Ballad of Johnny Taliban: Steve Earle Picks Another Dumb Fight

Written by Ken Layne
Published August 12, 2002
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The latest outrage was all over FoxNews and talk radio. While his loyal fans will brush it off as another chapter in Earle's endless effort to pick a fight, those who don't appreciate his music see it as a George Michael-esque attempt to "rebuild his faltering career," as Nashville deejay Phil Valentine told the New York Post. Who cares what some Nashville deejay says? It's not like you hear Steve Earle on Hot Country 107.5.

His career seems just fine. He's got plenty of money and makes the music he wants. His last six records have all done well on the Americana, AAA and Billboard country charts — pretty good considering commercial radio doesn't play such music outside of Texas. And he's been nominated for eight Grammy awards while routinely topping the critics' lists.

While the New York Post might not think much of Earle, the New Yorker and New York Times can't seem to get enough of him. He even got a publisher to put out a collection of his short stories last year.

And there's the danger. That fancy Manhattan attention got to Earle's already big head and convinced him he wasn't just a talented Texas songwriter, but a Serious Writer addressing Serious Issues. And serious writers type dull short stories for other serious writers to praise. Last time I saw him on Letterman, he was wearing eyeglasses, for God's sake.

It's one thing to annoy conservative Nashville with coffeehouse claims of Marxism and stands against the death penalty and land mines, as Earle has done for years. His fans can take or leave this stuff, as long as the music's good. And it's fine to write a song about Johnny Taliban, because who hasn't wondered what goes on inside that kid's head?

The trouble comes when you let the ruckus kill the art, when you claim oppression before the record is even released. Unless this country magically became Iran yesterday, performing a controversial song is still punished by a lot of free publicity. I'm hoping Earle won't will leave the phony martyr routine to Susan Sontag. It's a tired, dull act.

* * *

Earle has used the Holy Land/Jeebus/Devil/backwards guitar thing pretty often. Anybody surprised by an Earle album called "Jerusalem" hasn't been paying attention.

He's also written songs with characters endorsing ar son, ps ycho stalking, assault with various deadly weapons, the consumption of coke and heroin, and executing people for a government paycheck.

So, all of y'all want to scream and whine about the same guy writing a song from the viewpoint of some dipshit Marin County boy who couldn't pull off hip-hop and became one of those head-bobbing Madrassa fruits instead, go right ahead. I'll still be poor and Steve Earle will still be rich. But I've never been bothered by Earle having money. Crazy Chomsky-reading nut that he is, he at least deserves some coin for 30 years of honky-tonk labor. At least he doesn't have a university degree. Hell, he doesn't have a high school diploma.

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Ballad of Johnny Taliban: Steve Earle Picks Another Dumb Fight
Published: August 12, 2002
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Section: Music: Country and Americana
Writer: Ken Layne
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Comments

#1 — August 13, 2002 @ 08:15AM — Bill

Anybody know if this is the same Steve Earle who plays drums in Hermano (hard rock band fronted by ex-Kyuss singer John Garcia)?

#2 — August 13, 2002 @ 17:02PM — M-J [URL]

You claim saying something controversial and then letting the ruckus overshadow the art is a tired act; yeah, well, so is taking one pinch controversy, a smidgen of artist reaction, and using it to spin an oh-so-clever contrarian angle. Have you heard the song, or the album?

#3 — August 13, 2002 @ 18:29PM — zizka [URL]

Walker is a confused kid, he screwed up some, and he's going to have a lot of time to think things over.

He did one thing which the CIA couldn't do, though, and that's infiltrate al Qaeda. He also attained fluency in Arabic, which almost no one in the CIA or the State Department has done. (Not nobody, but few).

Language study is tough. Even (American) liberal arts graduates seldom really learn even just to read one easy European language. (Yeah, French, German and Spanish are easy).

I've studied foreign languages and taught English and Chinese, and in that one respect Walker is an impressive guy.

#4 — August 13, 2002 @ 23:08PM — A

No, I don't believe Steve has ever played drums.

Also, the problems with the Del McCoury Band had to do mostly with money, not Steve's language.

#5 — October 9, 2002 @ 06:24AM — Neil

That was interesting, if kind of all over the map. I would have liked to have seen the thoughts a little more organized. I'm not sure you quite know what things you like and what things you don't. If you do, this doesnn't make it clear.

You seem way to smart to have a sloppy error like this, though --

"Earle told a Canadian crowd his latest contribution to the genre "just may get me fuckin' deported."

(On his own Web site, Earle contradicts this claim by saying, 'I'm not trying to get myself deported or something" and calls the new CD " the most pro-American record I've ever made.')"

There isn't a contradiction. Anyone should be able to see that.

I've done a lot of things in my life that I knew could or even probably would have a certain consequence. That doesn't mean it I did it for that consequence. Basically it's not different than a high school kid saying "If I break curfew to stay with my friends and drink beer, then I'll probably get grounded." That doesn't mean getting grounded was the hoped for consequence.

I'm not trying to compare Steve's comments to that level of maturity, just to a situation that demonstrates how simple and obvious the two statements flow together. They make such obvious sense that calling it a contradiction seems tantamount to a lie.

#6 — February 16, 2004 @ 07:58AM — dj [URL]

this is one o the greatest songs ever written-next to anything by rozz williams- i am bored by radio, mtv, vh1, led zeppelin, give me steve earle!

#7 — February 16, 2004 @ 08:15AM — Eric Olsen

I don't see this as one of is better songs, but I am pleased you have found Steve.

#8 — February 13, 2006 @ 10:13AM — Scott Butki

I have tremendous respect for Earle. He's one of the good ones, in my book.
He does not have a great singing voice but he takes on challenging topics and won't back down.

I wrote a review of two movies by Earle here.

#9 — March 5, 2006 @ 09:48AM — Scott Butki

Making this song was a daring movie precisely because it makes people like this reviewer angry. But I think there's nothing wrong with telling a story from another character's perspective. Look at some of Springsteen's darker songs, for example.

#10 — April 25, 2007 @ 22:31PM — Duck

Well put. But he's always doing something interesting with his presence and stories and the collaboration with the McCoury's was a bright spot, more than worth the trouble. I saw that particular show live in a large club with about 800? people. He started solo with a long 20 minute story song about his hometown. Totally mesmerized the crowd. I don't think anyone even moved until he was finished.

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