when Mo Farah turned up for the dads' race at sports day... It was probably the fifth or sixth time I've seen Billy over the last 25 years or so […]

Shop Amazon by clicking through this logo to support NoDepression.com. We get a percentage of every purchase you make!


Subscribe To the No Depression Newsletter

Subscribe to the No Depression Newsletter