Earle was so affected by his relationship with Van Zandt that he named a son after him. Now he's putting the finishing touches on a tribute album to Van Zandt, recorded in both Nashville and New York. Rolling Stone called Earle in Nashville to discuss the album, listening to the Kings of Leon, recording with Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morello and his unique relationship with the late, great Townes Van Zandt:
So these are all Townes' songs you're
doing?
The idea was to try to record these songs as close to the way that
I remember Townes performing them as possible.
How was that?
It's how I learned to play; it's how I learned to perform. I arrive
at it slightly differently than he did. I technically execute my
guitar style differently than he did, in that he used metal finger
picks and I don't, but I finger pick like he did. He was sitting
right in front of me when I was really learning to play.
What do you mean he was sitting right in front of
you?
This was a real live apprenticeship. I met him when I was 16.
Townes was a stunning solo performer. I've only seen a handful of
people that were as good as he was. Loudon Wainwright is in that
class as a solo performer. It's a really rare thing. The way Townes
did it, he could literally just stand there and close his eyes
— sometimes not open them for an entire set — and you
were mesmerized. By the time more people knew about him, his skills
were somewhat diminished as a performer and as a guitar player and
as a singer. I barely got there in time to see him when it
wasn't.
Do you have a favorite vocal or song or lyric of his? A
favorite moment or slice of a song?
My favorite record overall is probably the one they called The
Nashville Sessions. The people that released it were not
authorized to release it. It was his last studio record before a
long break. It was made in the mid-'70s and it's got some really
really, really great songs. It's got "The Spider Song" on it, and
it's got "Buckskin Stallion" on it. So I like that record overall.
I think my favorite songs are probably "Colorado Girl," on an album
called Townes Van Zandt, 'cause nobody fucks with that at
all. It's a solo vocal performance.
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