Steve Earle & The Dukes Announce New Album GUY for March 2018 Release

Steve Earle & The Dukes will release new album GUY on March 29, 2019 through New West Records. The album features The Dukes including Kelley Looney on bass, Chris Masterson on guitar, Eleanor Whitmore on fiddle & mandolin, Ricky Ray Jackson on pedal steel guitar, and Brad Pemberton on drums & percussion.

The 16-song set features songs written by Earle’s mentor Guy Clark and comes ten years after the singer-songwriter paid tribute to his other mentor Townes Van Zandt on TOWNES. Earle met Clark in 1974, hitchhiking from San Antonio to Nashville. He became the bassist in Clark’s band, taking over from Rodney Crowell. GUY is produced by Earle and recorded by his long-time production partner Ray Kennedy.

“No way I could get out of doing this record,” says Earle. “When I get to the other side, I didn’t want to run into Guy having made the Townes record and not one about him. GUY wasn’t really a hard record to make. We did it fast, five or six days with almost no overdubbing. I wanted it to sound live. When you’ve got a catalog like Guy’s and you’re only doing sixteen tracks, you know each one is going to be strong.”

There was another reason, Earle said, he couldn’t “get out of” making GUY.  “You know,” he said, “as you live your life, you pile up these regrets. I’ve done a lot of things that might be regrettable, but most of them I don’t regret because I realize I couldn’t have done anything else at the time. With Guy, however, there was this thing. When he was sick, he was dying really for the last ten years of his life. He asked me if we could write a song together. We should do it ‘for the grandkids,’ he said. Well, I don’t know…at the time, I still didn’t co-write much, then I got busy. Then Guy died and it was too late. That, I regret.”

Like the TOWNES record, GUY is a saga of friendship, its ups and downs, what endures. GUY also features guest appearances by fellow Guy Clark cohorts Emmylou Harris, Rodney Crowell, Terry Allen, Jerry Jeff Walker, Mickey Raphael, Shawn Camp, Verlon Thompson, Gary Nicholson, and the photographer Jim McGuire.

Recently, the band Devildriver did the cover of “Copperhead Road” originally done by Earle. The track centers around man, John Lee Pettimore, who comes from a moonshine making family and decides, after two tours in Vietnam, to begin growing Marijuana on his land. In the summer of 2018, Earle and the Dukes teamed up Country icons Lucinda Williams and Dwight Yoakam traveling in the cheekily named “LSD Tour.” The tour is named for the first letter of each performer’s first name: Lucinda, Steve and Dwight.

Earle began learning the guitar at the age of 11 and was reported to have run away from home at age 14 to follow his idol, singer-songwriter “Townes Van Zandt” around Texas. Earle was “rebellious” and dropped out of school at 16 and moved to Houston with his 19-year-old uncle and met Van Zandt, who became his hero and role model.

In 1974, at the age of 19 Earle moved to Nashville, Tennessee, and began working blue-collar jobs during the day and playing music at night. During this period Earle wrote songs and played bass guitar in Guy Clark’s band and on Clark’s 1975 album Old No. 1. Later Earle returned to Texas where he started a band called The Dukes.

Track List for GUY:
1. Dublin Blues
2. L.A. Freeway
3. Texas 1947
4. Desperados Waiting For A Train
5. Rita Ballou
6. The Ballad Of Laverne And Captain Flint
7. The Randall Knife
8. Anyhow I Love You
9. That Old Time Feeling
10. Heartbroke
11. The Last Gunfighter Ballad
12. Out In The Parking Lot
13. She Ain’t Going Nowhere
14. Sis Draper
15. New Cut Road
16. Old Friends

Kelly Tucker: Originally from Los Angeles, I grew up listening to all types of music. My first concert was Aerosmith with Skid Row, then moved on to concerts with Metallica, Lollapalooza, Guns N’ Roses, Soundgarden and more. One of my favorite shows of all time was when I was in college and someone took me to see the Allman Brothers play. I also scalped a ticket to see Pearl Jam and the amazing Eddie Vedder sing his heart out. My professional career started in 2000 at Nielsen Business Media where I was an assistant in a sales department and later got promoted to advertising account executive. When the recession hit in 2008 and the magazine was sold, I took a job at a call center and later got promoted to assistant to the CEO and COO of a global company. In 2017, I took a position at a pharmaceutical agency, and now currently responsible for coordinating meeting logistics for physicians and pharma reps throughout the United States. In my spare time, I work at Peace4Kids a non-profit in South Los Angeles and write screenplays in hopes to make a breakthrough.
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