If you’re not at least a bit older than the concert featured on One for All Tour: Live in Australia 1989, you might not realize just how big a group the Bee Gees were. Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb (the […]
Jeff Burger's latest book, on Bob Dylan, will be published in May 2018. His previous books include Lennon on Lennon: Conversations with John Lennon, Leonard Cohen on Leonard Cohen: Interviews and Encounters, and Springsteen on Springsteen: Interviews, Speeches, and Encounters. Chicago Review Press published all of these books in North America; they have variously been licensed for republication in England, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Italy, Hungary, Spain, France, and Turkey.
Burger has been a writer and editor for more than four decades and has covered popular music throughout his journalism career. His reviews, essays and reportage on that and many other subjects have appeared in more than 75 magazines, newspapers and books, including Barron’s, The Los Angeles Times, Family Circle, Melody Maker, High Fidelity, Creem, Circus, Reader’s Digest, Gentlemen’s Quarterly, All Music Guide, the Berkeley Barb, The Morton Report, and No Depression.
He has published interviews with many leading figures from the music world, including Bruce Springsteen, Roger McGuinn, Wolfman Jack, Tom Waits, Foreigner's Mick Jones, Billy Joel, Tommy James, the Righteous Brothers, Deep Purple's Tommy Bolin, and members of Steely Dan and the Marshall Tucker Band. He has also interviewed many other public figures, such as Suze Orman, Daymond John, James Carville, Donald Trump, Sir Richard Branson, F. Lee Bailey, Sydney Pollack, and Cliff Robertson.
Burger has been editor of several periodicals, including Phoenix magazine in Arizona, and he spent 14 years in senior positions at Medical Economics magazine, the country’s largest business magazine for doctors. A former consulting editor at Time Inc., he currently serves as editor of Business Jet Traveler, which the American Society of Business Publication Editors named one of the country’s best business magazines in 2011, 2013, and 2016.
Burger lives in Ridgewood, New Jersey. His wife, Madeleine Beresford, is a preschool director, writer, and puppeteer. The couple have a son, Andre, and a daughter, Myriam.
Burger's website, byjeffburger.com, features information about his books and four decades' worth of music reviews, news, interviews, and commentary.
(All articles by Jeff Burger posted on NoDepression.com are copyrighted by the author. Reproduction in any form without permission is strictly prohibited.)
If you’re not at least a bit older than the concert featured on One for All Tour: Live in Australia 1989, you might not realize just how big a group the Bee Gees were. Barry, Robin, and Maurice Gibb (the […]
Not every album that reappears in a lavish, dramatically expanded boxed version deserves this treatment, but U2’s powerful and cohesive The Joshua Tree sure merits its recently released 30th anniversary Super Deluxe Edition. On one of its most famous songs, […]
A Previously Unheard Phil Ochs Concert Live in Montreal 10/22/66, a two-CD, 20-song set that clocks in at a little more than two hours, is a welcome addition to the still-growing list of live Phil Ochs releases. It catches this […]
Del Does Dublin Sometimes, when a record label unearths material from the vaults, one listen tells you why it stayed unreleased for so long. Other times, the tracks are good enough to make you wonder how they could have remained […]
Though live material from Arthur Lee’s brilliant rock band Love was in short supply for decades, the situation has changed in recent years. You’ll still have trouble finding much from the lineup that issued Love’s classic quartet of early albums […]
Versatile – the 38th studio album from Van Morrison, which comes only three months after his last release — finds him joining artists like Bob Dylan and Rod Stewart in mining the Great American Songbook. There are two tracks here […]
Ralph Peer—a record producer and engineer, talent scout, and music publisher whose death in 1960 ended a half-century career—reminds me of John Hammond, Sr. Like Hammond, who championed artists ranging from Billie Holiday and Robert Johnson to Bob Dylan and […]
To fully appreciate what the Ramones accomplished, you have to put them in context. Their eponymous debut LP came out in April of 1976, when the Billboard charts listed syrupy pop like Diana Ross’s “Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know […]
It’s Christmas season again. What to play? You could opt for yet another go-round with Bing Crosby’s “White Christmas,” Johnny Mathis’s “Sleigh Ride,” and the like, but how about—as Monty Python used to promise—something completely different? I’ve long owned a […]
Even the most fanatical Bob Dylan fan would likely concede that the numerous high points of his career have been interspersed with a few notable lows. For many years, moreover, a consensus has existed as to just when the biggest […]
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