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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.

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Archives for 2009 » March

Live Reviews from web archive March 16, 2009

Jake Shimabukuro

“That one hurts my hand a little bit,” Jake Shimabukuro confided as he shook his fingers to cool them down after playing his original composition “Blue Roses Falling” a couple songs into his early-evening set at the fabled Iron Horse nightclub in Northampton, Massachusetts. Watching Shimabukuro cast his four-stringed spell for about an hour and [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 13, 2009

Clarence Bucaro / Seth Walker

The fact that this is a review of new albums by both Seth Walker and Clarence Bucaro isn’t meant to suggest that they’re collaborators, ex-bandmates, part of the same regional music scene, or anything of the sort. They’re not. But neither is comparing them unjustified. They’re pretty close in age (either just shy of 30, [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 12, 2009

Chris Darrow

Music history has a tendency to frequently favor the reputation of easily defined artists, but that’s at the expense of music makers as singular and strange as Chris Darrow. How do you pigeonhole a multi-instrumentalist who has traces of his DNA detectible in his own work with psychedelic purveyors Kaleidoscope in the ’60s, neo-trad practitioners [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 11, 2009

Buddy & Julie Miller

[Editor's note: The following review appears in No Depression #77, the second in a series of "bookazines" edited by Grant Alden and Peter Blackstock and published by University of Texas Press. The bookazine can be ordered here.] When news began trickling out that the next Buddy Miller album — the first since 2004′s widely acclaimed [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 10, 2009

Bela Fleck

When Bela Fleck released the first two volumes of Tales From The Acoustic Planet, the idea was merely to differentiate these returns to his newgrass and bluegrass roots from the electric jazz fusion of his work with the Flecktones. Now, for the third volume, Fleck realizes that the planet stretches well beyond just the United [...]

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Live Reviews from web archive March 9, 2009

Joe Romeo & the Orange County Volunteers

Despite change at the top – tremendously satisfying change from my perspective – optimism can still be an elusive commodity. At work, people are getting laid off by the tens of thousands every day. At play, the national pastime has a stain that might never wash out. And somewhere in between, music websites can’t stay [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 6, 2009

Raul Malo

Growing up as a Philadelphia Phillies fan in the 1960s, I was drawn to Cookie Rojas, a jack of all trades on the field who once played all nine positions in a single game. Like his fellow Cuban-American, Raul Malo demonstrates a similar versatility as a vocalist and musician on Lucky One, his first album [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 5, 2009

Ian McLagan & the Bump Band

One of the great love stories of the rock era came to a sad end in August 2006, when Kim McLagan – beloved wife, best friend and muse to ex-Small Faces keyboardist Ian McLagan – died in a car accident in Texas. That’s a blow you wouldn’t wish on anyone, but especially the impish McLagan, [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 4, 2009

Brigitte DeMeyer

Although Brigitte DeMeyer comes from the Bay Area, her music radiates with the sounds of the south. Red River Flower, the follow-up to her acclaimed 2005 disc Something Ater All, benefits from being recorded in Nashville with such ace sidemen as Buddy Miller, Mike Henderson, Al Perkins, Phil Madeira and Brady Blade (who again serves [...]

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Record Review from web archive March 3, 2009

Justin Townes Earle

The Good Life, last year’s debut album from Justin Townes Earle, was a mixture of honky-tonk country stylings and confessional singer-songwriter material. Half of him was actively avoiding comparisons with his father Steve by going back to country before dad, and the other half was sticking close to the family template. On Midnight At The [...]

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From the Blogs

  • Enter to win a signed copy of 'Steve Earle: The Warner Bros. Years' box set
    Ever since his 1986 debut (and, in some ways, even before that), Steve Earle has been one of the most prolific and distinctive singer-songwriters on the Amerciana/alt/country/rock scene. His 15 studio albums have encompassed political protest music, bluegrass, rock and roll, Townes Van Zandt covers, and just flat-out, darn-good genre-defying music. His work […]
  • Guy Clark's "My Favorite Picture of You" is touching and topical
    By Ken Paulson Like Kris Kristofferson’s recent Feeling Mortal, Guy Clark’s  My Favorite Picture of You reflects the years. On the new album,  due July 23 on Dualtone,  Clark’s voice is softer and weathered. But if time has  taken a physical toll, it’s made the music matter more. This… […]
  • Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, Wembley Stadium (London, UK. June 15th 2013)
    I hate large stadium arenas but I adore Bruce Springsteen. I’m with the purists who argue that shows in such venues are much less satisfying than in smaller, intimate venues but, but, but….Springsteen is one of those artists who make a large venue seem small. For him it’s all about the music and the energy of the performance – no laser beams, no pyrotechnics […]
  • When politics met Americana in 1976
    One of the pleasures of being of a certain age is that you can literally rack up decades of seeing great musicians and attending gigs of all shapes and sizes. A recent BBC documentary about The Eagles jarred my memory about one such event in (gulp) 1976.  I was a Brit newbie in America and was taken to a political fund raiser for then (and now) California Go […]
  • Father's Day: Songs About Dad
    This is the weekend where we examine the impact great fathers have made upon history.  From the Bible, where the landscape is littered with the actions of fathers.  Who could forget the long walk Abraham and his son took in Genesis?  Adam, the first father, raised a fine bunch of stand-up children.  And what about the Big Father himself -- Jesus' daddy […]
  • Album Review: The Human Experience ft. Rising Appalachia - Soul Visions
    The Human Experience, an artist I’ve come to know much about recently, will be releasing a new album on Monday, featuring sisters Leah and Chloe Smith of Rising Appalachia. The album is called Soul Visions, and, upon listening, truly resonates as the vision of three creative souls collaborating to produce something highly elevated. David Block, the mind behi […]

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