It was not out of nowhere, then, that Danny Goldberg, an ACLU board member who is president and founder of Artemis Records, Earle's current label, called up Earle shortly after Bush landed in the White House and said, How about writing a political album? "Part of the reason was commerce," Earle explains. "How do you separate the next album from the last one? The conversation began the same way every conversation I've ever had with a record company executive [has]: 'I don't want to tell you how to make records, but...' But I do listen to Danny because I don't have to apologize to him for being opposed to the death penalty. I've been told by Irving Azoff [onetime head of MCA Records], by Jimmy Bowen [an influential recording executive in Nashville], that if I kept my mouth shut about different things I could sell more records. Not Danny. And he felt this was a way to make a record distinct from the last one, which was mostly chick songs. I waved him off and said, 'I'll see.'" Earle was busy with running his own independent record company (E-Squared) and writing fiction. He's published a collection of short stories, is working on a novel and has written a play about Karla Faye Tucker, who in 1998 became the first woman executed in Texas since the Civil War. (He also recently acted in three episodes of HBO's The Wire and opened a theater company in Nashville.) He wasn't even planning to work on an album anytime soon.
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Fred Thompson, Neocon
Conservatives & The American Right
David Corn: He has a strong claim on the neoconservative heart, and if he ends up in the White House, the moribund neocons will rise again.
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George Tenet's Evasions
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
David Corn: His new memoir proves how hard it is to tell the truth about oneself but how easy it is to blame others.
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Trying to Stay Out of Iran
David Corn: Does Congress have the strength to prevent Bush from going to war with Iran?
After September 11, the first new track in Earle's notebook was "Ashes to Ashes," a dark rock song that reminds the listener that all things must pass--dinosaurs, humanity and, probably, America ("It's always best to keep it in mind/that every tower ever built tumbles"). "Jerusalem," the title track, cautions against viewing the Middle East conflict with cynicism ("The man on the TV told me that it had always been that way/And there was nothin' anyone could do or say"). And when Earle, who is the father of several children, including a 20-year-old son, saw an arrested Lindh on the TV, he felt the anguish of Walker's parents and questioned the rush to turn Lindh into a sacrificial lamb. "Artists and politicians are afraid of dishonoring the memory of the people who died and of offending their families," Earle says. "That's a real fear. It's not bullshit. I thought about it before I wrote 'John Walker's Blues.' But I decided that he had fuck-all to do with September 11, and I could take the flak. My only purpose was to humanize him. I happen to be more afraid of damage to my civil liberties than I am of another terrorist attack."
Many reviews have dubbed Jerusalem "political." Which raises the question: What makes for political pop art? On no song does Earle advocate a particular policy. "Jerusalem" says nothing about who's right or wrong in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. "Amerika v. 6.0" jabs at healthcare US-style from the left, but it suggests no alternative. (What rhymes with "single payer"?) "Ashes to Ashes" implies that the United States won't be top dog forever and might want to act accordingly, but it does not have to be heard that way. ("If we contribute anything lasting at all," Earle says, "it will be jazz, rock and roll, and our Constitution. This document is hipper than [the Founders] intended it to be. Sometimes it's ignored and it's been beaten to shit--especially recently.") The album contains no shots at John Ashcroft or explicit critiques of US foreign policy--though Earle is delighted to oblige in interviews. And the disc does offer a couple of his "chick songs." Still, the conservative Weekly Standard attacked the album as a "juvenile" political statement, while hailing its music as better than that of Bruce Springsteen's September 11 offering, The Rising.
The album might more fairly be termed "topical"--in that several songs reference the stuff of headlines and cable-TV debates. It seems, though, that if a musician-songwriter directly acknowledges current affairs, many consider it a political act. "I don't think of myself as a political writer," says Earle. "But then I don't think of Woody Guthrie as a political writer. He was a writer who lived in very political times. And our times have become politically supercharged. We have had a period where capitalism has been allowed to run rampant, and people have suffered for it. And we're at war and going to war. But as Pete Seeger said, all songs are political to somebody. Lullabies are political to babies. Even a baby has an agenda--he wants to go to sleep or he doesn't."
When Earle started working on Jerusalem, he feared "a political album would be boring." But the disc--whether seen by his audience as political or not--hit the charts strongly. It debuted at 59 on the Billboard Top 200, and was No. 1 on Billboard's indie chart, No. 7 on the country chart, and No. 12 on the Internet sales chart--a takeoff consistent with his last major album. "I'm a hillbilly singer with delusions of grandeur," Earle says, with a guffaw. "My guess is that we're at a real critical point in history, so there might be more political art for a while. When I don't feel completely overwhelmed with the need to do this, I'll get bored and write about other things. There's always stuff to write about--and it comes with and without politics."
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