No Depression (magazine)


No Depression is a quarterly roots music journal with a concurrent online publication at nodepression.com. In print, No Depression is an ad-free publication focused on long-form music reporting and deep analysis that ties contemporary artists with the long chain of American roots music. In April 2020, No Depression introduced digital versions of their print journal. While the print journal remains ad-free, the digital versions include roots-music-related advertisements. Its journal contributors include roots music artists as well as professional critics and reporters, photographers, illustrators, and artists.
NoDepression.com was largely crowd-sourced by contributions from a combination of writers and fans, regular columnists and staff reviewers. In 2019, the online version of the publication moved to align more with its print version variant by no longer accepting community posts.

History

No Depression was launched in September 1995 by co-editors/co-founders Grant Alden and Peter Blackstock. Kyla Fairchild, who handled the business functions of the magazine from the beginning, became a co-publisher with Alden and Blackstock in 1998. The magazine was named for the Carter Family song "No Depression in Heaven," the 1990 album No Depression by the band Uncle Tupelo, and an early AOL online discussion group on alternative country called The No Depression Folder.
No Depression has received the Utne Reader Independent Press Awards for Arts & Literature coverage, and was cited as one of the nation's Top 20 magazines of any kind in 2004 by the Chicago Tribune.
Two No Depression music festivals took place at Marymoore Park, just outside Seattle. The first was on July 11, 2009 and featured Gillian Welch, Iron and Wine, Patterson Hood and the Screwtopians, Jesse Sykes, Justin Townes Earle, Jessica Lea Mayfield, Zee Avi, and Seattle roots music all-stars. The second was August 21, 2010 and featured The Swell Season, Lucinda Williams, The Cave Singers, Alejandro Escovedo, Chuck Prophet, Sera Cahoone, and The Maldives.
The publishers announced in February 2008 that the May–June 2008 issue would be their last. Buddy Miller was featured on the cover of the final issue, with No Depression declaring him Artist of the Decade. Soon after, co-founders Alden and Blackstock sold their ownership stakes to Fairchild in 2008 and 2010, respectively. In the wake of the magazine going out of print, No Depression launched a community website on the Ning platform in February 2009.
Fairchild sold her ownership of No Depression to FreshGrass LLC in 2014. In 2016, the FreshGrass Foundation – a nonprofit organization that supports roots musicians and music scenes around the United States – took over No Depression and the which it operates in conjunction with Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.

Return to print

In May 2015, No Depression announced it would be returning to print after seven years of being an online-only publication. According to an article by Kim Ruehl, "we’re opening up pre-orders via Kickstarter for what will be a truly unique magazine – there will be no advertisements. Instead, the articles will be accompanied only by stunning photography and original illustrations. The paper will be larger and thicker than you might remember from the original incarnation, printed by the one of the only carbon-neutral printers in North America."

History of print features

Features from the No Depression print journal
TITLEDATEFEATURES
Fall 2015Punch Brothers, I'm With Her, Jason Isbell, Lucinda Williams, the Mavericks, and more
Spring 2016Mavis Staples, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, David Grisman, Robert Burns, Bluegrass in Japan, and more
Summer 2016Sibling duos, Kill Rock Stars, English folk, Candi Staton, The Ash Grove, Levon Helm, the Ardoin Family, and more
Fall 2016The Weavers, the Dixie Chicks, Jail Guitar Doors USA, John Prine, Race in Country Music, and more
Winter 2016What’s bluegrass music? – Bela Fleck, Noam Pikelny, and Sarah Jarosz, Neil Rosenberg’s modern history of bluegrass music, Pioneering women of bluegrass – Hazel & Alice to Sierra Hull and beyond, Considering bluegrass rhythm sections, A pre-American history of the banjo, Bluegrass adventure outings
Spring 2017Dolly Parton, working class feminist, Bob Dylan’s Midwest roots, Heartland rock via John Mellencamp, Melissa Etheridge, Kansas, and more, The enduring legacy of Hee Haw, The unknown story of Indiana’s Gennett Records, Native American hip-hop and Standing Rock, Chicago and Austin’s musical exchange
Summer 2017Music life in Cuba, Shedding light on China’s folk-punk scene with Abigail Washburn, Hanggai, and more, Q&A with David Broza on music in Israel and Palestine, How ancient Indian kirtan music has spread in the West, Celebrating music at Italy’s Umbria Jazz Festival
Fall 2017A century of American music through the women of the Carter Family, Elizabeth Cotten’s folk revival, The untold story of Karen Dalton, Annie Oakley and the legacy of outlaw country, An oral history of ‘Trio’, Big Mama Thornton, Alice Gerrard, Ruthie Foster, Sharon Van Etten on artists like Vashti Bunyon and Jackie DeShannon, Daniel Lanois on the making of Emmylou Harris’ Wrecking Ball, Mark Erelli on Catie Curtis, Lori McKenna, and Kris Delmhorst, Kaia Kater
Winter 2017Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson, Ani DiFranco, The Avett Brothers, Jason Isbell, Lori McKenna, Chris Hillman, Josh Ritter, Eliza Gilkyson, Mary Gauthier, and Gretchen Peters, Jolie Holland & Samantha Parton, Emily Saliers, Chastity Brown, Caspar Babypants, Samantha Crain, Susan Werner, Leeroy Stagger
Spring 2018Ketch Secor, Rayna Gellert, Wild Ponies, Tyler Childers, Appalatin, Alan Lomax, Scott Miller, Billy Strings, Doc Watson
Summer 2018Johnny Cash, John Hartford, Dark Water Rising, The Kruger Brothers, Kalu & The Electric Joint, Woody Guthrie, Bobbie Gentry
Winter 2018Wilco and the use of technology on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, The history of the dreadnought guitar, The influence of the parlor piano, Tim Easton on recording his new record direct to lacquer, Radio Bristol, The rise of online music lessons, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Anna & Elizabeth, Outlaws & Armadillos at the Country Music Hall of Fame
Spring 2019The Beatles as a lasting influence to bluegrass and country musicians, Gillian Welch on winning a literary prize from University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Amanda Shires on her love of poetry and earning her M.F.A., Keith Secola and his "Native Americana" anthem, The legend of "John Henry", An introduction to jazz standards, Jason Molina's biographer reflects on the Magnolia Electric Co., The parallels between hip-hop and folk music lyrics, John Prine on songwriting
Summer 2019Pete Seeger's local legacy in the Hudson Valley, Tom Morello on Pete Seeger and the continued threat of censorship, The Kronos Quartet's classical-inspired Pete Seeger tribute, Steve Earle on Guy Clark, The 50th anniversary of Joni Mitchell's Clouds, A history of labor songs featuring Joe Hill, Billy Bragg, and Son Volt, The legacies of folk music supergroups like Cry, Cry, Cry, Monsters of Folk, and Our Native Daughters, Dracula on Spanish-language folk music, A resurgence of Yiddish-language folk songs, Original essays by Raye Zaragoza and Over the Rhine's Linford Detweiler
Fall 2019No Depression's take on a Food & Drink issue. In time for the harvest season, No Depression explores what roots musicians eat, drink, and smoke, as well as farm, foster, and distill. In a larger sense, the issue also aims to balance body and mind and embrace contemporary notions of self-care. Of course, stories also include a taste of roots music’s indulgences, too! Featuring Aoife O’Donovan, Lydia Loveless, American Aquarium, Steve Poltz, Ben Glover, Molly Tuttle, Sean Rowe, Margo Price, Frank Solivan, Steep Canyon Rangers, and more.
Winter 2019No Depression takes a more visual approach to understanding roots music in the Winter 2019 issue. Even though music is primarily an auditory experience, there are so many visual elements that go into presenting, performing, consuming, and engaging with this particular art form. Through No Depression’s exceptional print medium, the issue highlights the photos, comics, graphics, non-traditional band merchandise, and more that help both musicians and fans see new ideas through the sounds. Featured artists include Jeff Buckley, Scott Avett, Rebecca Loebe, The Mountain Goats, North Mississippi Allstars, Andrew Combs, Orville Peck, Elvis Presley, Kaia Kater, Mary Gauthier, Yola, Lillie Mae, and more.
Spring 2020Festival season starts in earnest in the spring, but of course live music happens all year round. This issue of No Depression explores all facets of the live music experience, compiling the most important roots music festivals and venturing behind the scenes at some legendary venues. Additionally, stories look at the challenges that live music curators and attendees face and dig into how roots musicians transform their recorded music into live presentations. Featured in this issue: Mandolin Orange, Rhett Miller, Chris Shiflett, Gaelynn Lea, Langhorne Slim, Wilco, Shovels & Rope, Laura Stevenson, Chadwick Stokes, High Fidelity, and more.
Summer 2020Roots music wouldn’t happen at all without a certain tool kit. Musicians need instruments to make acoustic music and all kinds of wires and technologies to project that music and transfer it to eager listeners. The Summer 2020 issue of No Depression explores equipment old and new and digital innovations by sharing stories of instruments, luthiers, machinery, and even less tangible songwriting tools to better understand how exactly roots music is made. Features include Alan Lomax, Alice Gerrard, American Aquarium, The Black Lillies, Ballake Sissoko, Dom Flemons, Jaime Wyatt, Steve Gunn, The Lowest Pair, Pharis & Jason Romero, and more.

Cover features from the original print magazine
  1. 58: Lizz Wright, #59: Nickel Creek, #60: New Orleans