
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Singer-songwriter Steve Earle was a longhaired, seventeen-year-old San Antonio kid when he first heard “Local Memory,” a deep cut off 1973’s Shotgun Willie. He calls it the song that first taught him that a country lyric could read like literature. Steve goes on to describe the very real tension that still existed between hippies and rednecks when Willie played outside Austin in the early 70’s, and Willie's wonderfully off-color nickname for him.
By John Spong4.6
873873 ratings
Singer-songwriter Steve Earle was a longhaired, seventeen-year-old San Antonio kid when he first heard “Local Memory,” a deep cut off 1973’s Shotgun Willie. He calls it the song that first taught him that a country lyric could read like literature. Steve goes on to describe the very real tension that still existed between hippies and rednecks when Willie played outside Austin in the early 70’s, and Willie's wonderfully off-color nickname for him.

38,518 Listeners

38,807 Listeners

29,040 Listeners

5,975 Listeners

3,147 Listeners

1,976 Listeners

368 Listeners

4,115 Listeners

140 Listeners

52 Listeners

112 Listeners

351 Listeners

15 Listeners

59,510 Listeners

1,019 Listeners

15 Listeners

224 Listeners

58,014 Listeners

2,193 Listeners

6,543 Listeners

10,501 Listeners

517 Listeners