John Prine
18 articles
Audio interviews
Interview by John Tobler, Rock's Backpages audio, July 1992
The singer-songwriter talks about writing a song with Phil Spector; on Bruce Springsteen and Bonnie Raitt; on songwriting; favourite songwriters; writing with Shel Silverstein; setting up his own label Oh Boy; recording in Memphis and Nashville; his friendship with Steve Goodman... and being covered by John Denver.
File format: mp3; file size: 61.3mb, interview length: 1h 03' 52" sound quality: ****
Interview by Paul Zollo, Rock's Backpages audio, 28 May 2009
The former mailman talks about how he started as a songwriter; on being a performer; on songs such as 'Angel from Montgomery'; the detailed ins-and-outs of songwriting; and looks back at his friend and collaborator Steve Goodman.
File format: mp3; file size: 93.0mb, interview length: 1h 42' 34" sound quality: ** (phoner)
List of articles in the library
School of Rock Study Guide: Singer-Songwriters
Guide by Barney Hoskyns, iTunes, October 2008
"WHERE DO YOU have left to go but in?" It was a question posed by Joni Mitchell, the brilliant Canadian blonde who specialized in intensely ...
Book Excerpt by Bruce Pollock, 'In Their Own Words' (Collier Books), 1975
ALTHOUGH AT FIRST he may sound like an early incarnation of Bob Dylan, lyrically John Prine has a voice all his own. Fusing his country ...
Singer-Songwriters: Back To The Roots!
Overview by Dave Laing, Melody Maker, 21 June 1975
In this exclusive extract from a major new rock book, The Electric Muse, Dave Laing investigates the post-Woodstock singer/songwriter syndrome, and charts the rise in ...
Troubadours: Who Was That Harp With Johnny Prine?
Report and Interview by Ed McCormack, Rolling Stone, 12 October 1972
NEW YORK — Last night John Prine squinted out into the audience at the Bitter End and drawled, "Whar's that harmonica player?" ...
Songs from the Gut: A Conversation with John Prine
Interview by Holly Gleason, No Depression, Fall 2016
JOHN PRINE, the original "new Dylan", has always written songs with a deep heart and a strong empathy for the people who go unseen. ...
Interview by Holly Gleason, Paste, 23 November 2011
"FIONA MADE ME CLEAN OUT THE GARAGE," John Prine confesses with a chuckle that's equal parts warm breeze, cold beer and fried chicken. "I cursed ...
John Prine: Regent's Park, London
Live Review by John Tobler, New Musical Express, 31 July 1976
IT MUST have been a terrible choice between seeing John Prine (and perhaps Steve Goodman?) at Regent's Park, and checking out the first British gig ...
John Prine: The Troubadour, Los Angeles CA
Live Review by Lester Bangs, Phonograph Record, January 1972
EVERYBODY'D BEEN talking about this guy Prine, how he was Kris Kristofferson's boozin' buddy or something, and since I like Kristofferson's Kerouacian American romanticism I ...
John Prine: A Non Philosophical Singer/Songwriter?
Profile and Interview by Martin Hawkins, Country Music People, June 1980
WHEN I SPOKE to John Prine during a recent visit he made to Britain, he was searching, in this order, for his girlfriend (who plays ...
John Prine: Another Diamond In The Rough
Profile by Martin Hawkins, Goldmine, 27 April 1984
IT SEEMED strange to be tracking down John Prine recently to find out why there hasn't been a John Prine album release in four years. ...
Review by Michael Gray, Let It Rock, January 1973
A NEW ALBUM by John Prine is an event. Let it be said at once that Prine is immeasurably the best singer-songwriter to come out ...
Review by Nicholas Jennings, Inside Entertainment, 2005
CHICAGO IS THE cradle of modern blues, the place where Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf urbanized and electrified the music of the Mississippi Delta. But, ...
Interview by Norman Jopling, unpublished, September 1972
JOHN PRINE IS THE GUY that sang the song about the hole in Daddy's arm where all the money goes, and a whole bunch of ...
John Prine: The Blue Railroad Interview
Interview by Paul Zollo, Blue Railroad, Summer 2009
"You can write about anything. Anything at all. As a matter of fact, the less familiar, the better." ...
John Prine: Sweet Revenge (Atlantic)
Review by Tom Nolan, Rolling Stone, 31 January 1974
SWEET REVENGE is another side of John Prine, a departure from the nearly unrelenting somberness of his earlier work, and an engaging picture of the ...
Review by Tom Nolan, Phonograph Record, May 1975
FLESHED OUT WITH such guest performers as Jackson Browne, J.D. Souther, Glenn Frey and Steve Goodman, Common Sense comes on like Prine's ultimate supersession production; ...
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