Johnny Come Lately - Steve Earle & The Pogues - HD Video & Audio Remaster

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ธ.ค. 2023
  • We know this classic song has never been given it's due from the Pogues side of things.
    Note this audio is taken from the Pogues box set Just look Them In The Eye And Say - Pogue Mahone! If anyone is wondering why you can see Andrew or others playing though you cannot hear them, it is simply the band laying down guide tracks.
    It goes without saying that as Pogues die hards we have so many fantastic songs to focus on but we also have some great collaborations, this song being a case in point.
    This is a fantastic collaboration that works on all levels. Let us not forget the Pogues were a family and Spider brought Steve into that family for this song. Steve is truly a writer exposing the rawness of life from the same perceptive as Shane.
    What is most interesting here for Pogues fans is that there is little or no footage of The Pogues in the studio and it is a real treat to see the boys working on Steve's classic song.
    The footage of Shane on banjo is exceptional.
    “I’m an American, boys, and I’ve come a long way
    I was born and bred in the USA
    So listen up close, I’ve get something to say
    Boys, I’m buying this round.”
    These first lines from Steve Earle’s “Johnny Come Lately,” off his amazing 1988 Copperhead Road album, could serve as an effective introduction for any American songwriter. Blues great Robert Johnson, folk troubadour Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Madonna or Kendrick Lamar. I am here, and I have an important story to tell. I have something meaningful to say.
    However, after the first lines of “Johnny Come Lately,” we realise this is not a biographical song about Steve Earle, but rather a story about an American soldier serving in London during World War II.
    “When I first got to London it was pourin’ down rain
    Met a Iittle girl in the field canteen
    Painted her name on the nose of my plane
    Six more missions I’m gone.”
    The soldier arrives in London and meets a British girl. He tells the world of his love by painting the name of the girl on his plane, and he is already counting the hours and the missions until he can return to her. Later in the song he promises “I’m taking her home with me one day sir, soon as we win this war.” In the chorus, he sings of an expected warm welcome back in the states.
    “But when Johnny Come Lately comes marching home
    With a chest full of medals and a G.l. loan
    They’ll be waiting at the station down in San Antone
    When Johnny comes marching home.”
    Through this song, World War II becomes connected to a shared, proud and painful past by recalling the popular “When Johnny Comes Marching Home” song from the American Civil War. Heroes were warmly welcomed home then, too. “When Johnny comes marching home again, Hoorah! Hoorah!” War to war, generation to generation, the men and women who put their lives at risk for our safety and democracy come home to celebrations of their heroism and bravery.
    Then, there’s a twist. We learn that this story is not being told by the soldier, but rather by his grandson.
    “Now my granddaddy sang me this song
    Told me about London when the Blitz was on
    How he married grandma and brought her back home
    A hero throughout this land.”
    The soldier did get home safely. He married his British bride. He was celebrated upon his return, and they had a family. They had a grandson.
    The narrator is thinking about his grandfather as he himself returns home from the Vietnam war and realizes that the chain is now broken. The narrative has changed. Soldiers return home from a war that the people did not support or understand. The pride of the civil war is missing. The victory elation that followed World War II is missing. People are angry. People are apathetic.
    “Now I’m standing on a runway in San Diego
    A couple Purple Hearts and I move a little slow
    There’s nobody here, maybe nobody knows
    About a place called Vietnam.”
    America is difficult. The story is constantly changing and evolving. Families connect to the story of our country across generations, and those experiences are interpreted through vastly ever fluid perspectives and opinions.
    I don’t know that the story of the country and its families, now evolving through more than 150 years, has been ever been captured more effectively than Steve Earle has done in “Johnny Come Lately.”
    This song is story about family, war and the patriotism and passion that connects us all -
    So listen up close, I’ve got something to say.
    Boys, I’m buying this round.
    Video created by Moog Bass.
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ความคิดเห็น • 12

  • @jimoliver535
    @jimoliver535 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    This and Tom Ames' Prayer are hands down my favorite Steve Earle songs. RIP Shane.

  • @joannehack7588
    @joannehack7588 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    🤩

  • @joannehack7588
    @joannehack7588 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Shane. Always in our hearts🎋

  • @irishroverandthecrew
    @irishroverandthecrew หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great !

  • @777straycat
    @777straycat 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

    80th with thanks to the USA

  • @rckrtcrg1246
    @rckrtcrg1246 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    This is truly special, so glad it was captured on video. Thank you for posting!

  • @markhibbert4052
    @markhibbert4052 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Two brilliant songwriters / singers doing what they do best

  • @123Heikki
    @123Heikki 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    F-ing brilliant !!

  • @shermanscarrier920
    @shermanscarrier920 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Yee ha

  • @joannehack7588
    @joannehack7588 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

    🩵

  • @finscall1068
    @finscall1068 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great. At bit more James and Andrew would be nice
    Hey it’s all on the cutting room floor 😂

    • @milligan8679
      @milligan8679 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Type in ‘Steve Earle Recording of Johnny Come Lately’ for 10 minute doc clip