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event

The Vanguard and Bros. Houligan Present...

Justin Townes Earle

with
Sun Mar, 1 8:00 pm ( Doors: 7:00 pm )
The Vanguard
All Ages
$25 adv // $30 dos
Artists
Justin Townes Earle
Justin Townes Earle has done a lot of living in his 37 years. For starters, there’s the quick-hit
bullet points about his childhood that seem to get dredged up in every interview, article or
review about the singer-songwriter and guitarist: Born the son of Steve Earle, who was largely
absent during Justin’s childhood; struggles from a young age with addiction and numerous
stints in rehab; long stretches of itinerancy and general juvenile delinquency; a youth he once
said he was “lucky to have gotten out of alive.”
That’s before we get to the years spent honing his craft in Nashville bars and on club stages all
over the world; the various bands, record labels and industry types that have been drawn toward
and, at times, pushed away by him; and, finally, the celebrated and rather formidable body of
work he has amassed since releasing his critically-acclaimed 2007 debut EP, Yuma .
It’s a seemingly bottomless well of material for a singer-songwriter to mine out of just three
decades or so of life. And Earle at times has—most recently on his 2017 album, Kids in the
Street , which the artist calls “one of the more personal records I’ve ever made.”
But when it came to his newest effort, The Saint of Lost Causes , Earle, these days sober, married
and father to a baby girl, chose to focus his gaze outward. “Maybe having a kid has made me look
at the world around me more,” he says.
As for how he felt after doing that?
“Frankly, I was horrified,” he says bluntly. Although, he adds, “I already sorta was, anyway.”
Make no mistake: there’s nary a party, PBR or pickup truck to be found in any of the 12 tracks on
The Saint of Lost Causes . Rather, Earle is focused on a different America—the disenfranchised
and the downtrodden, the oppressed and the oppressors, the hopeful and the hopeless. There’s
the drugstore-cowboy-turned-cop-killer praying for forgiveness (“Appalachian Nightmare”) and
the common Michiganders persevering through economic and industrial devastation (“Flint City
Shake It”); the stuck mother dreaming of a better life on the right side of the California tracks
(“Over Alameda”) and the Cuban man in New York City weighed down by a world of regret (“Ahi
Esta Mi Nina”); the “used up” soul desperate to get to New Orleans (“Ain’t Got No Money”) and
the “sons of bitches” in West Virginia poisoning the land and sea (“Don’t Drink the Water”).
These are individuals and communities in every corner of the country, struggling through the
ordinary—and sometimes extraordinary—circumstances of everyday life.
“I was trying to look through the eyes of America,” Earle says. “Because I believe in the idea of
America—that everybody's welcome here and has the right to be here.”
Earle tells these American stories in detail and without judgement. But he also lays out his point
of view right from the start. The Saint of Lost Causes kicks off in stark fashion with the title
track, on which JTE, over a desolate soundscape of acoustic guitar, deliberate snare hits and
moaning pedal steel, presents a harsh vision of the world in plainspoken, almost biblical terms:
"Got your sheep / got your shepherds / got your wolves amongst men,” he intones, before
asking, “Throughout time / between the wolf and the shepherd / who do you think has killed
more sheep?”
“That's kind of like the spooky leftist conspiracy theorist in me,” Earle says with a slight laugh,
before turning serious. “But the fact is, if you look around, we live in a time where one of the
number-one threats to an inner-city black youth is a police officer. It’s just bizarre. So I think
sometimes how we forget how animal we are. We look at ourselves as this sort of
higher-functioning being, but we miss the mark quite often at being civilized and such.”
He points to another track, the slide-guitar-and-harmonica assisted “Don’t Drink the Water”
(“Folks gettin’ sick, talkin’ women and children / ask the man on the stand what he thinks killed
‘em”), as a further example of man’s disregard for his fellow man. “Several years ago one of [ coal
CEO and former Republican primary candidate for Senate ] Don Blankenship's companies
leaked a bunch of chemicals into the river outside of Charleston, West Virginia, and there’s still
areas where if people take a bath they’ll get lesions on their skin,” he explains of the song’s
subject matter. “We live in the richest per-capita country in the world, and we have people who
can't bathe in the fucking water. Much less drink it.”
While that song and others like “Flint City Shake It”—where, over a boogie-woogie rhythm, Earle
chronicles the decline of the city’s once vibrant auto manufacturing industry (“Then trouble
come in ’86 / this son of a bitch named Roger Smith / cut our throat with the stroke of a
fountain pen”)—cite historical events, other tracks present fictionalized narratives that are no
less harrowing or true-to-life.
Take the haunting “Appalachian Nightmare,” on which Earle spins a first-person account of how
a landscape of little opportunity combined with a few bad decisions can quickly lead to a
premature, and literal, dead end. “It's a fictional story, but it's a story we've heard a million
times growing up in the South,” he says. “I remember back in the late Nineties we had what they
called the ‘Oxycontin Wars,’ which was, like, hillbillies armed to the teeth robbing the shit out of
drug stores. People went buck wild and it destroyed a lot of lives.”
But Saint of Lost Causes is not all doom and gloom. There are also moments of calm, both
musically and lyrically, where Earle pulls back to admire the beauty of the world around him. On
the languid “Mornings in Memphis” (“one of my favorite songs on the record”), he watches the
sun rise, takes a stroll down Beale Street to the banks of the Mississippi, and, finally, stands
alone under a sky full of stars where all he can do is “try not to think / just listen to my heart.”
He offers a similar, if more jocular ode to his surroundings on “Pacific Northwestern Blues,”
where the Nashville-bred Earle, now relocated a few thousand miles west, laments only being
able to drive 20 miles an hour due to the region’s notoriously rainy conditions. “We’re moving so
slow / I’m about to lose my mind,” he complains over a loping Western swing accompaniment.
Says Earle with a laugh, “I've been living in the Pacific Northwest for a while, and I’ve realized
that, you know, the weather really does suck up here!”
Earle may call the Pacific Northwest his home these days, but when it came time to record The
Saint of Lost Causes he headed back to Music City. “I always say, ‘If you want whores and
gambling, you go to Vegas. If you want to make records, you go to Nashville,’ ” he reasons. Earle
co-produced The Saint of Lost Causes with his longtime engineer Adam Bednarik, and likewise
brought in musicians that that he’s known for years, among them guitarist Joe McMahan, pedal
steel player Paul Niehaus, drummer Jon Radford and Old Crow Medicine Show keyboardist
Cory Younts. “I'm realizing that as I'm getting older and grumpier and set in my ways, I just
much more enjoy making a record on my own terms and with people I know well,” he says.
To that end, Earle also worked at a studio he knew well, even if he had never actually recorded
there before. Sound Emporium is a facility steeped in music history—it was opened by Cowboy
Jack Clement in 1969 and has hosted country luminaries like Johnny Cash and Kenny Rogers
over the years—and also Earle’s own childhood. “I grew up in that neighborhood, and as a kid I
used to ride my bike through the Sound Emporium parking lot,” he says. “It was always an active
place in the neighborhood. So it was great to finally be able to record there.”
As for where Earle’s sound, which on The Saint of Lost Causes spans everything from traditional
country, blues and folk to western swing, roots-rock and boogie-woogie, fits into the larger
country music picture beyond Nashville?
“I see it the same way that Gram Parsons did,” he says. “There’s this idea of moving forward and
playing with newer sounds and different modes, but at the same time making sure you keep one
foot firmly planted in the past as you feel out the future. I think it’s really important to leave a
trail, you know? Put down some breadcrumbs behind you.”
He’s similarly resolute when it comes to his lyrics. Ask Earle whether he is at all concerned that
the bold stance he takes on The Saint of Lost Causes might raise the country-music
establishment’s hackles, and he can only laugh in response.
“I've never been opposed to pissing off all the right people,” he says matter-of-factly. “But I see it
two ways: If you don't like what I have to say politically or anything like that, just don't read my
interviews. But you're never going to go to my shows and hear political spiel from me. We're
going to play songs and have a good time, because that's what the show is all about.
“But you know,” he continues, “I'm a disciple of the Woody Guthrie school of thinking about
music. I figure it’s always better to just go ahead and tell people the truth.”
On The Saint of Lost Causes , Earle proves himself a songwriter and artist who is unflinching and
unequivocal in his truth.