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Music CD: Copperhead Road Artist: Steve Earle
List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $6.23
Your Save: $ 3.75 ( 38% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Mca
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Copperhead Road 2. Snake Oil 3. Back To The Wall 4. The Devil's Right Hand 5. Johnny Come Lately 6. Even When I'm Blue 7. You Belong To Me 8. Waiting On You 9. Once You Love 10. Nothing But A Child
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0039405000728 Label: Mca Manufacturer: Mca Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Mca Release Date: 1990-10-25 Studio: Mca
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Copperhead Road Comment: My husband loved this download for his MP3 he has shared it with everyone
Thanks
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great CD Comment: Right up there with other Steve Earle CDs. Would recommend to anyone who remotely likes his music!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Good Album Comment: I love Steve Earle. I think Side 1 (I used to have the cassette) is as good as anything you'll ever hear. Side 2 seemed to be sort of a letdown after those first five great songs. As to the editorial review: the "wild-west themed" Snake Oil is about POLITICS....and the BS we get from politicians.........
Customer Rating:      Summary: third in a rowe Comment: the best steve earle album ive ever heard. more of a rockin feel to it. love it. glade to have it as a part of my cd collection.
Customer Rating:      Summary: c.d. Comment: Came as promised that's all i care about lol! it was a gift so i don't know how it runs.
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Editorial Reviews:
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It happens to every hard partier--your lifestyle eventually catches up to you. For Steve Earle, this third so-so effort from the then-roué-ish troubadour was a pretty glaring rehab-ahead warning light. The sloppiness was beginning to show: half the disc bogs down in throwaways, cheap echoes of Guitar Town and Exit 0's country-rock acumen. The rest, fortunately, is prime, focused Earle: the Vietnam-vet title track, the Wild West-themed "Snake Oil," and the oft-covered classic "The Devil's Right Hand," in which the composer achieves that perfect balance of city-slick pop and hillbilly twang. Earle would hit that one-two combo again, but not until he shook that party monkey a few albums later. --Tom Lanham
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