Welcome to Devotion Unswerving. This is a fansite and fanlisting for Joanna Newsom; the beautiful and talented singer, songwriter, and harpist.

This fanlisting was last updated on February 20, 2012. We have 23 fans listed with 0 pending! This site is listed in the Musicians: Female category at The Fanlistings Network. I am proud to have run this fanlisting since January 29, 2007!

To navigate this site, use the menu above. News and updates about this site and Joanna can be seen below. If you have any problems with the site, please be sure to contact me!



Interview with The Economist

The Economist has a great new interview with Joanna Newsom! Here’s a lovely quote from Joanna about her song meanings:

“I get mad at myself after doing interviews about song meanings; I always feel like I articulated myself badly and clumsily. It takes me months to land upon what I consider to be the best, most musical way to possibly express an idea or a story, and I find I’m just not capable of reiterating that same idea or story, on the spot, concisely, in the context of an interview. Then, my failed attempts at that conversation invariably feel like an act of faithlessness, in my not allowing the listener to discover a song’s meaning on his or her own. The whole point of writing a song is that, in its completed form, it should be the only way in the whole world of saying that one particular thing. If I could properly explain that story or idea in an interview then it wouldn’t need to be a song. I’m obviously not a big pop star, but the people who do like my music like it for reasons that I want to respect and show gratitude for, and I think that I do neither by explaining, and botching, my song meanings in an interview.”

Read the full interview here!

Posted on January 07, 2011 @ 5:00 PM. Leave a comment?

Year in Review

This article picks Have One on Me as the best album of the year! Here’s what it says:

Three discs, 18 tracks, two hours plus … and I’m left wanting more. More of that distinctive voice. More of that delicate harp. More of those unconventional folk arrangements. After Have One’s February release, everything else was left battling for second.

The same author also has an article on how he made his list which can be read here! Here’s what he says about his choice for number one:

Some years, the toughest part of the process is picking my Album of the Year, the record (yes, I still like calling them records) that will anchor the list from its No. 1 position. Not an issue this time. Joanna Newsom’s Have One on Me has been my clear pick since I first heard it in February. When I enjoy an album 10 months later as much or more than I did initially, I take it as a pretty good sign I’ll still cherish it 10 years from now. I like everything about Have One: its sprawling format (three discs, 18 tracks, 124 minutes), the variety of its compositions, the way Newsom powerfully harnessed her unusual voice this time out. I found 2004’s The Milk-Eyed Mender intriguing, and even though 2006’s Ys has always felt severely overwrought to me, it does contain moments of brilliance. Yet I’ve surely already listened to Have One more than both of those combined.

I don’t agree about Ys being overwrought (it’s still my favorite), but it’s nice to see Have One On Me getting the praise it deserves!

Posted on December 31, 2010 @ 7:39 PM. Leave a comment?

Favorite 50 Albums of 2010

Have One On Me is listed at #7 on this list of the top 50 albums of 2010! Here’s the excerpt:

An outsider artist no more, Joanna Newsom came into her own with Have One On Me. Rather than further develop the Ren-Faire aesthetic of 2006’s Ys or the idiosyncratic folk of The Milk-Eyed Mender, her 2004 debut, Newsom drew from an almost unthinkable (for her, at least) range of influences — Laurel Canyon 70s soft-rock, Dixieland jazz, 80s alternative, religious hymns — to create her most accomplished album to date. Newsom’s sylvan vocals still might’ve been too shrill for those not yet converted to her cult, but Have One On Me, despite its marathon length, was more accessible than anything she’d recorded previously. Stretching the Lisa Simpson-limitations of her vocal abilities was a risk, but it paid off marvelously on full-blooded songs like “Good Intentions Paving Company” and “Baby Birch.” Have One On Me was an embarrassment of riches, and those who continued to refuse its charms were only poorer for their stubborn resistance.

Posted on December 29, 2010 @ 10:48 PM. Leave a comment?