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Steve Earle proves again and again that he is the original alternative to the glossy side of Nashville.
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Steve Earle adds yet another masterwork to his disparate collection of classics...
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Transcendental Blues measures up to the tough artistic standards Earle has set for himself since 1986's Guitar Town.
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Checkout.comTranscendental Blues epitomizes musical craftsmanship; it simmers instead of sizzles, meaning it's solid throughout and has no shortage of good songs... [w]hat is missing in the mix here is Earle at his angriest...
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Winding through the psychedelic title track, the ''Rubber Soul''-ish pop, the garage rock, and the lovely ''Eire meets Tennessee'' ''The Galway Girl,'' ''Blues'' is his musical road map.
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This may be the Steve Earle album for people who've never been Steve Earle fans before.
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Earle has let the spook out of the closet, so he can bare his spiritual chest (as it were) with a Lennonesque honesty and a vocal delivery that increasingly resembles Tom Petty's sub-Dylan sneer.
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Earle's music doesn't simply mirror the transcendence of its creator; it lends transcendence to the listener as well, as all excellent music will. But what truly makes this one of Earle's best records is that he refuses to be pulled down by musical decisions. It's as if he never faced a problem of whether or not to add this or that instrument, or to veer off in this or that direction. He simply had the idea and went with it.
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There is no doubt that his songwriting chops just keep on getting better.
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Transcendental Blues is an intermittently twangy, often trippy and, yes, generally transcendent outing.
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"Transcendental Blues" is a deeply personal album steeped in pain and loneliness.
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The writing shines throughout... Steve Earle seems able to do anything he cares to.
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Some of the best music he's created since his release from prison on drug charges nearly six years ago.
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Extending his winning streak to five albums, he's become a paragon of quality and musical honesty.
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It's not precisely rock and roll, more a summary of the stylistic fusion that has evolved over his last five albums: unequal parts rock, bluegrass, folk, Irish, and punk.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 11 out of 12
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Mixed: 0 out of 12
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Negative: 1 out of 12
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Jun 6, 2015
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RobertSJun 13, 2006This should embarass Nashville. A great record.
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BrianMcCMar 5, 2006