The song that kicks off Heartworn Highways, "L.A. Freeway" by the great and reclusive Guy Clark, sets the tone for the album. Clark's plaintive song conjures a laid-back atmosphere that, like most of the recordings here is Most of the tracks here are really intimate - living room intimate, front porch intimate. More than that, "L.A. Freeway" serves as sort of a mission statement for the album as a whole with its theme of leaving the urban life behind and getting back to one's roots.
The homey, homespun vibe continues straight through until the last notes of the closing song, a Christmas Eve jam on "Silent Night" with Clark, Steve Earle, Rodney Crowell, Steve Young, Susannah Clark (guy's wife), and Richard Dobson. Along the way, chairs creak, whiskey is sipped, audience members have important questions for whoever's singing, microphone stands make noise, and people come and go.
Guy Clarke contributes three other songs to the album, including an early version of his classic "Desperadoes Waiting For A Train," about "a man who was kinda like my grandfather, but was really my grandma's boyfriend." It is a perfect song about how this man helped raise him, with lyrics as sharp as a knife and scenes as sharply drawn as any ever have been, and it is made even stronger by the care the producers have put into sequencing the record. You see, just before "Desperadoes" is a wonderful David Allan Coe song called "I Still Sing The Old Songs" which closes with a few lines from "Red River Valley." "Desperadoes" opens with a mention of the same song. Rather than seeming gimmicky, touches like these elevate Heartworn Highways from a mere compilation to a statement about what country music meant to some of its future saviors.
It should be clear by now that I am not so much reviewing this album as falling in love with it. This was not a sure thing - I don't always have patience for confessional living-room singers and their confessional living-room songs. Performances like these live or die on the quality of the writing. But despite the fact that these are songwriters still learning their craft (Townes Van Zandt's "Waiting Around To Die" is actually, so he claims, the very first song he ever wrote), there really isn't a single dud, outright cliche, or bit of hokey filler here. And although the homespun authenticity of the whole thing sometimes feels a little studied, a little put-on, that's a minor sin to commit in the making of music this good. I could try to run down more highlights from this album, but the truth is, you're either going to dig all of it or none of it, and I wouldn't feel right choosing this Steve Earle song over that Townes Van Zandt when they are all pretty much gold.








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