Diesel Only Records

Diesel Only Records is a Brooklyn-based country music record label established in 1990 by musician-journalist Jeremy Tepper, then also the lead singer of the World Famous Blue Jays.

Diesel Only Records
Founded1990 (1990)
FounderJeremy Tepper
GenreCountry music
LocationBrooklyn, NY

History

Tepper, along with Diesel Only's cofounders, Jay Sherman-Godfrey and Albert Caiati, originally started the label with the goal of releasing vinyl 45s for use in jukeboxes at truck stops.[1] Tepper also started the label with the goal of releasing his own band's albums,[2] as well as those by other young bands from New York City. The first non-vinyl record the label released was 1992's Rig Rock Jukebox, which was also their first singles compilation album. Also that year, the label released a single by Mark Brine entitled "New Blue Yodel," which, after Brine sent it to Hank Snow, landed him a gig at the Grand Ole Opry that July.[3] By the end of 1993, Diesel Only had released more than 30 records by artists from all across the United States.[4] The label did not become well-known until 1996, when its third singles compilation album, "Rig Rock Deluxe", was released, as part of a deal with Upstart Records.[5] The album included songs by Buck Owens, Steve Earle, and Marty Stuart, and won Americana Album of the Year from the National Association of Independent Record Distributors.[2] Tepper has recalled that after Owens agreed to contribute “Will There Be Big Rigs in Heaven?” to the album, they merely had to mention that he had signed on to the project, after which "we [Diesel Only] got anybody we wanted."[1] "Rig Rock Deluxe" received a favorable review from Billboard, which described it as the label's best compilation yet.[6]

In 1996, Peter Blackstock wrote in No Depression that through his work with Diesel Only, "Jeremy Tepper has established himself as a unique and indispensable cog in the alt-country underground."[7] In 1997, Tepper married fellow musician Laura Cantrell. The label first diverged from its pattern of releasing compilations of trucker music in 2000, when it released Cantrell's debut album, Not the Tremblin' Kind.[8] Cantrell and Tepper later became the co-owners and co-operators of Diesel Only.[9] Cantrell has released all but one of her albums on Diesel Only (as of 2011).[10]

Artists

Artists who have released albums on Diesel Only include, but are not limited to:

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References

  1. Ridley, Jim (25 April 1996). "White Line Fever". Nashville Scene. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
  2. Clark, Jim (2001). The All-American Truck Stop Cookbook. Thomas Nelson. p. 88.
  3. Foege, Alec (September 1992). "Keep On Truckin'". Spin. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  4. Marx, Jonathan (2004). "Diesel Only". In Kingsbury (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Country Music: The Ultimate Guide to the Music. Oxford University Press.
  5. Morris, Chris (8 July 1995). "Assessing NARM Confab's Murky Future". Billboard. p. 61. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
  6. Morris, Chris (21 September 1996). "Music Keeps on Truckin' on "Rig Rock Deluxe"". Billboard. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
  7. Blackstock, Peter (September–October 1996). "Jeremy Tepper". No Depression. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  8. Applebome, Peter (13 July 2003). "Moonlighting At the Bank On Her Way To the Opry". New York Times. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
  9. Ray, Linda (30 June 2005). "Laura Cantrell - Simple twist of fate". No Depression. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  10. Bennett, Bruce (18 May 2011). "A Little Country in the City". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
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