No Depression: What It Sounds Like, Vol. 1

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CD

  • Release Date: 03/09/2004
  • Sales Rank: 134,090
  • Label: DUALTONE MUSIC GROUP
  • UPC: 803020115323
 
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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Editorial Reviews

The publishers of the alternative country magazine No Depression offer a thumbnail overview of the fertile subgenre on this compilation. The disc begins by tipping its proverbial hat to two forefathers, with Johnny Cash rendering a bristling version of Willie Nelson's "Time of the Preacher," backed by a host of Seattle grunge rockers, and ends with the Carter Family's "No Depression," the zine's namesake song. In between are many individual spins on the traditional country that lies at the roots of the sound, such as Allison Moorer's dark, foreboding ballad "Is Heaven Good Enough for You"; the late Doug Sahm's western swing–infused "Cowboy Peyton Place"; and Buddy Miller's stark, sarcastic indictment of a faithless significant other, "Does My Ring Burn Your Finger." Kasey Chambers reminds us why hers remains the most penetrating voice of her generation on the pulsating country rocker "Dam" (previously available only on an Australian EP). And while he may have moved on to a more rock-centric sound of late, Ryan Adams turns up with his old band Whiskeytown on "Faithless Street," a template for the angst-ridden, languorous style of country common to the early alternative bands. At the other end of the scale is Hayseed, who stay firmly rooted in rustic tradition on the old-time hymn "Farther Along," featuring Emmylou Harris's keening harmonies. As a sampler, this disc leaves one wanting more -- and that's a good thing. Maybe that's why they called it Vol. 1. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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No Depression: What It Sounds Like, Vol. 1by Anonymous

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March 12, 2004: After nine years of writing about music, the editors of “No Depression” have cut out the wordy indirections with this thirteen track essay on alternative country music. No doubt they’ve been pieced together compilations like this for friends, but now those outside the immediate circle now get to share in their obsession. This thirteen track collection has the breadth needed to stake out a genre as hazy as “No Depression.” There are founders (The Carter Family) and legends (Johnny Cash, Doug Sahm, Emmylou Harris), alt.country darlings (Whiskeytown, Robbie Fulks, Alejandro Escovedo, Lucinda Williams) and artists from the various spokes of the alt.country umbrella. And as if that weren’t enough, there are frictional sparks thrown off by several surprising collaborations. ¶ It’s fitting that the collection opens with one of mainstream country music’s biggest stars and most ornery individualists, Johnny Cash. The combination of Cash’s riveting baritone, Willie Nelson’s song of a murderous preacher, and Seattle’s finest grunge-rock musicians (Soundgarden guitarist Kim Thayil, Nirvana’s bassist Krist Novaselic, and Alice in Chains’ dummer Sean Kinney) is just the sort of alchemy that frees country music’s essence from Nashville’s commercial constrictions. The battle between John Carter Cash’s acoustic 12-string and Thayil’s storming electric provides truly magnificent accompaniment to Nelson’s tale of temptation. ¶ Alison Moorer’s “Is Heaven Good Enough For You” provides a compelling segue, tagging off on the preacher’s theme to introduce a moving eulogy for Moorer’s mother. It’s an incredibly confident and personal turn for a debut album (this is drawn from Moorer’s 1998 “Alabama Song”), and features superbly wrought harmony singing. It’s a perfect example of how major labels (MCA in this case) can innovate on the edges of their commercial inclinations. Buddy Miller’s “Does My Ring Burn Your Finger,” provides another side to that coin, having been turned into a hit single by Lee Ann Womack. The latter couldn’t muster the deep soul of this original, but showed off the sheer quality of Miller’s songwriting. ¶ Whiskeytown’s “Faithless Street” finds poster boy Ryan Adams summing up much of the alt.country experience with Gram Parsons’ styled anguish, and the declaration, “So I started this damn country band / ‘Cause punk rock was too hard to sing.” The combination of twanging guitars, bending steel and Caitlin Cary’s old-timey fiddle lines show off several of the flavors included in the No Depression rubric. ¶ Segueing once again, Adams wasn’t the only artist who’d gravitated from punk rock to country. Alejandro Escovedo, having started out in The Nuns and crossing genres with Rank and File, settled in by founding the Austin-based True Believers, and subsequently recording a series of solo albums. Escovedo’s “Five Hearts Breaking” shows how well he writes with the troubadour’s touch and human detail of Springsteen and Zevon. ¶ Neko Case’s “Thrice All American” is a moving waltz-time ode to her hometown of Tacoma, WA. The near-jewel of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle won the railhead and the battle was over) has...