Music Review: John Prine - Fair & Square

A few years back, I ran across an acquaintance of mine who I'd almost forgotten about. Well, he's not really anyone I know personally, but John Prine has been around for most of my adult music listening life. He feels like one of those folk you'd see everyday on the bus on the way to work or school. Someone you'd not be friends with but whose company you come to accept as part of your life.

Then one day, you change jobs, or leave school, and you stop seeing them. Years later, if you happen to run into them, no matter what the circumstances, they provide a comfortable feeling of familiarity in a world which might not have turned out the way you expected it. So it is with John Prine and his music.

I had been listening to him all the way through the seventies, starting with his first release on Atlantic Records, John Prine, with the three songs he's still probably best known for: "Hello In There", "Illegal Smile", and "Sam Stone". Sweet Revenge has "Christmas In Prison" and "Dear Abby", and anything else he put out in those first ten or twelve years of his career were part of my musical landscape. There was even one memorable concert experience during that time before his voice started to deteriorate in the late eighties and early nineties.

It wasn't until 1996 that it was discovered John had a cancerous growth on the outside of his neck. The first doctor he went to told him not to worry about it and it was another year before anyone bothered with it. When it was discovered to be malignant, the doctors did their best to shield his larynx from the radiation to preserve his vocal chords, and he's come out the other side with his voice only slightly deeper.

When he was fully recovered from the treatments, John wrote an open letter to those who liked his music and songs, indicating he was ready to go back out on the road again and was feeling better than he had in a long time. The casual informality of his relationship with his fans, like that fellow passenger I talked about earlier, allowed him to say he hoped "… my neck is looking forward to its job of holding my head up above my shoulders" as much as he was to getting back to singing.
John Prine Current .jpg
It was the Billy Bob Thornton movie, Daddy And Them (a movie worth watching just to hear Andy of Mayberry worry about being "corn holed"), that brought John Prine back into my life. Not only did he play one of Billy Bob's dysfunctional family members in the movie (he turns out to be the one willing to push the family to pull itself together), he provided a song for the movie, "In Spite Of Ourselves", a typically bittersweet love song about a couple similar to the one portrayed by Billy Bob and Laura Dern. Somehow or other, despite all the strikes against them, they are able to love each other and find a way of making it work.

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Article Author: Richard Marcus

Richard Marcus is the author of the forthcoming book What Will Happen In Eragon IV? and has had his work published in print and on line all over the world. The not so long-haired Canadian iconoclast writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees …

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  • 1 - Bliffle

    Oct 28, 2006 at 9:07 pm

    Always enjoyed Prines songs and delivery. Very intimate. I especially like "Paradise".

  • 2 - Mat Brewster

    Oct 29, 2006 at 5:43 pm

    I found Prine on The Missing Year and then went back to his old records. If you haven't heard the duet with Bonnie Raitt on "Angel in Montgomery" you simply must do so.

    I haven't gotten around to checking out Fair and Square. Thanks for reminding me that I need to.

  • 3 - Connie Phillips

    Nov 02, 2006 at 4:42 pm

    Congrats! This article was chosen as a Editor's Pick!

  • 4 - Melissa

    May 04, 2007 at 10:34 pm

    John's music is wonderful! It reminds me of another artist, Denny Brown. What do you guys think?

  • 5 - elaine

    May 14, 2008 at 4:11 am

    I grew up w/ John Prine's music.
    It is as much a part of my life, as it is for my, now, adult sons.John Prine's music, runs , like a tapestry, throughout the last 30 years of my life, & secured a place in the warp & weave of my adult sons' lives as well.My husband died in July of 2000, a single motorcycle accident,he had a headset on, the headset was stopped in the middle of track 11 on the Great Days Anthology CD- the song, Please Don't Bury Me. Ironic??? I think not!But, I am touched deeply by the fact, that just 3 nights prior, my husband & I were riding around with the top down, on back country roads, & singing our guts out to this anthology. Who knew?Since then I moved away from Pa., to Florida, a few months ago I went on my first real road trip, since my husband's death. I drove my sister & myself from St. Pete., Fla. to Pensacola, Fla., across a time zone!- I stocked up my CD changer & of course loaded John Prine's Anthology. My sister was in utter shock, when she heard the music. This is exactly what John Prine would have liked to have witnessed, I believe. I got to learn some things about my sister,& she, got a chance to learn some things about me! No miracles-just some small opening of another kind of door.

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