For Immediate Release:
27 April 2005
For More Information:
Holly Gleason for Joe's Garage
John Prine: Cover Boy?
Iconic American Songwriter Graces No Depression, American Songwriter
Covers
Also #1 Folk Download, #11 Overall at Amazon.com
Nashville: When John Prine decided to release his first album in 9
years, the already critically acclaimed Fair & Square, he figured
it was time. "I had a bunch of songs I like pretty well," he said of his
motivation, "and I wanted to see if anybody agreed with me."
Not only did people agree, there's been some pretty amazing
publications offering insight into the deeply human work of the
Grammy-winning songwriter who recently became the first musician to read
at the Library of Congress -- at the invitation of America's Poet
Laureate Ted Kooser. Chicago-based critic Lloyd Sachs spent a long
afternoon interviewing the former mailman for an expansive cover piece
in the current issue of indie-roots-music-bible No Depression for
a feature that ties up the loose ends of a storied career in a way that
grounds the temerity of his current music.
"It's funny how when you start talking, you start to realize how the
things connect," Prine admits with a laugh. "Sometimes you're so busy
living the life, you don't think about how one thing leads to another,
so I'm remembering a lot of things from these conversations. It's a
pretty interesting way to time-travel, though I don't know that I'd want
to make a habit of it."
Looking back may have a certain sweetness, but Prine's music has
always been rooted in the here-and-now - even when it's looking back.
And for a particularly look at his craft and his process, the
Chicago-born artist talks about his gift for a cover piece by Paul
Griffith in American Songwriter that examines the challenges, the
muse and the mirth of the what the man who's given the world "Sam
Stone," "Hello In There," "I Only Want To Dance With You," "Angel from
Montgomery," "Speed of the Sound of Loneliness," "Picture Show" and
"Lake Marie."
"Being a writer is a responsibility. I'm trying to be responsible
for the records I've made before and try to keep the standards up,"
confesses the man who also admits, "Nowadays, I probably write as much
while I'm driving as I do sitting with my guitar or at a desk. I've
always got it going."
USA Today gave Fair & Square 3 1/2 stars -- raving, "You're
never quite sure whether John Prine's songs mean more or less than what
you take away from them, but that's part of their charm. Prine's craggy,
conversational voice dispenses wisdom with a wink and hides humor inside
ruminations on fame, home and his lover's Cadillac-black hair," and
Billboard gave it their Critic's Choice designation, saying, "Nine
years is way too long without a fresh batch of John Prine originals, but
the so-dang-human "Fair & Square" is worth the wait. Issued again on his
homegrown Oh Boy label, the 12-pack is quintessential blue-collar Prine:"
The #1 Folk download -- and #11 overall -- at Amazon.com, Fair &
Square is finally out -- and ready for fans to hear. Given the wait,
according to the critics, it's more than worth the patience.
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