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JOHN PRINE MISCELLANEOUS AWARDS - REVIEWS 2005

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· more: MISC | 2004 | Flashbacks | Fair & Square Album

REVIEWS OF JOHN PRINE CONCERTS & ALBUMS 2005


CONCERT REVIEWS BY YEAR
2006 | 2005 | 2004
2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000


JOHN  PRINE ALBUM REVIEWS

 

2005 John Prine Other Links of interest:

2005 Set Lists

2005 Prine fan concert photos gallery

 

Venue: AMP AWA RD
Date: BEST OF 2005
By: The AMP electorate
http://www.austin360.com/music/content/music/stories/2005/12/29music.html  
AUSTIN SONG OF THE YEAR.... 
1. 'We Can't Make It Here,' James McMurtry 
2. 'Time,' the Greencards 
3. 'I Turn My Camera On,' Spoon 
4. 'Childish Things,' James McMurty 
5. 'Long Long Time,' Guy Forsyth 
6. 'Paradise Hotel,' Eliza Gilkyson 
7. 'The Big Wheel,' Stephen Bruton 
8. 'Clay Pigeons,' John Prine (written by Blaze Foley) 
9. 'I Hope,' Dixie Chicks 
10. 'Little Rock,' Hayes Carll 
 The AMP electorate: John T. Kunz of Waterloo Records, Melanie Shrawder of KUT, Richard Skanse of Texas Music Magazine, Jody Denberg of KGSR, John Conquest of 3rd Coast Music and XL's Michael Corcoran, Joe Gross and Lynne Margolis.

Venue: Austin City Limits on PBS
Date: Nov 18
By: Harriett Gustason - The Journal Standard
Daily Features 
As I See It ..... a good time to take inventory... 
Saturday night while dozing off during a television program, I awoke unexplainably to one of the most beautiful voices I have ever heard. The program was “Austin City Limits,” on Chicago's public television. I think the vocalist was famous, but he was new to me. John Prine was his name. I wouldn't call it strictly country, or blues, or rock or pop, maybe folk. I don't know. I'm no authority. Prine had made a comeback after cancer surgery and was singing his testimony of picking up the pieces of his life and beginning again, writing the lyrics that spelled out what life means to him. I was thankful I awakened to hear him. 
read the entire article at: http://www.journalstandard.com/articles/2005/11/24/daily_features/pulse/pulse02.txt

Venue: XM Radio Fair & Square Album Launch
Date: April 17,2005
By: Kevin - Beltsville,Md
XM Radio's XCountry (XM12) featured the premier of the new John Prine album Fair & Square on Sunday, April 17. The album was great as was the interview with John. It's going to be re-broadcast on XM on The Village (XM 15)-Saturday, April 23rd at 6pm East/3pm West. and The Loft (XM 50)-Tuesday, April 26th at 9pm East/6pm West. I'll be listening again.


Venue: Creative Loafing Interview
Date: April 13, 2005
By: Steve Fennessy

VIBES | FEATURE 04.13.05
Prine Is Back
After beating cancer, the songwriting legend returns to form

  A week ago Thursday, if you were at Hartsfield-Jackson airport waiting on a flight, you might have seen a man with a head full of bushy hair that's gone gray. He would have looked to be pushing about 60, and might have rocked a bit when he walked. He held a cell phone to his ear for a while, and while he was talking, you might have noticed he kept looking over at the electric trash compactors that turn magazines and coffee cups into mulch. And you'd no doubt notice his grin, which is big and easy and maybe even a little goofy, which is one of his favorite words.
  The man is John Prine, and he was on his way to Asheville, N.C., to open the tour supporting his latest album, Fair & Square. It's been nine years since Prine released a record of new material. For his fans, who are an impassioned bunch, the wait has been somewhat frustrating, only partially alleviated by Prine's semi-regular touring schedule. He plays weekend shows throughout the country for part of the year while he writes new songs.
  Or doesn't write songs, as the case may be.
  Prine's approach to songwriting can most generously be described as relaxed. He's said before that he'd gladly put down his pen if somebody offered him so much as a hot dog. But in the nine-year period since his last CD of new material, Lost Dogs & Mixed Blessings, Prine's had to deal with distractions a lot bigger than hot dogs.
  In 1997, he was diagnosed with cancer in his neck. He beat it, but the surgery and radiation dropped his voice an octave and left it even more gravelly than usual. He had his hip replaced. In 2001, he took a spill in Ireland and busted his elbow. But the biggest distraction has been his two sons, who are now 9 and 10, the children of his third marriage.
  "For 49 years, it was kind of a quirky world for me," he says by phone from Hartsfield. "I'd go wherever I wanted, get up whenever I wanted to. I'd been married twice before, but I never had any children. The children, they tell you when to get up, when to go to bed. It threw me for a loop - a good loop."
  Until his children were born, Prine's songwriting depended as much on serendipity as focused effort. "I would just wait until lightning struck. It'd be 4 in the morning and I'd write a song and go back to sleep." He chuckles. "I was never busy before when lightning struck. I was just walkin' around waitin' for a storm."
  In his youth, Prine explained (when he visited the Library of Congress earlier this year at the invitation of America's poet laureate Ted Kooser), he was often subject to "spells," as he called them, where it would seem like he was looking down at the room from above. Such spells brought on emotions that led to songs. The best songs, he said, took about as much time to write as they did to sing.
  Today, with two kids to chase after, a summer house in Ireland, the responsibilities of running his own record label, and the challenge of maintaining his health, Prine has to fit in his muse when he can.
  "In order to write a record, I had to make an appointment with myself," he says with another chuckle.
  But his fans can rest easy: Fair & Square, which will be released April 26, is a return to form. Look no further than "She is my Everything," about his wife, Fiona, in which Prine rhymes "Copenhagen" with "eggs and bacon." Or "Some Humans Ain't Human," the last song he wrote for the record. In it, he blasts George W. Bush's Iraq war.
  "I don't particularly like protest songs myself because they don't last very long," he says. "Soon as you mention anything about current events, it puts a time limit on the song. But in this case, I started feeling like the stuff that the administration was doing - from the Dixie Chicks on down, the way they came down on anybody saying anything about Iraq - I thought this was pretty crazy. Anyway, I got the feeling if I didn't say something that that would be a 'yes' vote for Bush. So I wanted to make it clear if a bus should hit me tomorrow morning, I wasn't a Republican."
  At his shows, Prine even took one of his first songs out of retirement, the self-explanatory "Your Flag Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven Anymore." And last fall Prine took part in Vote for Change, the coalition of musicians who tried to mobilize voters to vote Bush out of office. Some of his fans didn't appreciate their guy wearing his politics on his sleeve.
  "You think you know who you're playing to. Not that I'm trying to please everybody, but I was surprised that as many people would get as pissed off as they did. In the same letters, they said they'd been following the music for 30 years. You wonder what songs they've been listening to."
  Prine laughs again.
  "So if nothing else, I feel like I've cleared the board and reminded 'em where I'm comin' from."
  Oh, and one more thing - Prine says his next album should come a bit quicker this time around.
  "I'm gonna try and do one in three years. You can write that down."


 

Venue: Things got real hot at Prine's photo shoot
Date: Sunday Jan 30, 2005
By: The Tennessean
 http://tennessean.com/celebrities/archives/05/01/64882948.shtml?Element_ID=64882948  
  Poet/singer/legend/treasure John Prine just got back from a photo shoot in Ireland for his new album, and he had some mini-excitement. 
  John and some fabulous European photographer rented a Mini Cooper and headed out to the countryside to a pub for the shoot. John put the car in the garage and the photo shoot began. 
  Shortly thereafter a black cloud, then flames burst into the pub after a fire broke out in the apartment next door. 
  ''We kinda smelled something funny,'' John said. ''I've never been that close to when that black smoke burst into flames everywhere. 
''Then I realized I parked the Mini I'd been driving in the carport. So I had to rush in and drive the car out of there.'' 
  Wow. He must have a really high deductible. 
  Car and Grammy winner are both doing fine. 
  The album, Fair & Square, with guest vocals from Mindy Smith and Alison Krauss, is out at the end of

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