- Dirty Linen
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For the play, see Dirty Linen and New-Found-Land.
Dirty Linen Editor Paul Hartman Categories Music magazines
Folk musicFrequency bi-monthly First issue 1983 as Fairport Fanatics
1987 as Dirty LinenCompany Dirty Linen, Ltd./Visionation, Inc. Country United States Website dirtynelson.com Dirty Linen was a bi-monthly magazine of folk and world music based in Baltimore, Maryland. The magazine ceased publication in the spring of 2010. The magazine offered extensive reviews of folk music recordings, videos, books, and concerts as well as in depth profiles of musical artists and venues. They also maintained a schedule of concerts and festivals of folk music performances in North America in their "gig guide" which was available within the magazine or through their web site. Other features included, "The Horse Trader" classified ads, and a "Wireless" discussion of whats on the air waves.
Contents
History
Dirty Linen originated in 1983 as a publication titled Fairport Fanatics, a fan magazine for the British band Fairport Convention created by T.J. McGrath of Fairfield, Connecticut. In 1987 Paul Hartman took over as editor and publisher, renamed the magazine Dirty Linen and expanded its scope to cover genres of rooted music from many countries and cultures.[1]
Based in Baltimore, Maryland, the magazine grew with direction from Hartman and his wife, Susan (who also served as co-editor of the magazine for many years). The photocopied fanzine became a glossy color publication in the early 1990s.[2] Dirty Linen began international distribution and gained sales in North American chains such as Borders Books & Music, Barnes & Noble, and Chapters.[1]
In September 2007, Dirty Linen announced a merger with Visionation, Inc., publishers of Blues Revue and the e-zines BluesWax and FolkWax. The merger was greeted enthusiasticly by both parties who announced plans for new projects for Dirty Linen such as the inclusion of a sampler CD for subscribers,[3] and planned growth for all four of Visionation's roots music publications, including entry into radio and cable markets and sponsorship of music festivals.[1]
In April 2010, Paul and Sue Hartman left Dirty Linen and Visionation. Dirty Linen canceled their March/April and May/June issues.
Writers
A number of writers for the magazine also provide music content elsewhere on the web:
- Kerry Dexter [1]
- Steve Ide [2]
- Anil Prasad (former writer) now runs Innerviews and is a contributing editor for Guitar Player
- Chris Nickson [3]
- Bill Nevins [4]
- Paul Hartman (Editor) [5]
- Duck Baker [6]
- Cliff Furnald (former writer) now runs Roots World, Hollow Ear, and CDRoots
- Chris Kocher writes for the Press & Sun-Bulletin of Binghamton, N.Y. and has a blog on the paper's Web site.
References
- ^ a b c Press release, September 6, 2007 (regarding merger with Visionation, Inc.)
- ^ Dirty Linen Back Issues
- ^ Dirty Linen Complete CD Sampler Discography
External links
- Dirty Linen, Former Editor's Blog: "What Happened to Dirty Linen?" (Official web site deleted)
- Visionation Home Page
Folk music Subgenres Ballads · Carols · Children's songs · Drinking song · Hornpipe · Jigs · Morris dance · Protest song · Sea shanties · War songs
Fusions Anti-folk · Celtic music · Celtic rock · Country folk · Electric folk · Filk music · Folk metal · Folk punk · Folk rock · Folktronica · Indie folk · Industrial folk song · Manila Sound · Medieval folk rock · Neofolk · Nu-folk · Psych folk · Progressive folk · Skiffle · Techno-folk · Un-folkRelated articles Festivals · Folk clubs · Folk dance · Instruments · Lists of traditions · Pub session · Record labels · Roots revival · Singer-songwriter · Traditional music · World music
Regional scenes Categories:- Folk music magazines
- American music magazines
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