"Boozing and brawling and country music might not be the first things that come to mind when you think of New Hampshire; presidential primary is more like it. But after reading Sing Me Back Home, you’re likely to agree with Dana Jennings, a native of one of the rougher regions of that state, that the feel-bad songs of Hank Williams and George Jones and Loretta Lynn are the soundtrack for the lives we all live . . . An editor at The New York Times, Jennings is not afraid to let his book larnin’ show, but only when it’ll further his argument that country music is for everyone, as when he suggests that if Virginia Woolf had grown up with the kind of plumbing he did, her great novel might have been called To the Outhouse."—David Kirby, The New York Times Book Review
"Dana Jennings' Sing Me Back Home: Love, Death, and Country Music is an overdue addition to the country music bookshelf. Bouncing between a memoir of his rural youth and close listening to an oleo of country hits popular between 1950 and 1970, Jennings lays out what country meant to its fans in an earlier generation, and how the music was used by his parents, grandparents and assorted other kin . . . Jennings writes like a dream . . . Throughout Sing Me Back Home, Jennings displays a gift for the taut observation—'Old age was a middle-class luxury,' he writes of poverty's toll—and also shows off an enviable knack for the memorable comparison. Webb Pierce's 'tenor is tight as a noose.' The guitar on 'Coat of Many Colors' is 'Jesus gentle.' The whole book reads just like that, and it's great that Jennings has gotten down these family stories, a history filled with hard work and early deaths, with cheating lovers and alcoholism, with folks who are in and out of trouble with the law, who disparage education and beat their kids. In 'the kingdom of country . . . it seems as if the sun is eternally blood red and going down,' Jennings writes, and his 'kin were cloaked in country darkness.; Sing Me Back Home is like many country songs: beautiful, but very, very sad."—David Cantwell, No Depression magazine "I admit it. When it comes to real country music, and those whom I believe truly appreciate it as the art form that it is, I am prejudiced. Never in a million years would I believe that some guy from New Hampshire, a writer and editor for the New York Times, of all the newspapers in the world, for crying out loud, would know much about the real thing; no way would someone with that background actually understand the music and those who created it. Well, that was before I read Sing Me Back Home, by Dana Jennings, who is exactly the guy I just described. I want to apologize, Mr. Jennings, and I salute you, sir. Sing Me Back Home is not a straight forward history of country music. Books like those serve their purpose, certainly, and there are many worthy ones out there already that take that approach. Jennings, on the other hand, turns the history of country music into something very personal: a way to share his own family story . . . What makes Sing Me Back Home so memorable is the way that Dana Jennings readily fits a member of his own family to every kind of classic country song there is. He lived it—and he remembers it because it made him the man that he is today despite the fact that he sits behind a desk at the New York Times. Song by song, the reader meets members of Jennings’ family who could easily have been the inspirations for those same songs because, not only did these folks love and surround themselves with country music, they lived the lifestyle at its heart. For those of us of a certain age, and of a certain upbringing, this book is like preaching to the choir. We already knew this deep down in our souls. But having someone as frank, and just as importantly, as articulate, as Dana Jennings come along to tell the real story of country music’s golden age and how its listeners related to those songs, is a real bonus. Sing Me Back Home fits longtime country music fans like an old glove. But the book is also a perfect primer for those newer fans who wonder about the country music legends that are barely more than names to them today. In fact, the discography at the end of the book is worth its whole $24 dollar cover price. Those willing to spend the money and time required to surround themselves with the albums and box sets listed by Jennings in that discography will learn more about the history of America’s working class than they could ever learn from any textbook. Despite what David Allan Coe says to the contrary, I do not believe in the perfect country music song. But there just might be a perfect country music book. If so, this is it."—Sam Houston, Real Country Radio"This is an energetically idiosyncratic book about country music with the blood, sweat and other bodily fluids left in—and the class warfare, too. Don’t tell Jennings that country music came from the South either; it came from a social class, he insists. Consider, for instance, Jennings' prefacing liner notes to his childhood: 'When my parents, all of a scared and trembling 17, tumbled into marriage in the fall of 1957 (my old man owed Ma eighteen bucks, which she never let him forget), the first thing they bought of any consequence was a gray and white Sylvania record player at Custeau’s Supermarket in Hampstead, N. H. Besides a squat glistening stack of 45 rpm records, they owned two long-players, Rock and Rollin' with Fats Domino and Johnny Cash With His Hot and Blue Guitar. I was born just eight days after my parents got married and those two record albums (I am convinced) became my nursery rhymes, comforted me as much as the soothing bass of my mother’s girlish heart.' Here then is the result—a wildly personal, flamboyantly written book about 'country music made between 1950 and 1970' which 'is a secret history of rural working class Americans in the 20th century—a secret history in plain sight.'"—Jeff Simon, The Buffalo News"The perfect country song, according to the late songwriter Steve Goodman, always had references to mama, being drunk, cheating, going to prison and hell-bent driving. Taking a page from Goodman's songbook, Jennings, a New York Times editor, brilliantly captures the essence of country music in this hard-driving tale that is part memoir and part music history. With the wild-eyed, hard-edged energy of Hank Williams and Jerry Reed, Jennings tells of his upbringing in the hardscrabble hollers of New Hampshire. He recalls characters from his family to illustrate the themes of what he believes is the golden age of country music: 1950–1970. Grammy Jennings, 'like Patsy Cline, knows what it is to go walkin' after midnight searching for her man, to fall to pieces, to be crazy-you don't go chasing your oldest son with a butcher knife if you ain't crazy.' With the lonesome strains of the steel guitar and tales of hunger and poverty, reckless driving, cheating and drinking, country singers Hank Williams, Patsy Cline and Merle Haggard—no longer heard on the radio—sang not only to Jennings and his family but the millions of folks just like them struggling to face 'The Cold Hard Facts of Life' (Porter Wagoner) in a postwar world."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Dana Jennings, a native of New Hampshire, is an editor with The New York Times. He lives in Montclair, New Jersey.