Artist: Louvin Brothers
Feature from web archive December 10, 2008
“You can kill him with words”:
A conversation with Charlie Louvin
In 1956, the Louvin Brothers released their first long-playing album on Capitol, Tragic Songs Of Life. The collection of murder ballads and songs of lost love would become their best-selling album and an influential aesthetic document of country tragedy. The Louvin Brothers always sang of so much more than doom and despair, but no country [...]
A Place to be - About a Place from Issue #16 July-Aug 1998
Satan Is Real, but you won’t find him here
“The whole world has got to where if you told ‘em, ‘I’ve got an ant, just a regular little ant that crawls on the ground, that can eat a thousand-pound roll of hay, and you can see him do that for a dollar,’ they’d say, ‘Well, I figured there was one of them somewhere, but [...]
Not Fade Away - Reissue Review from Issue #5 Sept-Oct 1996
Louvin Brothers – Tragic Songs of Life/A Tribute to the Delmore Brothers/Satan is Real / Blue Sky Boys – Self-Titled
Ira and Charlie Louvin were perhaps the greatest brother duet in country history, and it’s a shame that so little of their recorded work has been available domestically on CD. Capitol has rectified the situation somewhat with the recent reissue of three classic Louvin Brothers albums. The Louvins recorded a song for Apollo, a single [...]
Not Fade Away - Reissue Review from Issue #1 Fall 1995
The Louvin Brothers – When I Stop Dreaming: The Best of the Louvin Brothers
It’s easy to hear hints of the Louvin Brothers’ sweet, high harmonies in the music of the Flying Burrito Brothers, the Jayhawks and others. Now it’s easy to hear the Louvins themselves on this 24-cut best of collection. The Louvins — Ira on vocals and mandolin and Charlie on vocals and guitar — played a [...]
