logo
Q&A: Songwriting legend Steve Earle discusses legacy ahead of Long Center appearance

Q&A: Songwriting legend Steve Earle discusses legacy ahead of Long Center appearance

Yahoo15-05-2025
Genre-bending, Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Steve Earle is coming to Lafayette this summer for the first time.
Earle has included the stop at the Long Center for Performing Arts on June 18 among 49 others on something of a legacy tour called 'Fifty Years of Songs and Stories.'
'I'm 70,' he said. 'You start thinking about that kind of stuff.'
Earle was surprised in late April by an invitation to become just the 76th living member of the Grand Ole Opry. 'This is kind of the biggest thing that has ever happened to me in my life,' he said on stage.
The upcoming solo show will feature Earle's country and rock hits throughout the 50 years since he moved to Nashville from Houston at 19, and all the stories that accompany a career and life of wide-spanning musical accomplishment as well as failed relationships and a drug addiction that once made him essentially homeless.
Though he's never visited, Earle isn't without a Lafayette connection. His fifth ex-wife (there have been six total), Teresa Ensenat, signed Guns N' Roses to its first record deal, discovering Lafayette native and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Axl Rose.
"It was pretty crazy,' Earle said. 'I met (Rose) at a club show in Brooklyn. I run into Slash every once in a while.'
Earle, still making music, has also lent his talents to acting, playwriting and book writing. 'That's what I am,' he says. 'I'm a writer.'
Right now he lives in New York, waking at 6 a.m. to drive his son, who has autism, to school before 'desperately' working on the last three songs of a musical of the 1983 film 'Tender Mercies.' He hopes to have a draft done by the time his tour finishes.
Earle recently discussed his reasons for planning the tour and some of the roads he's travelled along the way. The conversation has been edited for clarity and brevity.
Q. You mentioned thinking about legacy. When and how does that come up for you?
A. The Opry was that. I campaigned pretty hard to be a member of the Grand Ole Opry. I started going, and it's not like you make any money. I'm living here in New York. I lost money every time I played the Opry over the last three years, but I went pretty much once a month, and they were appreciative of it.
By the time I made (1986 hit album 'Guitar Town'), I knew what I wanted to do. I wanted to make credible country records, and that's what I did. My second record, 'Exit Zero,' is every bit as good a record as 'Guitar Town' is. There's some great songs on there I still play, songs I'm proud of. By the time I got to (1988's 'Copperhead Road') I consciously made my idea of a rock record, because I was dead at country as long as I was on that label, and I had seven more albums according to my contract. So it was sort of a desperation move and a survival move.
After I got sober and got back (in 1996) I made that acoustic record, and then I made what were essentially rock records, and they were sort of based on Beatles records. And I just missed having steel guitar and fiddle on records. So later I added steel guitar, which I hadn't had in a long time. And I love those instruments. I love those sounds. It was unapologetically a country rock band, which is kind of what I've always been about.
You're talking about country, rock, and all these genres in between. Where do you want your name to fit in?
I'm always going to kind of be in the cracks. I'm never going to be in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Never going to be in the Rock Hall. I'm in the National Songwriters Hall of Fame. I'm in the Texas Heritage Songwriters Hall of Fame. And those things are more important to me than they probably would have been if this was 20 years ago, I probably wasn't thinking about that. But now I'm 70 and I am.
I'm a writer. I've got some musical talent, but lyrics is what I always did better than anything else. After I got sober, I started writing stuff outside of songs. I started writing some nonfiction stuff, a novel, 11 short stories, some poetry and one play, and now I'm doing the music for the one I'm working on now.
Your tour includes big cities like Chicago and Dallas. Any particular reason for stopping in Lafayette and Anderson, Indiana?
No, your agency lets the word out that you're going to be touring, and you get offers, and you start trying to put together something that you can actually reach. I've toured my bus in the States and Europe. Here, it makes a difference on shows I can do, because we sleep on the bus nearly every night and sometimes we're running 500 miles after a show.
It just came up that was interesting, you know, my ex-wife signed Guns N' Roses. So I've always known (Lafayette) is where Axl Rose was from, right? So I knew those guys before their first record came out, because my ex-wife worked with them.
How much time have you spent in Indiana in general?
A fair amount. I know a lot of that whole Seymour crowd just because John Mellencamp was a thing when I came along, and I played Farm Aid from the beginning. So I played the center of the state, I've also played the Chicago part of Indiana a little bit, too, because Chicago has been a pretty good market for me. And, you know, I spent some time chasing Yank Rachel around, who's the monster mandolin player, originally from Mississippi, but he lived most of his life in northern Indiana.
Do you truly enjoy playing your hits again and again? I know not every artist does.
Look, I don't understand why somebody has a song that's successful, and I've got a few songs that have become important to people.
I've got two that are definitely going to be around after I'm gone. Copperhead Road, a Tennessee State Song now, one of several, because there's about 15 of them. There's a whole generation of people in the Southeast, in the Southwest, that that song is part of their lives. And (2000's) Galway Girl is a very big deal in Ireland, and it's played at every wedding – it's Galway City Football Club's team song, which it took over for 'My Dear Old Galway Bay' after 150 years.
'It's just, I have some songs that people care about; why wouldn't I play those songs every night? Look, it pisses me off when Radiohead doesn't do 'Creep.' Why would they not play that? It's a great track.
To have a song that means so much to people, and being able to see that as you play it, what's that feeling like?
Back to legacy. It makes you feel good. It's as close to immortal as you're gonna get, Hoss.
This article originally appeared on Lafayette Journal & Courier: Q&A: Songwriting legend Steve Earle talks legacy, plans Long Center show
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cyndi Lauper to celebrate musical legacy with Bay Area crowd
Cyndi Lauper to celebrate musical legacy with Bay Area crowd

San Francisco Chronicle​

time23 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Cyndi Lauper to celebrate musical legacy with Bay Area crowd

Decades into her career, Cyndi Lauper still just wants to have fun. The pop singer got her start in the late '70s and rose to mainstream fame with her debut album, 'She's So Unusual,' in 1983. The record included her smash hit 'Girls Just Wanna Have Fun' and skyrocketed to the top of the charts in more than 25 countries. After years of entertaining, the Grammy winner opted to wind things down with her 'Girls Just Wanna Have Fun' farewell tour, which kicked off in October 2024 and stopped at Chase Center last November. The San Francisco show saw her 'bop,' shimmy and rock out to her hits, from 'True Colors' to 'Time After Time.' Despite its title, Lauper has clarified that the tour is not a retirement sendoff. The 72-year-old said she'll be open to occasional performances, and wanted to make sure she made one more push for an arena tour while she was still strong enough to give it her all. The trek, her first world tour since 2016, is scheduled to stop in the Bay Area once again at Mountain View's Shoreline Amphitheatre.

‘Acrophobic' Brian Littrell ‘freaked out' over floating platform at Backstreet Boys' Sphere residency
‘Acrophobic' Brian Littrell ‘freaked out' over floating platform at Backstreet Boys' Sphere residency

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

‘Acrophobic' Brian Littrell ‘freaked out' over floating platform at Backstreet Boys' Sphere residency

Backstreet Boys may be larger than life, but one member of the beloved pop group wasn't on board with a sky-high stunt they incorporated into their Las Vegas Sphere residency. The band's creative directors, Rich and Tone Talauega (better known simply as Rich + Tone), behind their newly-extended 'Into The Millennium' residency spoke to The Post about the 'challenges' they faced putting the show together, which included talking 'acrophobic' Brian Littrell into performing at over 50 feet in the air. 14 Backstreet Boys made their debut at Sphere in Las Vegas, kicking off their residency in July. Rich Fury Advertisement 14 Brian Littrell of the Backstreet Boys on February 14, 2025. Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images The Backstreet Boys' action-packed residency, which kicked off in Sin City on July 11, includes insane visuals — like monster-sized dancing robots projected on the 160,000-square-foot interior screen — a 1,600 speaker sound system to highlight the group's powerful vocals, and a futuristic platform with the ability to levitate Brian, Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, AJ McLean and Kevin Richardson up to 80 feet. The latter, of which almost didn't happen, thanks to Brian's fear of heights, The Post is told. Advertisement 'Baz [Halpin] came up with this idea,' Rich shared, referencing the Silent House CEO, the other mastermind behind the residency. He said the Backstreet Boys wanted to make a statement as the first big pop act to perform at the Sphere since its opening in September 2023. 'I think that was the statement that we wanted to make, was having them float,' Rich said of the platform. 'Like it looks like they're actually floating on there.' 14 Global pop icons Backstreet Boys made their debut at Sphere in Las Vegas. Rich Fury Advertisement 14 Brian Littrell of Backstreet Boys performs at Stagecoach on April 27, 2025 in Indio, California. Getty Images for Stagecoach 14 Backstreet Boys Vegas residency. Justin Segura When asked if all five members of the Grammy-nominated group were game for the stunt, which happens during the medley portion of the show, Rich laughed. 'Brian is acrophobic, so he's a bit afraid of heights,' he responded. 'So we had to ease him into it, make sure that everything was safe around that.' Advertisement Brian's counterparts, however, were 'gung-ho about it,' so he didn't have much of a choice. 14 The Backstreet Boys performing during their Las Vegas residency. Rich Fury 14 Brian Littrell turns to the camera to perform as his bandmates sing to the audience on July 14, 2025. Live Nation 14 The Backstreet Boys dance and perform their classic hits during opening night of their residency inside The Sphere in Las Vegas. Brian Prahl / 'They were so on board,' Rich, also a longtime choreographer for the Backstreet Boys, told The Post, explaining that they made some modifications to the floating platform stunt to help make Brian feel comfortable. 'We capped it at, I think, 52 [feet], which is as hell,' Rich noted, adding, 'Brian was freaking out about it at first.' However, the singer 'worked his way up to it,' the proud creative director shared. 'He's such an amazing team player when it comes to that.' 14 Brian Littrell of the Backstreet Boys perform onstage at the 60th Academy Of Country Music Awards held at the Ford Center at The Star on May 08, 2025 in Frisco, Texas. Penske Media via Getty Images Advertisement 14 The Backstreet Boys sing as they levitate over 50 feet in the air. Justin Segura Revealing that Brain's bandmates, as well as the entire team behind the residency, are 'sensitive' to his fear of heights, Rich said, 'For the most part, he came through and we didn't have to get rid of the gag.' Nick had previously opened up about Brian's phobia, but his comments resurfaced after eagle-eyed fans noticed that the vocalist uses a stand for extra support while soaring on the platform. 'Brian hates that,' Nick told Entertainment Tonight in February. 'He's afraid of heights.' Advertisement 14 An shot of the Sphere in Las Vegas during the band's residency show. Rich Fury 14 The Backstreet Boys on February 21, 2025. Backstreet Boys/Instagram Kevin, who is also Brian's cousin, echoed Nick's statement: 'He does not like heights.' Brian's fears aren't trumping his residency experience. Advertisement 'It's a show like no other,' he told the outlet earlier this year. 'At the end of the day the venue is remarkable, it's one of a kind. We can give our fans something different.' 14 Backstreet Boys announce their extended residency dates. Backstreet Boys/Instagram 14 The Backstreet Boys at their Las Vegas residency at the Sphere. backstreetboys/Instagram Rich + Tone didn't just spill on Brian's acrophobia, either. Advertisement They also shared the secret rituals each member of the Backstreet Boys does before they hit the stage — and the one thing they do as a band ahead of showtime. While their 'Into The Millennium' residency was scheduled to end on August 24, the Backstreet Boys added several shows to their lineup this week due to popular demand. 'OH MY GOD, WE'RE BACK AGAIN!' the band shared via Instagram on Wednesday. 'We know we said we were done for this year, but that was before you guys sold out 21 nights at Sphere! So we worked hard to get some more shows scheduled to make sure everyone who wants to see the show can come to Vegas.' Nick, Brian, AJ, Howie and Kevin will return to the Sphere for five new dates in December and two additional shows in January 2026.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store