 |
Steve Earle - Jerusalem
CD DetailsArtist: Steve Earle Edition: Music CD CD Release Date: 2002-09-24 Music Label: Artemis Records Soundtracks: - Ashes To Ashes
- Amerika v. 6.0 (The Best We Can Do)
- Conspiracy Theory
- John Walker's Blues
- The Kind
- What's A Simple Man To Do?
- The Truth
- Go Amanda
- I Remember You
- Shadowland
- Jerusalem
Music reviews of JerusalemMusic Review: silly leftist tripe - nice tunes Rating: 1 Stars
"Johnny Walker Blues" and America with a K Steve Earle's new album about our corrupt, imperialist nation is worse than anticipated. ...as political statement, the album is stunning for its juvenile and morally obtuse reading of the current moment. But as music (may the political gods forgive me), it is pretty good. This isn't the first time Earle has written political music, and he doesn't bother to hide his feelings. "Frankly, I've never worn red, white, and blue that well," he says in a three-paragraph message on the first page of the liner notes. His ambivalence about this country dates back to Vietnam: "We sent 55,000 of our sons to die far from home in the belief that if we didn't arrest what we perceived as an 'evil empire' abroad that the last domino would ultimately fall at our own doorstep." Next sayeth the Earle: "When no enemy presented itself at the gate we began to turn on ourselves, subjecting our own citizens to clandestine scrutiny by law enforcement agencies and persecution in our courts of law." I'd like to tell you which period of widespread divisiveness and repression the good musician has in mind, but I haven't a clue. Maybe he's talking about McCarthyism, but that predates Vietnam. Or he could be talking about the Carter administration, but somehow I think not. Now I'm generally not one to harp on the political and historical literacy of rock'n'rollers, except that Earle makes it hard to look the other way. "In spite of our worst intentions and ignorance of our own history" he writes, "our Constitution has, thus far, proven resilient enough to withstand anything we throw at it including ourselves." Now when Steve Earle talks about our ignorance of history, the appropriate response is: Speak for yourself. The joke of this political brief is saved for the end. The Constitution, says Earle, "was framed by men whose names we are taught to remember by rote: Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Patrick Henry, Aaron Burr . . . the list is long and distinguished and we call these men patriots. In times like these, it is also important to remember the names of John Reed, Emma Goldman, Abbie Hoffman, Bobby Seale, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King . . . those who defended those same principles by insisting on asking the hardest questions in our darkest hours." One is tempted to mail Earle a long bibliography and seek clarification ten years down the road, but for now a shorter rebuke will have to do: (1) Aaron Burr's contribution to history was shooting and killing Alexander Hamilton, whose own contributions to political history were fundamental to the course of democracy. (2) John Reed, the famous American Communist, celebrated the Russian revolution in his "Ten Days that Shook the World." So beloved was he of the murderous Lenin that Reed was buried beside the Kremlin wall with a bunch of other Bolshevik heroes. (3) Emma Goldman's name appearing on any list of "patriots" is a laugh riot. The anarchist Goldman, whose diverse political activities included supporting the assassination of enemies of the working class, described patriotism as a childish, egotistic, arrogant superstition. "The awful waste [of money and life] that patriotism necessitates ought to be sufficient to cure the man of even average intelligence from the disease." She later recanted her belief that the ends justified the means and even wrote early criticism of Lenin's revolution. But I do not think Earle likes her for contradicting John Reed and other Soviet apologists. (4) Abbie Hoffman? What "hardest questions" did the leader of the Yippies ask? Why don't we have a f***-in at the 1968 Democratic National Convention? Why don't we kill some cops? (5) Bobby Seale? Seale, like Hoffman a member of the "Chicago Eight," was for a time head of the Black Panthers, those murderous, shakedown artists who more than any other organization in America helped make thuggery chic on the American Left. But Earle's politics don't end with the liner notes. There is of course "Johnny Walker Blues," a beguiling little song about "an American boy--raised on MTV / And I've seen all those kids in the soda pop ads / But none of 'em looked like me." ... merely one perspective, and Earle doesn't bother with elaborate justifications for betraying your country. But he can see how it might happen. According to the song, Johnny (Taliban) Walker was like any other kid who finds himself alienated from his peer group. So he "started looking around for a light out of the dim." .... how he found Islam and that's how he found jihad. The song suggests he could have just as easily ended up a pretentious philosophy major who only wears black. ....The album boasts a few more hints of old lefty flavor, but only one worth mentioning. Track number two is called "Amerika v 6.0 (The Best We Can Do)." The "v 6.0" part is a software thing, you know, like version 6, batch 0. I can't tell you about the other five versions because this little trope doesn't mean anything, not in the slightest. "I remember when we was both out on the boulevard / talkin' revolution and singin' the blues / Nowadays letters to the editor and cheatin' on our taxes is the best that we can do." Only most letters to the editor come out making more sense than this song, with its lazy and ridiculous America with a K. And I'd much rather Steve Earle cheat on his taxes than hand over his talent to bad political cliches.
More Jerusalem free music reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Description of JerusalemJerusalem is Steve Earle's state of the state address - an insightful overview of our turbulent times, in the vein of classic political albums like Bruce Springsteen's Born In The USA & Marvin Gaye's What's Goin' On. Highlights include, 'Conspiracy Theory', 'Ashes To Ashes', 'John Walker's Blues' & an appearance from Emmylou Harris. 11 tracks. 2002. On 1997's El Corazón, Steve Earle wished for the return of Woody Guthrie to a world sorely lacking voices of righteous dissent. Here, Earle stops pining for ghosts and gruffly makes his own claim to the agit-folk crown. The controversial "John Walker's Blues" drew attention to the album and the ire of many who misunderstood it, but it's only one of many topical tunes on a disc that issues a kind of call to arms: over the distorted guitars and garbage-pail drums of "Amerika v. 6.0" and in the spare and creepy satire "Conspiracy Theory," Earle rallies listeners to resist such corrosive cultural forces as consumerism, xenophobia, and apathy. And as Earle's songs often do, several cuts offer sympathetic portrayals of folks on the margins: a busted Mexican migrant writes a letter home as organ chirps and guitars blaze through "What's a Simple Man to Do?" and in "The Truth," Earle's fuzzed-out drawl depicts life behind bars. Though nearly every moment of this ambitious album is laden with meaning, there's room enough for simple beauty--like the velvet voice of Emmylou Harris on "I Remember You"--and, more importantly, hope. "I believe there'll come a day," Earle affirms in the closing track, "when the lion and the lamb will lie down in peace together in Jerusalem." --Anders Smith Lindall
|
 |