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Archives for 2007 » September

Miked - Live Reviews from Issue #71 Sep-Oct 2007

Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival (Manchester, TN)

Part carnival, part treasure hunt and part endurance test, Bonnaroo 2007 was hot, dusty, and a little hard to get a handle on. The standard line on the sixth edition of the supersize mid-Tennessee music fest was that it marked Bonnaroo’s evolution from hippie jam spree to diffuse cultural grab-bag. On the surface, that seemed [...]

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Box Full of Letters - Letters to the Editor from Issue #71 Sep-Oct 2007

Box Full of Letters from Issue #71

Mandy Moore: Not to worry, no features on Britney or Paris planned When I first started to read No Depression it was what Rolling Stone was to me in the ’60s. I realize the music business and music tastes are changing, but why does No Depression have to become so commercial? Great to See Porter [...]

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Hello Stranger - Editor's Note from Issue #71 Sep-Oct 2007

Hello Stranger from Issue #71

“Back in Seattle, the sun is setting over the Sunset and Tractor Taverns on Ballard Avenue, over Puget Sound and the ferryboats motoring to the islands, over the Olympic mountains silhouetted in the western sky. It’s been an unforgettable nine years, sheltered beneath the sentinel that is Mount Rainier. But I hear Carolina calling.” So [...]

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Film at 11 - DVD review from Issue #71 Sep-Oct 2007

Show Me the Cash

“When will those Johnny Cash TV shows become available?” has probably been the question raised with me most often in my role as video columnist here. We have, at last, something of an answer in the new compilation The Best Of The Johnny Cash TV Show (CMV/Columbia/Legacy), which draws four hours of complete performances (as [...]

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Farther Along - Obituary from Issue #71 Sep-Oct 2007

Boots Randolph: 1927 to 2007

Along with pianist Floyd Cramer and guitarist Chet Atkins, tenor saxophonist Boots Randolph helped define Nashville as the home of a no-nonsense, casual yet superhuman approach to music-making that still holds today, although in inflated form. As a session man, Randolph was part of an elite group of musicians who labored on hits by Roy [...]

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Bound - Book Review from Issue #71 Sep-Oct 2007

I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead

Warren Zevon and Townes Van Zandt are subjects of new biographies, but they had more in common than that. Both came from families with money. Music eventually took over everything that mattered to them. Both enjoyed high esteem among fellow artists, yet reaped limited commercial success. And both were brutal drunkards. There’s at least one [...]

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From the Blogs

  • Gonzo Country: How to Write a Hit Country Song (Tractors,Trucks, Fishing, Beer and Jesus)
    Turnstyled Junkpiled's How To Write A Hit Country Song Tractors, Trucks, Fishing, Beer and Jesusby Courtney Sudbrink, Editor Many of today’s young,up-and-coming Country 
songwriters may be scratching their heads, wondering why Nashville isn’t biting. Bobby Bare once sang of the “Sure Hit Songwriter's Pen,” but unless that pen bleeds… […]
  • Interview: Singer/Songwriter Keith Betti
    For all the bittersweet twang and folksy melodies on singer/songwriter Keith Betti’s latest album,
Company Loves Misery, the ghost of George Harrison haunts the premises like no other. Harrison isn’t named-checked on Betti’s biography and nor is he mentioned on his store page.
 Nevertheless, the soaring melodies of “Found a Love” and the sunny warmth of “It’ […]
  • The Birth of British Folk Rock - 45 Years On
    It is always dangerous to claim the birth of a particular genre of music, but a case can be made that 45 years ago on May 27 there was a major delivery -- the arrival of British 
folk rock. The midwives at this event were the members of  Fairport Convention, a group that is still wildly popular among aficionados of the genre and which spawned many others fro […]
  • Stackridge, Farncombe Music Club (UK, 5/18/12)
    I first started going to live gigs in my early teens. I was underage. I lied about my date of birth so that I could become a member of Friars, a music club based in Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire. Life membership was 25p. I still have my member’s card. Wild Turkey in June 1971 was the first live band I saw and some forty one years later I am still occupyin […]
  • Bonnie Raitt, John Prine & Tom Waits at Opryland (circa '74)
    Bonnie, Johnny & Tom Visit Opryland, USA — an interview-article by W. Conrad for Buddy Magazine (March, 1976)

 
 
Backstage and on stage at Nashville's Opryland, Ben Fong-Torres, rock journalist from 
Rolling Stone, was shadowing Bonnie Raitt, the star of the evening's attraction. In the shadows, lurking inside his cheap suit and a cloud of to […]
  • The Last Time I Saw Gram Parsons
    By Bill Conrad (His Prep School Pal)

 Summer of 1969, I was in London when I saw a flyer advertising the Byrds at Royal Albert Hall. Melody Maker, the local music news, suggested that a few Beatles and Stones might attend. That was incentive enough for me.
  The Byrds took the stage and launched into "Turn, Turn, Turn."  Other than band leader Rog […]

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