ND #10 :: July-Aug 1997 Not quite two years ago now, when I had just moved into the converted garage which had been Peters first home in Seattle, and hed just moved into the front house, and wed both decided to take each others hallucinations seriously and start a magazine, I stumbled upon a 7-inch from this band in North Carolina. I remember walking into his living room waving the thing and saying something like, "You ever heard of this band Whiskeytown? Cause I think you should." Peter e-mailed his friend in Raleigh, David Menconi, who e-mailed back saying, "Funny you should ask about Whiskeytown," and concurred they were one of his favorite new local bands. Voila, we had our first Town & Country opening spread. Last night, as we sat in my still-new Nashville digs (Im above the garage this time), editing and designing this issues Whiskeytown cover story, Peter dug out all the tapes hes accumulated since that hot August morning and we played Ryan Adams songs long into the night, three records worth and more hes probably forgotten writing. A little over a year ago, No Depressions first and much-beloved ad rep, Jenni Sperandeo, left our ranks to become Whiskeytowns manager; this spring, we loaned the magazines name to a national tour the band co-headlined (at the final show of which they lured Peter onstage to sing harmony on an Alejandro Escovedo song). If that all smacks of a loss of critical distance, well, then, so be it. The music speaks for itself, and if it doesnt speak to others as strongly as it does to us, at least were all still having a conversation about something which deeply matters. That conversation seems not to happen much here in Nashville. Music City seems to this newcomer a peculiar kind of manufacturing town in which everybody goes home to their lawn when the whistle blows at five oclock. Three or four nights a week I stumble around one of the citys many half-empty venues, wondering where all the people are. Well, those Ive spoken with on the phone apologize and say theyre tired after a long days work, and thats fair enough. But my friends in the rock quarries of Los Angeles (where I lived in exile for 16 months) and New York still find the time and energy to attend shows. Every raw intern with any sense begins assembling a network of friends at other labels so they can all get into shows for free. Its hardly my place to tell other people how to live, but the culture of the place says a lot about the art it produces. And, first off, I dont think most of Music City views music as art, but as product. Thats the culture of session players and punched-in vocals and cloistered songwriters on top of which is placed a lead singer in a cowboy hat, all served up to the handful of radio programmers who far as I can tell really run this place. If you work on an assembly line, the last thing you want to do with your nights is turn a wrench. But this is a special business, and we even we parasites on the sidelines are specially privileged to make some kind of living from it. My sense is that too many people who work behind the scenes in Nashville have lost the joy of the music, have turned a rare opportunity to make a living doing something they love into into a job. And jobs stop at five oclock. Well its not just a job, folks, and if the music no longer delights and inspires you enough to get you off the couch a few nights each week, youre in the wrong business. There are plenty of jobs in the insurance business. |