Copperhead Road - Steve Earle

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Copperhead Road - Steve Earle
Steve Earle - Copperhead Road (Official Music Video)
The video is too cool not to share 😎 Love Rural America 🇺🇸 Steve Earle: Copperhead Road 🎶
Copperhead Road is such a wild gem of a song and packs SO MUCH storytelling over three generations into four and a half minutes. Like it starts by establishing the perspective character's grandfather's moonshining business, and makes sure you know grandaddy killed a revenue man in the first section. Then in the second section it launches into how the main character's father died in the same line of work, while simultaneously fleshing out some details of this family operation. And in the third section, it takes a wild pivot to the main character's time in Vietnam and his marijuana-growing operation.
I think the real testament to the storytelling is how it pulls the strings together in the last verse. Without being told, you understand exactly what's going on in with this guy and how it relates to his family history. Just. Look at this.
The last and hardest-hitting lyrics, everything builds to this. The DEA chopper bringing up PTSD flashbacks is such a good detail that hammers home how the US government has ground this guy up in the war machine, and are now persecuting him for what he turned to when he had no other options. And then it invites you to think of this as a parallel to his grandaddy and the revenue man and it's like. Yeah that's where it started. This has been going on for generations. Grandaddy probably didn't have a lot of options either.
And then it implies he's rigged Copperhead Road with Vietcong-style booby traps ("Charlie" being a slang term for the Vietcong) which is an absolutely buckwild thing to include, and has the delicious twist that the government has made him a more dangerous enemy than his grandfather and father by sending him to war.
And that's not even getting into the music. This thing starts with a synth that sounds like bagpipes - which may sound like a weird choice, but there's a lot of Scottish ancestry where this takes place in Appalachia. And it's really attention grabbing. This song played at every dance I went to in high school and the sound of that synth was the signal for everyone to rush to the dancefloor. Then the synth stops and everything else kicks in - the beat is really driving and you get the sense that something is building and building as the story is told, until it takes off at the end of the second section. Everything stops for this DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN and then the energy kicks up, but the synth doesn't return until he starts singing the third section. It's just barely present until the last line up above, and then it kicks back in with the same repeating part it started the song with, now layered on top of all the other instruments and the collective effect is an adrenaline rush. Then the other instruments fade out and you're left with that repeating synth again, closing the song out.
Idk what to say, I'm not good at talking about music and I don't really have the vocabulary to do it justice. It's just a really good song.
Living in the shadows
Copperhead Road
Saturday Night Special
Minneapolis 2023
Richard Speight, Jr.
Rob Benedict
Michael Borja
Song Review: Steve Earle - “Copperhead Road” (Live)
Stripping away everything but his octave mandolin, his voice and some help from the audience, Steve Earle reveals the hidden qualities of “Copperhead Road.”
Introduced as Tennessee’s newest state song - a weird thing for the liberal Earle to be proud of - and following “I Ain’t Ever Satisfied” from the forthcoming (July 13) Alone Again … Live, this “Copperhead Road” is the version for Earle fans who love to dislike his signature number.
Minus studio accoutrements and with in-the-moment energy, rowdiness and rawness added, the song is able to breathe and define itself. And it’s a good one - the studio version just kinda stinks.
Grade card: Steve Earle - “Copperhead Road” (Live) - A-
6/28/24