Events
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Start: 7:00 pm
Fri 9/28 7pm-8pm
David Menconi
discusses Ryan Adams: Losering, a Story
of Whiskeytown
Before he achieved his dream of being an internationally
known rock personality, Ryan Adams had a band in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Whiskeytown led the wave of insurgent-country bands that came of age with No
Depression magazine in the mid-1990s, and for many people it defined the era.
Adams was an irrepressible character, one of the signature personalities of his
generation, and as a singer-songwriter he blew people away with a mature talent
that belied his youth. David Menconi witnessed most of Whiskeytown’s rocket
ride to fame as the music critic for the Raleigh News & Observer, and in
Ryan Adams, he tells the inside story of the singer’s remarkable rise from
hardscrabble origins to success with Whiskeytown, as well as Adams’s
post-Whiskeytown self-reinvention as a solo act.
Menconi draws on early interviews with Adams,
conversations with people close to him, and Adams’s extensive online postings
to capture the creative ferment that produced some of Adams’s best music,
including the albums Strangers Almanac and Heartbreaker. He reveals that, from
the start, Ryan Adams had an absolutely determined sense of purpose and
unshakable confidence in his own worth. At the same time, his inability to hold
anything back, whether emotions or torrents of songs, often made Adams his own
worst enemy, and Menconi recalls the excesses that almost, but never quite,
derailed his career. Ryan Adams is a fascinating, multifaceted portrait of the
artist as a young man, almost famous and still inventing himself, writing songs
in a blaze of passion.
David Menconi has been the music critic at the Raleigh
News & Observer since 1991, and he misses the days when it was possible to
see Whiskeytown play in Raleigh every week. His writing has also appeared in
Spin, Billboard, the New York Times, and a host of publications that
regrettably no longer exist. Chief among the latter is No Depression magazine,
for which he was a contributing editor. His byline appeared in every issue
except one during the magazine’s thirteen-year run.
Author photo by Juli Leonard
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