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TIMELINE
The Beginning 1955 |
| Stephen Fain Earle is born in Fort Monroe, Virginia, the son of Barbara and Jack, an air traffic controller. He grows up in Schertz, Texas, near San Antonio. |
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Guitar Contest 1968 |
| After receiving his first guitar only two years previously, Steve finishes third in a local contest. He also starts experimenting with drugs, the beginning of a 26-year addiction. |
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Moves to Houston 1969 |
| At age fourteen, Steve leaves home to live with an uncle in Houston. He meets Townes Van Zandt, the man who would become his mentor and role model. |
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Moves to Nashville 1974 |
| At age nineteen, Steve moves to Nashville and takes on odd jobs to pay the bills. He also plays in various bands while writing his own music. |
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First Professional Recording 1975 |
| Steve gets his first break, playing bass and singing background vocals on Guy Clark's album, Old No. 1.
Elvis Presley arranges to record Steve's song, Mustang Wine but fails to show up for the session.
He also appears as an extra in the Robert Altman film, Nashville. |
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First Top 10 Hit 1982 |
| Johnny Lee records a Steve Earle/John Scott Sherrill song called When You Fall in Love and it reaches the Top 10 in the US. Carl Perkins records Mustang Wine. |
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"Guitar Town" Released 1986 |
| Debut album. Title track becomes a Top 10 single in the summer and Goodbye's All We've Got Left reaches the Top 10 early the next year. Steve receives two Grammy nominations for this album: Best Country Male Vocalist and Best Country Song (Guitar Town). |
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"Exit 0" Released 1987 |
| I Ain't Ever Satisfied receives some airplay on rock radio and Steve gets two more Grammy nominations: Best Country Male Vocalist and Best Country Song (Nowhere Road). |
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"Early Tracks" Released 1987 |
| Following the success of Guitar Town, Epic releases this collection of older singles. |
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Arrest in Dallas 1987 |
| After a New Year's Eve concert in Dallas, Steve is arrested for allegedly assaulting a police officer. He spends the night in jail and is fined. |
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"Copperhead Road" Released 1988 |
| Copperhead Road is the only commercial single released in the US and it is targeted to rock radio exclusively. Three commercial singles are released in the UK: Copperhead Road, Back to the Wall, and Johnny Come Lately. |
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Steve on Playgirl's List 1988 |
| Playgirl magazine names Steve as one of the "10 Sexiest Country Singers". |
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"The Hard Way" Released 1990 |
| Justice in Ontario becomes a minor hit in certain parts of Canada. The song compares the trial of bikers Gary Comeau and Rick Sauvé to a case of vigilante justice from the 1800s.
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"Guitar Town" on Rolling Stone's List 1990 |
| Rolling Stone magazine names Guitar Town as one of the "Greatest 100 Albums of the 80s". |
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"Shut Up and Die Like An Aviator" Released 1991 |
| This live album is the last one released by MCA. The record label decides not to renew the contract as Steve's drug problem becomes more severe. |
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Canada Day Speech 1991 |
| Steve performs four songs and makes a speech on the lawn of Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Canada as part of his campaign to have bikers Comeau and Sauvé released from jail.
Shortly after this, he virtually disappears for four years as his drug problem escalates out of control. He later refers to this time period as his "vacation in the ghetto". |
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Arrest and Jail 1994 |
| In July, Steve is arrested in Texas for possession of heroin. He pleads guilty and, while out on bond awaiting sentencing, he is arrested for possession again. He flees to Georgia but eventually turns himself in and is sentenced to one year in jail.
Steve spends part of his sentence in prison until his lawyer convinces the judge to send him to rehab. After thirty-three days in a treatment center, he is declared clean and sober and is paroled on November 11th. |
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"Train A Comin'" Released 1995 |
| After his release from jail, Steve records his very first album while sober. This collection of acoustic compositions and covers receives a Grammy nomination for Contemporary Folk Album. |
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"I Feel Alright" Released 1996 |
| First release on Steve's own label, E-Squared. |
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"Ellis Unit One" 1996 |
| The anti-death penalty song, Ellis Unit One, appears on the soundtrack for the movie, Dead Man Walking. Steve doesn't include it on one of his own albums until 2002's Sidetracks. |
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"El Corazon" Released 1997 |
| Another Grammy nomination in the Contemporary Folk category. The album is dedicated to Townes Van Zandt. |
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Attends an Execution 1998 |
| Steve attends the execution of Jonathan Nobles at Huntsville prison in Texas, at the request of Nobles. He says afterwards that he had witnessed a "murder". |
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"The Mountain" Released 1999 |
| Steve records The Mountain with the Del McCoury Band and receives a Grammy nomination for Best Bluegrass Album. Several songs from this album are included on the soundtrack for You Can Count on Me. |
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"Transcendental Blues" Released 2000 |
| Steve receives his eighth Grammy nomination (Contemporary Folk Album) and three singles are released to US radio: Transcendental Blues, I Can Wait, and Everyone's in Love With You. Galway Girl is released commercially in the UK. |
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"Doghouse Roses" Published 2001 |
| Steve's collection of eleven short stories is published. |
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"Sidetracks" Released 2002 |
| Some Dreams is included on the soundtrack for the movie, The Rookie. |
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