翻訳と辞書
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・ No Friends of Harry
・ No frills
・ No Frills (Bette Midler album)
・ No frills (disambiguation)
・ No Frills (grocery store)
・ No Frills (Nik Kershaw album)
・ No Frills (TV series)
・ No Frills Excursions
・ No Frills Friend
・ No Dejemos Que se Apague
・ No Deliverance
・ No deposit bonus
・ No Deposit, No Return
・ No Deposit, No Return (2004 film)
・ No Depression
No Depression (album)
・ No Depression (magazine)
・ No Depression in Heaven
・ No Dessert, Dad, till You Mow the Lawn
・ No Destruction
・ No Devolución
・ No Devotion
・ No Dice
・ No Diggity
・ No Direction Home
・ No direction home
・ No Direction Home (album)
・ No Dirty Names
・ No Disco
・ No Disguise


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No Depression (album) : ウィキペディア英語版
No Depression (album)

''No Depression'' is the first studio album by alternative country band Uncle Tupelo, released in June 1990. After its formation in the late 1980s, Uncle Tupelo recorded the ''Not Forever, Just for Now'' demo tape, which received a positive review by the ''College Media Journal'' in 1989.〔 〕 The review led to the band's signing with what would become Rockville Records later that year. The album was recorded with producers Sean Slade and Paul Q. Kolderie at Fort Apache Studios, on a budget of US$3,500.
''No Depression'' was critically acclaimed and sold well for an independent release. Selling over 15,000 copies within a year of its release, the album's success inspired the roots music magazine ''No Depression''. The record is considered one of the most important alternative country albums, and its title is often used as a synonym for the alternative country genre after being popularized by ''No Depression'' magazine. After regaining the rights to the album through a lawsuit, Uncle Tupelo released a remastered version in 2003 through Legacy Records, expanded to include six bonus tracks.
== Background ==
Jay Farrar, Jeff Tweedy and Mike Heidorn began their musical careers in the 1980s playing in a garage band, The Plebes. After a few gigs, creative differences between the members led to the development of a punk rock sound for the band.〔Heidorn, Mike (2003). ''No Depression'' (re-issue liner notes ). Legacy Recordings.〕 As punk rock was unpopular in the St. Louis region, the band changed their style to blues-rock and renamed themselves Uncle Tupelo. At this point, they stopped performing covers and began to write their own songs.
The band discovered a musical niche around Washington University in St. Louis, where bands such as Brian Henneman's Chicken Truck performed in a similar style. The trio recorded its first professional tracks in Champaign, Illinois with future Chicago punk producer Matt Allison. The demo tape, ''Not Forever, Just for Now'', contained early versions of several songs that would later appear on their debut album, including "Train", "Whiskey Bottle", "Flatness", "Screen Door", and "Before I Break".
That demo, as well as the band's rigorous touring schedule, attracted the attention of several music scouts. Record labels initially were wary of signing the band whom they perceived as straddling "the divide between the countrified punk of early 1980s such as Green on Red, Jason & the Scorchers, and X—none of whom had bum-rushed the charts—and the Pacific Northwest grunge of Mudhoney and Nirvana, which was still years from breaking out commercially".〔 However, the influential ''CMJ New Music Report'' gave the demo tape a favorable review in 1989, praising its "mature, developed, seriously thought-out songwriting". This review prompted New York City-based distributor Dutch East India Trading to provide funding for the band to record an album on their Giant Records label, shortly before the label was renamed to Rockville Records.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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