No Depression

Ojai Sam

Staff member
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They say you can't go home again, but sometimes that's not true. "No Depression" is at once a song, a style of music and a magazine. The magazine died in 2008 but lo and behold, it returned in 2015 true to the original concept.

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The first iteration of No Depression magazine appeared in September 1995. As it happened, that was a very depressing time in my life, so a new magazine full of exciting stories about a new style of music was right up my alley. It had more impact on my approach to music and writing than anything I've ever read. In this thread, I'll be sharing some of my favorite music, old and new along with the occasional personal reminiscence.

Where else could I begin but here?

Uncle Tupelo - No Depression (1990)

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Yin and Yang
Sturm und Drang
Crunch and Twang

Life is full of dualities. :confused:

I decided to spin this one again before commenting. Turns out it is just as powerful even in the absence of personal turmoil and/or Bombay Sapphire and tonic to help it along. Alt country has a lot of ingredients, but the combustible duo of Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy shook grunge and country up together to provide the perfect atmosphere for their dark lyrics. Eventually, like Lennon and McCartney, the pair flew apart leaving behind the best music either would ever do.

For a number of reasons, I try to avoid living my favorite songs. Maybe I saw one too many episodes of the Twilight Zone and was afraid I'd wake up trapped inside a vintage jukebox filled with nothing but Ernest Tubb records. Nevertheless, "Whiskey Bottle" was my theme song for about 18 months, and damned if it wasn't prophetic:

A long way from happiness
In a three hour away town
Whiskey bottle over Jesus
Not forever, just for now
Not forever, just for now


Sure enough, it wasn't forever. :worm:

:5.0: on the Sam-O-Meter.
 
Nevertheless, "Whiskey Bottle" was my theme song for about 18 months, and damned if it wasn't prophetic:
I'm sorry to hear that.

Sure enough, it wasn't forever. :worm:
And I'm glad to hear this.


I don't know much about Alt-Country but the genre interests me. I have long disliked Country music. But the influence of that on Alt-country and the influence of the latter on Americana has generated a retooling of my musical interests. A lot of 50-cent words to say I don't hate country anymore and I'm interested in it, but mostly from the lens of modern music backwards.

I like Uncle Tupelo but only own one of their albums. I like Son Volt very much but only own a few downloaded tracks. I have a current musical crush on Amanda Anne Platte and the Honeycutters. I've sent myself an email to my office inbox to listen to this tomorrow. And I look forward to whatever recommendations come of this topic.





The reason I started typing is because you mentioned music that was your theme song during a hard time. My marriage took four or five years from initial crumbling to final decimation. It was The Allman Brothers Band's - Not My Cross To Bear that became my theme song and gave me comfort. I don't really want to start an entire topic on songs that carried each of us through hard times. But I wanted to unburden myself from that bit of trivia.

Edit: But I *thank you for your patience while I* unburden myself from that bit of trivia.
 
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Love this post, @Old Uncle Toe. Music and work can be marvelously therapeutic as long as you don't live out your songs or through your work. For a variety of reasons starting with the departure of my secretary and ending with Covid-19, I haven't had a lot of time for long, introspective posts. But this album hit my radar recently and it's too good not to share in this thread.

Son Volt - Trace (1995, Deluxe Edition 2015)
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After Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy broke up Uncle Tupelo, Jay went deeper into the moody alt country vibe. I think an awful lot of us who were around at the time suffered such trauma from UT's demise that their later work suffered by comparison. 20 years after the fact, Rhino released an expanded version of Son Volt's debut and it is stunning. The 11 songs comprising the original album were a powerful declaration of independence from the crossover ambitions of Tweedy. In a 2015 interview for The Boot, Farrar recalled:

"Ultimately, I was ecstatic to actually be playing with a pedal steel guitar and a fiddle. That instrumentation is what inspired me to write some of the songs for Trace. Actually getting into the studio and hearing the layer of sounds and the way those instruments fit together, that was inspirational to me. Leading up to that, the whole writing process was liberating: It was a liberating time for me, both creatively and personally. I was living in a new city, in New Orleans, and making long drives across the country and listening to a lot of country music on AM radio -- that sort of found its way into the lyrics, like on the song 'Windfall.'"

If the album seems a lot better than I recalled, the bonus material is revelatory. We get to enjoy 8 demos from the Trace sessions that offer an intimate fly on the wall view of Farrar's creative rebirth. The second disc presents a complete show at The Bottom Line in NYC from February 1996, apparently recorded on The Rolling Stones' mobile truck if Jay's memory is to be believed. As someone who is terminally addicted to Uncle Tupelo live boots, I'm a very tough audience. But this concert comes damn close to matching the ferocious energy of the best Tupelo shows. Farrar even has the chutzpah to cover three songs from the same album by his former band (Anodyne). As an encore, he rips through Del Reeves' trucker classic "Looking At The World Through A Windshield" just as Uncle Tupelo used to close with "Truck Drivin' Man".

Unlike, say, John Fogerty, Jay Farrar succeeded in making peace with his past from the get go. This collection documents exactly how he achieved that rebirth, at home, in the studio and on stage.

:5.0: on the Sam-O-Meter.
 
I have heard of Uncle Tupelo, but have never heard their music, and had no idea that Jeff Tweedy of Wilco started the band with his high school friend. Maybe I should check out Uncle Tupelo, although quite frankly the only thing I have liked from Wilco is the album "Summerteeth". I never understood why "YHF" was so beloved. It never clicked with me. But (I think it was) OUT posted their album "Mermaid Avenue" that they did with Billy Bragg as part of our listening series and I was surprisingly taken with it.
I'm going to check out UT this weekend to see if anything clicks.
 
I have heard of Uncle Tupelo, but have never heard their music, and had no idea that Jeff Tweedy of Wilco started the band with his high school friend. Maybe I should check out Uncle Tupelo, although quite frankly the only thing I have liked from Wilco is the album "Summerteeth". I never understood why "YHF" was so beloved. It never clicked with me. But (I think it was) OUT posted their album "Mermaid Avenue" that they did with Billy Bragg as part of our listening series and I was surprisingly taken with it.
I'm going to check out UT this weekend to see if anything clicks.
Let us know what you think! I’m underwhelmed by YHF too. I really like Mermaid Avenue, perhaps because it’s atypical of Wilco’s style.
 
Alejandro Escovedo - Gravity (1992)

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Hey, let's revive this dormant thread! :zzz::aha:

Alejandro Escovedo has enjoyed a long and varied musical career. That should be no surprise when you consider that his brothers are Coke Escovedo and Pete Escovedo. Another brother, Mario, fronted the hard rock band the Dragons, and still another brother, Javier Escovedo, was in the punk rock band the Zeros. Oh, and Pete's daughter is Sheila E.

Alejandro himself has ranged far and wide from punk (The Nuns) to alt country (Rank and File) to the genre-defying True Believers. Gravity, his first solo outing, is similarly hard to pigeonhole. It arrived after the first wave of No Depression artists had crested and before Americana became a thing. It all starts with the songs, and Escovedo's writing shows a unique style that is literate without being literary, finely crafted without artifice, contemplative without pathos. The arrangements run the gamut from chamber pop to country to rock and roll. Background vocals are credited to "The Screaming Me Me's", the best group name I've heard in a long while.

This album generated a lot of excitement among the No Depression crowd when it came out. It didn't bowl me over at the time, perhaps because I missed the twang of Rank and File. But I recently scored the bonus disc version on MusicBoomerang and it turned my head completely around. In addition to one studio outtake, the second disc presents a live set from February 1993 recorded at McCabe's Guitar Shop in Santa Monica that included 7 of the 11 songs from Gravity. Rather than trying to reproduce the diverse instrumentation of the studio album, Alejandro and producer Stephen Bruton rounded up a string chamber trio and added Willie Nelson's stellar harmonica player, Mickey Raphael. The subtle instrumentation, warm acoustics and receptive audience combined to display Alejandro's songcraft in an intimate way that the album for all its style fails to capture.

:5.0: on the Sam-O-Meter. Go for the 2-CD version on Lone Star Records.
 
As of last May, No Depression will cease publication of a paper magazine, and go online only. This unhappy development coincides with its acquisition by something called the Fresh Grass Foundation. According to the foundation website,

Moving forward, No Depression will be expanding its editorial voice to move into other expressions of roots arts, roots culture and even fiction writing and poetry. No Depression will reflect the wider variety of arts in our funding program and will speak to the entire roots cultural community beyond music.”

:vic:

This concept is so nebulous as to be of no interest to me. Besides,

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