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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 7:16 pm 
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Mr. Steve Earle (my own personal Jesus) returns from an unusual three year break on Sept. 25 with "Washington Square Serenade". The album represents a number of firsts for Steve: his first record for New West Records; his first album produced in New York City (now his home though he's been writing songs about that city for years); and the first produced by John King of The Dust Brothers at the legendary Electric Ladyland Studios. The deluxe CD/DVD digipak version will be available with bonus packaging art plus an exclusive documentary about the inspiration behind the album, 3 acoustic performances, interviews and a walking tour of Greenwich Village with Steve and journalist Mark Jacobson. The album will also be available as a Limited Edition 180 gram vinyl record.

Now, if he would just grow some facial hair back...

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1. Tennessee Blues
2. Down Here Below
3. Satellite Radio
4. City Of Immigrants (with Forro In The Dark)
5. Sparkle And Shine
6. Come Home to Me
7. Jericho Road
8. Oxycontin Blues
9. Red Is The Color
10. Steve's Hammer (For Pete)
11. Day's Aren't Long Enough (with Allison Moorer)
12. Way Down In The Hole

Standard Edition (CD only):

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000UC1Q9C/?tag=imwan-20

Limited Edition (CD + DVD):

The DVD includes an exclusive behind-the-scenes exploration of the inspiration behind Washington Square Serenade. It includes an extensive interview capturing Steve s insights, opinions and observations on a wide range of topics, a tour of some of his favorite spots in Greenwich Village, and 3 performances filmed in the legendary Electric Lady Studios.

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000UNM4CO/?tag=imwan-20

Added tracklist and pre-order links. ~ Linda


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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 7:29 pm 
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The Pope of Pop!

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Apparently Earle has been living in Greenwich Village lately. The guys at 'Rama tell me he did a photo shoot in the store some weeks ago (how could I not have been there?--it's practically my second home!) Maybe 'Rama will be featured on the walking tour DVD feature!

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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Tue Aug 28, 2007 9:10 pm 
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Looking forward to hearing what the "direction" is on this - solo acoustic/bluegrass/kickass/suckass?? Any tracks out for the ears yet?

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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 8:19 am 
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extremely underrated artist is mr. earle.

not afraid to take chances, great lyrics, good playing and production.

the man never made an album i didn't like :)

renny

p.s. and he's pretty damn good live too!

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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 11:48 am 
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The new Steve Earle is his "goodbye to Nashville, I love New York and my seventh wife" record. It's mostly acoustic, with a stray banjo (on the unfortunately named "Oxycontin Blues") and a teriffic duet with Alison Moorer (# 7) on "Days Aren't Long Enough".

Don't be scared off by the notion of The Dust Brothers bringing hip-hop beats to this record - it sounds like a Steve Earle record, maybe a cross between Train A Comin' and Transcendental Blues, but not quite as good as either... but miles better than his last two, Jerusalem and The Revolution Starts... Now.

There's a little of the lyrical heavy-handedness that's dogged some of his more recent work, but overall it's a return to form.

Steve Earle (and maybe Tom Waits) may be the only two artists whose careers could be split in half and the latter half could at least measure up to the first half.

On tour soon... I can't wait.


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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 12:43 pm 
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Looking forward to hearing what the "direction" is on this - solo acoustic/bluegrass/kickass/suckass?? Any tracks out for the ears yet?

No sooner had I posted that message yesterday did I go shopping, and my buddy comes out of the backroom of the store with a advance CD copy for me. (Good lookin' out Doug! I'll still have to buy the deluxe DVD edition, though.) Have only given it a couple of spins so far, but it is a lovely and cohesive collection mixing all of the different genres that Steve has dipped into on previous releases. But the overall feeling I get from the disc is that he's really in love - now I understand the three-year absence. I had no idea that he had married Allison Moorer (wife No. 7!). All 'n' all, he still hasn't lost that rebel fire that makes him such an attractive musician and human being. This is one of those "instant" purchases.

LISTED BELOW IS THE FACT SHEET THAT CAME WITH THE PRESS KIT:

"The city hasn't changed as much as real estate agents would have you believe," Steve Earle explains about his adopted hometown of New York City. "Specifically, my neighborhood hasn't changed that much. I point people in the right direction so that they can take their picture like the cover of Freewheelin' all the time."

That's easy enough for Earle these days, because he and his wife, singer-songwriter Allison Moorer, now live on the very Greenwich Village street on which the famous cover shot for The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan (1962) was taken. In that photo, Dylan and his then-girlfriend Suze Rotolo huddle against the cold as they walk along a snowy New York street. It's an indelible romantic image that captures the idealism of the folk revival that was gathering momentum in New York at the time.

Steve Earle's gripping new album, Washington Square Serenade, is a loving tribute to that era, that movement, that music and the city that gave them all a nurturing home. "That period changed pop music," Earle says. "It made lyrics much more important. Rock & roll could have become a subgenre of pop if it hadn't been for that literary aspect, which completely came out of a four-block area in New York City in one brief instant of time."

Like Freewheelin' itself, Serenade is an album that combines songs of love and protest, a stirring chronicle of both the connections between people that make life worth living and the things that must be changed in order to make such connections more possible for everyone. "I knew it was going to be pretty personal," Earle says about the album, which he recorded at Electric Lady Studios, the famed Greenwich Village recording complex that Jimi Hendrix built in the late Sixties. "The best part of my personal life was going so well I knew that chick songs were going to be no problem. As for political songs, I don't think I've ever made an apolitical record. The last two before this [The Revolution Starts … Now (2004), Jerusalem (2002)] were overtly political, and unapologetically so. This one is unapologetically personal."

Washington Square Serenade opens with "Tennessee Blues," which updates the title track of Earle's 1986 debut album, Guitar Town – and establishes the sense of another fresh start. The new version is acoustic, more introspective and more rhythmically charged – all traits highly appropriate for the tale of an artist "bound for New York City" and leaving Tennessee behind. "It's continuing a narrative – the state of me," Earle explains.

The "chick songs," as Earle describes them in apt period slang, include the lovely "Sparkle and Shine," which echoes both early Dylan and the Beatles, and "Days Aren't Long Enough," which Earle co-wrote and sings with Moorer. "I've written duets for Lucinda Williams, Emmylou Harris, Iris DeMent and my sister Stacey, so there was no way I was going to get away with not writing a duet for me and Allison," Earle says, laughing. "I had to – I'm married! But we've been singing together as long as we've been together, and I wanted something that was a love song about us."

On the other end of Earle's passions, "Steve's Hammer," which the singer dedicates to Pete Seeger, is an uplifting political anthem, a statement of Earle's conviction about the role that music can play in achieving social justice. "One of these days I'm gonna lay this hammer down/Leave my burden restin' on the ground," he declares, and then makes clear when and only when that day will come: "When the air don't choke you, and the ocean's clean/And the kids don't die for gasoline."

As we all know, that time has not yet arrived, and "City of Immigrants" makes that point forcefully. A paean to New York's long history of welcoming people from other countries, the song had a very specific inspiration for Earle. "I knew I wanted to write a ‘Fuck Lou Dobbs' song," he says about the CNN anchor who has defined anti-immigration politics as his signature issue. "There's no excuse for it – it's ugly and it's racist." Supporting Earle on the song is Forro in the Dark, the super-charged neo-folk Brazilian band that's based in New York.

Washington Square Serenade concludes with Earle's scarifying version of Tom Waits' "Way Down in the Hole," which will serve as the theme for the next season of the HBO series "The Wire." Earle has a recurring role on the show – "I play a redneck recovering addict, so it's not acting," he deadpans.

"It's daunting to cover a Tom Waits song – he's one of the best of my generation of songwriters," Earle admits. "But, then, I once sang ‘Nebraska' to an audience that I knew Bruce Springsteen was in. It's not that stuff like that doesn't scare me – it's just that doesn't mean I won't do it!"

Overall, Serenade is imbued with a deeply intimate feel, because all of its concerns, public as well as private, as essential to who Steve Earle is. That intensely personal quality, however, is deftly complemented – both underscored and unsettled -- by John King's production. As one half of the Dust Brothers, King has worked with the likes of Beck and the Beastie Boys. As a result, rhythms continually percolate, bump and simmer beneath the largely acoustic instrumentation, fashioning a folk/hip-hop hybrid that sonically unites two of New York's finest musical traditions.

Asked how he would like listeners to respond to Washington Square Serenade, Earle, characteristically, is ready with a bold answer. "If you feel like you don't know what America is all about right now, and you want to reorient yourself to what America should be about, it's a really good time to come to New York City," he says. "I needed really badly at this point in my life to see a mixed-race, same-sex couple holding hands in my own neighborhood. It makes me feel safer."

"I've been pretty heartbroken about the way things have gone politically in this country the last few years, and I seriously considered moving someplace else," he concludes. "Then I figured out that I didn't have to leave the country. All I had to do was come to New York."

Washington Square Serenade – in its commitment, its values, its musical intelligence and, finally, its very American optimism about the possibilities for a better world – demonstrates why.


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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 12:54 pm 
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Quote:
Looking forward to hearing what the "direction" is on this - solo acoustic/bluegrass/kickass/suckass?? Any tracks out for the ears yet?


Apologies to "Smithers-Jones" in my last post. It was he/she who asked the question about the direction of the CD. I just didn't post it correctly.


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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Wed Aug 29, 2007 5:51 pm 
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Joined: 20 Aug 2007
Posts: 182
Location: Anytown, Canada
No problem - thanks for the updates (all). I'm intrigued.......
Just got the new Lyle Lovett (as well as the Ian Hunter) in the mailbox today. Looking forward to hearing what these cats are up to!

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"I know there's a balance, I see it when I swing past....."


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 Post subject: (2007-09-25) New Steve Earle "Washington Square Serenade" CD/DVD
PostPosted: Mon Sep 24, 2007 12:16 pm 
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BUMP with new info ~ I've added details for the limited two-disc version (one CD, one DVD) to the first post in this thread. There's now also a "Behind The Scenes With Steve Earle" video available for viewing at both of the Amazon links in that post.

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