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Jeff Slate

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Jeff Slate
Birth nameJeffrey Slate
Born (1967-02-06) 6 February 1967 (age 57)
New London, Connecticut
Genres
  • Rock
  • Classic Rock
  • Pop
Occupation(s)journalist, author, musician, singer-songwriter
Associated acts
Websitejeffslatehq.com

Jeff Slate is an American music journalist and singer-songwriter. As a journalist he has been best known over the past decade as as contributor of music and culture articles to Esquire.[1] His work has also appeared in Rolling Stone,[2] the Wall Street Journal and more. He is co-author of the 2017 biography The Authorized Roy Orbison.[3] As a musician and songwriter has worked with Simon Townshend, Carlos Alomar, Earl Slick, Jeff Tweedy, Sheryl Crow, Roger McGuinn and others.

Career: Journalist/Author[edit]

Born February 6, 1967 in Connecticut, Slate attended New York University where he earned a bachelor's degree.

Slate has been best known since 2013 as as contributor of music and culture articles to Esquire.[1] His work has appeared in Rolling Stone,[2] the Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, NBC News, the Daily Beast, Guitar World, Rock Cellar, InsideHook, Guitarist/MusicRadar and elsewhere. He co-authored the 2017 biography The Authorized Roy Orbison[3] and has contributed commentary and liner notes for projects on Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Small Faces and the Rolling Stones among others.

Slate conducted interviews with artists including Roger McGuinn, Ernie Isley, Jimmy Page, Brian Wilson, and Noel Gallagher for MusicRadar beginning in 2012.[4] From 2013 to 2015 he contributed articles regularly to Guitar World.[5] In 2015 he began contributing to The Daily Beast, interviewing artists such as Ringo Starr, David Crosby, the Sex Pistols' Steve Jones, and Linda Ronstadt.[6] In the same year he was the "man on the inside" daily blogger for Monty Python when the troupe reunited.[7]

In 2017 he wrote liner notes for the 50th anniversary expanded edition of The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.[8]

In 2018 he wrote the liner notes for Bob Dylan's The Bootleg Series Vol. 14: More Blood More Tracks.[9] and interviewed Tony Visconti for the Brooklyn Museum's David Bowie is exhibit.[10]

His 2019–2021 articles for Guitar[11] included an interview with Pete Townshend.[12] In 2020 he wrote liner notes for the Jimi Hendrix box set and documentary The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Live In Maui[13], and in 2021 he wrote the hardcover book accompanying the remastered box-set re-release of the Rolling Stones' Tattoo You.[14]

In April 2021 Slate caused a stir in music journalism circles with a piece for NBC News[15] that was interpreted as a dis of Paul Simon.[16][17]

In 2022 he interviewed Bob Dylan for The Wall Street Journal about Dylan's book The Philosophy of Modern Song.[18]

Selected Publications[edit]

  • 2013: The Difference We Make (co-author)
  • 2017: The Authorized Roy Orbison (with Roy Orbison Jr., Wesley Orbison and Alex Orbison)
  • 2018: "Bob Dylan's First Day with 'Tangled Up In Blue'", The New Yorker[19]
  • 2018: The Bootleg Series, Volume 14: More Blood, More Tracks, book accompanying Bob Dylan’s box set
  • 2021: Tattoo You (Remaster), book accompanying re-release box set.

Radio[edit]

Since 2017 Slate has served as a guest host on SiriusXM The Volume (Channel 106) and Faction Talk (Channel 103). He has appeared as a guest on podcasts and radio for NPR, BBC, RadioNZ and others.

Career: Musician and Singer-Songwriter[edit]

Slate's career as a musician and songwriter began I the 1980s. Since then he has worked with Simon Townshend, Carlos Alomar, Earl Slick,[20] Jeff Tweedy, Sheryl Crow, Roger McGuinn and others.

In the 1980s Slate co-founded the punk band the Mindless Thinkers. In 1997 he founded the band The Badge,[21] which released three albums, two best-of compilations, and in 2013 a 15th anniversary edition of its debut album Digital Retro.

In 1993 he released an EP, The Townshend Tapes, executive produced by Pete Townshend. It included the song “My Dolly,” which he co-wrote with Simon Townshend.

In 1995 Slate opened for Sheryl Crow on her “Tuesday Night Music Club” tour.

As "Jeff Slate & Friends" he has had a longtime residency at Hill Country Live! in New York City.[22] The series has included birthday tributes to Bob Dylan,[23] David Bowie,[24] and George Harrison.

In 2019 he appeared at the University of Tulsa Institute for Bob Dylan Studies, at the first World of Bob Dylan conference, interviewing The ByrdsRoger McGuinn and joining McGuinn in a performance of “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door.” That year he served as musical director and performed at[25] a fundraiser at the El Rey Theater in Los Angeles in honor of Tom Petty on what would have been Petty's 70th birthday, featuring performances by former Heartbreakers Steve Ferrone and Ron Blair and others. In 2020 he appeared with Wilco's Jeff Tweedy at New York's Town Hall performing Woody Guthrie's songs "This Land Is Your Land" and "California Stars" on the occasion of the former song's 80th anniversary.

During the pandemic he performed an online concert series that resulted in the 43-track album Lockdown Live.[22]

Slate is a Martin Guitars-endorsed artist. He lives and works in New York City.[20]

Discography[edit]

  • "The Poacher" (single), 2022[26]
  • "Heartbreak" (single), 2020 [featuring Duff McKagan and Earl Slick][27]
  • Lockdown Live (album), 2020[28]
  • Imposters & Attractions: Music Inspired By Elvis Costello (album), 2013
  • Birds of Paradox (album), 2012
  • "Dreamtime" (single), 2010 [featuring Earl Slick and Carlos Alomar]
  • The EP Collection (2004-2005) [with The Badge] (album), 2005
  • EP No. 3 [with The Badge] (EP), 2005
  • EP No. 2 [with The Badge] (EP), 2004
  • EP No. 1 [with The Badge] (EP), 2004
  • Calling Generation Mojo [with The Badge] (album), 2003
  • Digital Retro [with The Badge] (album), 1998
  • The Townshend Tapes (EP, single), 1993
  • "My Dolly" (single), co-written with Simon Townshend, 1993
  • Anyone for Anything [with the Mindless Thinkers] (album), 1985

References[edit]


This article "Jeff Slate" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Jeff Slate. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.

  1. 1.0 1.1 Jeff Slate, Esquire, retrieved 6 March 2023
  2. 2.0 2.1 Jeff Slate, Rolling Stone, 13 October 2015, retrieved 6 March 2023
  3. 3.0 3.1 "The Authorized Roy Orbison Traces Musician's Life from Texas to Touring with The Beatles", Parade: Entertainment, Recipes, Health, Life, Holidays, Parade, 17 December 2017, retrieved 13 March 2023
  4. Jeff Slate, MusicRadar, 10 January 2022, retrieved 6 March 2023
  5. Jeff Slate, Guitar World, 23 September 2019, retrieved 6 March 2023
  6. Jeff Slate, The Daily Beast, retrieved 6 March 2022
  7. Monty Python, www.montypython.com, retrieved 13 March 2022
  8. Jon Blistein (5 April 2017), Beatles Prep Massive 'Sgt. Pepper' 50th Anniversary Reissue, Rolling Stone, retrieved 13 March 2023
  9. Ed Newman (4 March 2019), A Rewarding Visit with Writer-Musician Jeff Slate, Author of the Liner Notes for More Blood More Tracks, Ennyman's Territory, retrieved 6 March 2023
  10. Brooklyn Talks: Tony Visconti with Jeff Slate, Guitar.com, retrieved 6 March 2023
  11. Jeff Slate, Guitar, retrieved 6 March 2023
  12. Jeff Slate (7 May 2021), "I'm still having fun with guitars": Pete Townshend on Clapton, Hendrix, The Who and coping with lockdown life, Guitar.com, retrieved 6 March 2023
  13. Sam Stone (24 December 2020), Holiday Gift Guide Review: Legacy Looks Back at 1970 With Elvis Presley and Jimi Hendrix Archival Offerings, The Second Disc, retrieved 13 March 2023
  14. Tom Fine (21 December 2021), Revinylization #25: The Rolling Stones' Tattoo You—What's the Point?, Stereophile, retrieved 10 March 2023
  15. Jeff Slate (2 April 2021), Paul Simon sold his catalog to Sony for millions. He'll still end up a historical footnote to Dylan., NBC News, retrieved 6 March 2023
  16. Fred (3 April 2021), Jeff Slate Speaks For No One But Himself, Beacon of Speech, retrieved 6 March 2023
  17. Martin Hackworth (9 April 2021), Jeff Slate, you're no Paul Simon, Idaho State Journal, retrieved 6 March 2023
  18. Jeff Slate (19 December 2022), Bob Dylan on Music's Golden Era vs. Streaming: 'Everything's Too Easy', The Wall Street Journal, retrieved 6 March 2023
  19. Jeff Slate (31 October 2018), "Bob Dylan's First Day with 'Tangled Up In Blue'", The New Yorker, retrieved 8 March 2023
  20. 20.0 20.1 Rick Koster (14 July 2021), Earl Slick, Jeff Slate play Hygienic Saturday, The Day, retrieved 6 March 2023
  21. Brandy McDonnell (17 November 2018), X's John Doe and music writer Jeff Slate to talk about Bob Dylan's 'More Blood, More Tracks' tonight at Tulsa event, The Oklahoman, retrieved 7 March 2023
  22. 22.0 22.1 Tina Benitez-Eves (11 June 2021), Jeff Slate Opens Up to New York City on 43-Track 'Lockdown Live,' Backs Causes Through Weekly Live Shows, American Songwriter, retrieved 7 March 2023
  23. Lauren Leadingham (11 June 2021), Jeff Slate & Friends: Bob Dylan 80th Birthday Concert, American Blues Scene, retrieved 7 March 2023
  24. Karen Rempel (10 April 2022), Bowie lives! 75th birthday show was out of this world, The Village Sun, retrieved 7 March 2023
  25. The Heartbreakers' Ron Blair Looking Forward To Reuniting With Band's Drummer At L.A. Tom Petty Tribute, 977theriver.com, 14 October 2019, retrieved 10 March 2023
  26. NYC Musician/Rock Journalist Jeff Slate Covers Ronnie Lane's "The Poacher" to Honor Lane's 76th Birthday, Rock Cellar Magazine, 1 April 2022, retrieved 13 March 2023
  27. Chloe Rabinowitz (28 September 2020), Jeff Slate Announces New Single 'Heartbreak', Broadway World, retrieved 6 March 2023
  28. BCB Staff (9 August 2020), Singer-Songwriter and Author Jeff Slate Sets Live Release, Best Classic Bands, retrieved 6 March 2023