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Justin Townes Earle: ''The Good Life''

Justin Townes Earle: ''The Good Life''

  • Avg user rating: 4 stars Out of 3 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Wayne Hancock, Hank Williams, William Elliott Whitmore, Fionn Regan, Ray LaMontagne, A.A. Bondy, Pete Molinari

Playlist

Hard Livin' (2:48) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 919
The Good Life (2:47) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 1,185
Who Am I to Say (3:08) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 470
Lone Pine Hill (3:04) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 279
South Georgia Sugar Babe (2:48) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 341
What Do You Do When You're Lonesome (3:32) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 319
Turn Out My Lights (3:33) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 331
Lonesome and You (3:30) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 287
Ain't Glad I'm Leavin' (2:32) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 206
Faraway In Another Town (3:06) Date added: 03/24/08 | Total listens: 304

User reviews for Justin Townes Earle: ''The Good Life''

Average rating4 starsOut of 3 votes

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Editor's review

A name like Townes Earle announces its intention straightaway. The biological son of Steve and the spiritual child of Mr. Van Zandt, JTE offers a mean sort of country on "The Good Life," but it's hardly the same as dad's. Earle jumps back to the gritty roadhouse style of an earlier generation.

Biography

With Justin Townes Earle’s pedigree come mixed blessings. As the son of legendary singer/songwriter Steve Earle, high expectations are the name of the game, and he’s shown that he is up to the task on The Good Life, crafting stark portraits and narrative tales with elements of blues, classic country and rock n’roll. A modern-day troubadour, Earle blends genres seamlessly, framing his songs in warm musical settings and creating tunes that could easily be mistaken for classics. “I started out to make an old timey country record, but I listen to so many other kinds of music,” Justin explained. “Some of the songs were rearranged on the spot and took on other lives and album is now more of an exploration of southern music.” Earle approaches universal topics like traveling and matters of the heart (“Hard Living”, “The Good Life”) with the same fervor with which he evokes the bleak loneliness of a Civil War soldier on “Lone Pine Hill”.

With inspirations as diverse as Townes Van Zandt (he was named in honor of the elder Earle’s hero), Jimmy Reed, Kurt Cobain, The Replacements, Ray Charles and The Pogues, Justin forged his own brand of American roots music. Going through life with a namesake of Van Zandt’s stature cannot be easy for a young songwriter, but Earle takes it in stride,” saying, “Anyone who tries to live up to Van Zandt is a fool. I’m honored to carry the name, but if I spent my life trying to live up to it, I’d have a pretty miserable life.” Likewise, his father’s incredibly acclaimed, prolific career casts a huge shadow, but Justin Townes Earles makes a name for himself by focusing his writing on the personal rather than the political, narrative tales instead of protest. The Good Life melds the qualities of a short story with the lyrical acuity of excellent songs, celebrating grand southern traditions and blowing a fresh breeze across the musical gardens and dive bars of Nashville.

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