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"Copperhead Road" album lyrics

4.6 / 5
Album updated, review now!
Tracklist
01
Steve Earle - Copperhead Road
Copperhead Road lyrics
Steve Earle
4.4 / 5 (45)
playlist
02
Steve Earle - Snake Oil
Snake Oil lyrics
Steve Earle
4.0 / 5 (1)
playlist
03
Steve Earle - Back To The Wall
04
Steve Earle - The Devil's Right Hand
05
Steve Earle feat. The Pogues - Johnny Come Lately
06
Steve Earle - Even When I'm Blue
07
Steve Earle - You Belong To Me
08
Steve Earle - Waiting On You
09
Steve Earle - Once You Love
10
Steve Earle - Nothing But A Child
album info:
Verified yes
Discs1
Rank
Released1988-10-17
Record labelUNI Records
Charts
AddedJuly 26th, 2013
Last updatedMay 4th, 2017
AboutCopperhead Road is the third studio album by Steve Earle, released in 1988. The album is often referred to as Earle's first "rock record"; Earle himself calls it the world's first blend of heavy metal and bluegrass, and the January 26, 1989 review of the album by Rolling Stone suggested that the style be called "power twang".

The songs on side one of the album reflect Earle's politics: the title track attacks the War on Drugs, and the song "Snake Oil" compares then president Ronald Reagan to a traveling con man and draws attention to his "legacy of creative deceit". The title track and "Johnny Come Lately" (performed with The Pogues) both describe the experiences of returning veterans. The latter compares the experience of US servicemen fighting in World War II with those in the Vietnam War, and contrasts the differing receptions they received on returning home. "Back to the Wall" is about poverty, describing the life of the homeless in the US.

Unlike some issues-oriented musicians, however, Earle does not limit himself to political material. The second side of the album consists of more personal, slower tempo works: love songs ("Even When I'm Blue" for example) and a holiday offering ("Nothing but a Child", performed with Maria McKee).

The title song "Copperhead Road" tells of a Vietnam War veteran, scion of a rural moonshine bootlegging clan, who returns home to Rockingham County, Virginia but decides instead to enter the marijuana business which is shown by the line, "I'll take the seed from Colombia and Mexico". Copperhead Road was an actual road near Mountain City, Tennessee although it has since been renamed as Copperhead Hollow Rd. due to theft of road signs bearing the song's name. The song also inspired a popular line dance timed to the beat of the song and has been used as the theme music for the Discovery Channel reality series Moonshiners.

In declaring Copperhead Road Rock Album of the Week on October 21, 1988, The New York Times described it as "...exactly half of a brilliant album, with five smart, ornery, memorable story-songs." With references to Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp and The Rolling Stones the paper applauded Earle for introducing country music's storytelling and three-chord structures to rockabilly and contemporary rock music. Side two, however, the Times dismissed as "strictly average" love songs and a "hokey" Christmas song. Time Magazine, including it in the September 19, 1988 Critics' Choices, described it as a "rock-inflected, country-based album" that "takes long chances with big themes...and does them proud".

It was a month into the new year before Rolling Stone finally published their review of Copperhead Road. On January 26, 1989, Rob Tannenbaum wrote the album, "begins murderously and ends sentimentally... split into two song cycles" and described the album's first side as being, "as powerful as any music made this year". Of side two he admits disappointment at conventional love songs, saying Earle, "has already examined this terrain and done a better job of it." Nonetheless, the review compares Earle to Randy Newman, Bruce Springsteen, and Waylon Jennings among others, and concludes with Rolling Stone's designation of Earle as an "important artist" and finding Copperhead Road worthy of four stars.

Airplay on rock radio stations drove the title track into Billboard Magazine's Album Rock Top Ten chart, and that in turn helped Copperhead Road on Billboard's Album Chart, where it peaked at number 56.

Deluxe Edition (2008)

On April 29, 2008, Geffen Records/Universal Music released a 2-disc deluxe edition of Copperhead Road. Disc one is the album as listed above, digitally remastered. Disc two features previously unreleased live recordings.

Disc two:
1."The Devil's Right Hand" (live in Raleigh, N. C. - Nov. 19, 1987)
2."Fearless Heart" (live in Raleigh)
3."San Antonio Girl" (live in Raleigh)
4."Nobody but You" / "Continental Trailways Bus" (live in Raleigh)
5."My Baby Worships Me" (live in Raleigh)
6."Wheels" (Chris Hillman, Gram Parsons) (live in Raleigh)
7."The Week of Living Dangerously" (live in Raleigh)
8."Johnny Come Lately" (solo, live in Raleigh)
9."Brown and Root" (Emmylou Harris, Rodney Crowell) (live in Raleigh)
10."I Love You Too Much" (live in Raleigh)
11."It's All Up to You" (Earle, Harry Stinson) (live in Raleigh)
12."Nebraska" (Bruce Springsteen) (solo, live - 1988)
13."Copperhead Road" (live in Calgary, Canada - April 1989)
14."I Ain't Ever Satisfied" (live in Calgary)
15."Dead Flowers" (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) (live in Calgary)
16."Little Sister" (Greg Trooper) (solo, live in Calgary)
17."Guitar Town" (live in Calgary)

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