Jerusalem Steve Earle

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/24/2002
  • Sales Rank: 28,648
  • Label: ARTEMIS RECORDS
  • UPC: 699675114725

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Jerusalem

1LISTENAshes to Ashes 4:02
2LISTENAmerika V. 6.0 (The Best We Can Do) 4:19
3LISTENConspiracy Theory 4:14
4LISTENJohn Walker's Blues 3:41
5LISTENThe Kind 2:04
6LISTENWhat's a Simple Man to Do? 2:29
7LISTENThe Truth 2:21
8LISTENGo Amanda 3:34
9LISTENI Remember You 2:52
10LISTENShadowland 2:52
11LISTENJerusalem 3:56

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Notorious well before its release, Steve Earle's Jerusalem features no fewer than five powerful songs addressing the events of 9/11 and their aftermath, including a sensitive recounting of John "The American Taliban" Walker's unsettling odyssey. Earle has already been, and will continue to be, ripped by conservatives for "John Walker's Blues," but this somber, deliberate testimony is most persuasive in its depiction of a young man whose spiritual quest leads him first to Allah and then to the wrong place at the wrong time, culminating in his arrival back on native soil "with my head in a sack." Its opening line -- "I am just an American boy raised on MTV" -- echoes "Johnny Come Lately" on Earle's 1988 magnum opus, Copperhead Road, suggesting the song is the next chapter in an epic about three generations of fighting men, this latest returning home reviled. Elsewhere the gritty, anxious rock guiding "Ashes to Ashes," "American v.60 (The Best We Can Do)," and "Conspiracy Theory," along with Earle's restrained growl of a voice, offer vivid lessons in historical inevitability, as does the title number, which closes the album by referencing biblical prophecy concerning Judgment Day. These are all strong, thought-provoking songs guaranteed to spark heated debates. But the strength of Jerusalem also lies in the songs that aren't shaped by the events of 9/11, which happen to be among Earle's finest. "The Kind" is one of the most winsome heartbreakers he's ever written. The jaunty Tex-Mex air of "What's a Simple Man to Do" frames a compelling tale of a fellow who made some mistakes and went back on his word, but only in the name of survival. And the languid memoir "I Remember You," with guest vocals from Emmylou Harris, is a stirring interior monologue of a man haunted by the memory of a woman he shouldn't have let slip away. In Earle's wondrously wrought Jerusalem, answers raise more questions and the truth lies somewhere in the shadows. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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