10 Songs for the New Depression | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Loudon Wainwright III |
Cover: | Loudon Wainwright III - 10 Songs for the New Depression.jpg |
Alt: | On the left half of a black-and-white album cover, the text "10 Songs for the New Depression" along the top and "Loudon Wainwright III" along the bottom. On the right half, an image of a man with crossed legs sitting on a bench, holding a guitar and an American flag. Behind the man is a "Welcome" sign, a mounted fire extinguisher and a window with the "No Public Restrooms" sign. |
Released: | July 2010 |
Label: | Proper |
Prev Year: | 2009 |
Next Title: | Older Than My Old Man Now |
Next Year: | 2012 |
10 Songs for the New Depression is the twenty-first studio album by American singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III, released in July 2010 through Proper Records.[1] Released forty years following his first studio album, 10 Songs is Wainwright's first album since his Grammy Award-winning tribute project (2009).[1] The concept album was inspired by the financial crisis of 2007–2008 and Great Recession, and features Wainwright backed by his own banjo, guitar and ukulele performances.
Wainwright began writing songs for the album following the inauguration of Barack Obama in January 2009. The album features ten original songs and two cover versions of songs originally written and recorded during the Great Depression. Lyrical references throughout 10 Songs include economists Alan Greenspan, John Maynard Keynes and Paul Krugman, President Barack Obama, and the government program Car Allowance Rebate System (more commonly known as "cash for clunkers"). Overall, critical reception of the album was positive. 10 Songs reached peak positions of number thirty-eight on the United Kingdom's Top Independent Albums chart and number twelve on the Top 40 Independent Albums Breakers chart.
Wainwright began writing songs for the album following the January 2009 inauguration of Barack Obama.[2] In January 2010, Wainwright said of the album:
On February 22, The New Yorker featured a video of Wainwright performing "The Krugman Blues" and complimenting the publication's March 2010 article which profiled economist Paul Krugman.[3] Part of "Cash for Clunkers" was featured in a segment of NPR's program Car Talk. Wainwright was able to promote the album by touring both before and after the album's release. The Loud and Rich Tour, which co-headlined Wainwright and long-time friend Richard Thompson, began in the fall of 2009 and continued into 2011.[4] [5] [6]
10 Songs for the New Depression is a simple vocal and acoustic performance album composed of original songs as well as two cover versions of songs from the Great Depression. The album is approximately thirty minutes in length and contains lyrical references to economist Alan Greenspan, Nobel Prize-winning economist and The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, and President Barack Obama.[7] While Wainwright's previous studio album (2009) contains more than twenty musicians and singers, The Guardian contributor Robin Denselow described 10 Songs as featuring a "pared-down, DIY set, in keeping with the mood of the new songs".[8]
The opening track, "Times Is Hard", features "bleak" lyrics about "nihilism [being] used as a tool to remedy social ills" sung to upbeat melodies.[8] Wainwright wrote the song following the inauguration of Barack Obama. "House" is about economics and relationships, and tells the story of a couple wanting to divorce but staying together because they cannot sell their house.[8] [9] In the liner notes, Wainwright admitted that at the time the album was released he "remained relatively unscathed by the New Depression" but owned a house in Southern California that he was unable to sell.[7] "On to Victory, Mr. Roosevelt" and "The Panic Is On" were both originally written during the Great Depression.[9] Circa 1933, Texas politician W. Lee O'Daniel wrote and recorded the former. Medicine show performer Hezekiah Jenkins originally wrote and recorded "The Panic Is On"."Fear Itself" is about being fired "from the job you always professed to hate" and contains a reference to John Maynard Keynes.[10] [11] "The Krugman Blues" references the "gloomy mien of one's favourite economic pundit", Paul Krugman, whom Wainwright met on a train to Boston. Wainwright believed Krugman's sense of melancholy made for a "compelling and challenging character".[12] "Spooky" sound effects, suggested by Dick Connette, were added to the track "Halloween 2009". Wainwright wrote "Middle of the Night" a few years prior to the album's release in an attempt to "cheer [himself] up and also to purvey an optimistic point of view for a change". "Cash for Clunkers" refers to the Car Allowance Rebate System, a United States federal scrappage program active during summer 2009.[13] [14] "Got a Ukulele" features Wainwright performing the titular instrument, which he believes was popular during the 1920s–1930s due to its ability to improve "one's mood and general outlook".
Critical reception of the album was positive overall. Robin Denselow of The Guardian awarded the album four of five stars and wrote that Wainwright's performance sounded as "easy-going and spontaneous" as it does at his live concerts. Denselow considered "House" to be the album's best track. The Daily Telegraph Colin Irwin described the album as "oddly uplifting" despite its "variants on the theme that we're all doomed" from the economic crisis. The Observer contributor Neil Spencer wrote that "while [Wainwright's] tone becomes shrill at times, his mix of nihilism and jauntiness (with ukulele) are finally uplifting."[15] Music journalist Andy Gill of The Independent recommended the tracks "House", "Fear Itself " and "The Panic Is On". Simmy Richman's review for The Independent complimented Wainwright's ability to address current issues "simply and effectively", claiming "Wainwright can make you laugh, nod in agreement, shake your fist in despair and want to sing along". Richman appreciated Wainwright's honesty and humor and wrote that he displayed "better lyrical form than he has been in for some time". The Independent included 10 Songs on their "Indy Choice: Best of the New Music" list for the week of July 16, 2010.[16] PopMatters' Alex Ramon preferred Wainwright's album Social Studies (1999), but considered 10 Songs to be "an enjoyable effort nonetheless", complimenting it for its simple approach. Furthermore, Ramon wrote that the album "succeeds in getting you smiling rather than despairing at the mess we're in, and that's always been one of Wainwright's great gifts".
All tracks written by Loudon Wainwright III, unless noted otherwise.
10 Songs for the New Depression debuted and reached its peak position at number thirty-eight on the United Kingdom's Top Independent Albums chart the week of July 31, 2010.[17] That same week the album debuted at number twelve on the Top 40 Independent Albums Breakers chart.[18] 10 Songs fell to number eighteen on the Top 40 Independent Albums Breakers chart the week of August 7, 2010.[19]
Chart (2010) | Peak position | |
---|---|---|
UK Top 40 Independent Albums | 38 | |
UK Top 40 Independent Albums Breakers | 12 |