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

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 [...]

Read More…

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 [...]

Read More…

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 [...]

Read More…

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 [...]

Read More…

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 […]

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