You’ll Miss The Time You Waste

Justin Townes Earle passed away on August 23, 2020, leaving behind an impressive catalog of music starting with a debut song on one of his father’s albums.

Justin Townes Earle

The first time I heard Justin Townes Earle’s voice was on the final song of his father Steve Earle’s 2003 album, Just An American Boy. The father gave his son the final track on the album on the son’s song, “Time You Waste.” Although I still had to wait several years for an album from the talented son, that wonderful debut led to a career of stellar music and albums. So, like many fans, I was heartbroken to learn that 2020 had claimed the life of Justin Townes Earle at the age of 38.

The news sent me back to listen to many of his albums that I had in my collection, including from his debut EP Yuma (2007) through his much acclaimed Harlem River Blues (2010) through his personal exploration in Single Mothers (2014) and Absent Fathers (2015) to his latest The Saint of Lost Causes (2019). Earle had carved out his own niche, separate from his father, but still influenced by him as well as the singer-songwriter he was named for, Townes Van Zandt.

Like his father and the man he was named for, Justin Townes Earle faced his own substance abuse problems throughout his life. We always rooted for him to succeed in controlling the demons, as his father had done. So we are heartbroken that he died even so much younger than his namesake, who had died at the age of 52.

Thinking about the music of Justin Townes Earle in this age of the pandemic where we have lost so many, I keep going back to that debut recording of “Time You Waste.”

Don’t think that I,
I wouldn’t take every minute back
If I could bring myself
To live like that.

Cause all the other ones,
You only get one chance;
It’s seeing life through the eyes of the innocent;
So take it slow;
No need in haste,

Because the time you’ll miss
Is the time you waste;

Yeah the time you’ll miss, babe
Is the time you waste.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to the friends and family of Justin Townes Earle, including his wife and daughter, his mother, and his father Steve Earle.

  • Steve Earle Covers Justin Townes Earle’s “Harlem River Blues”
  • Heartworn Highways . . . Revisited
  • Guy Clark’s Life and Music in “Without Getting Killed or Caught”
  • Nanci Griffith’s Superstars on Letterman: “Desperados Waiting for a Train”
  • I woke up this morning, and none of the news was good: Steve Earle’s “Jerusalem” (Song of the Day)
  • Virginian Jake Kohn’s Young Soulful Voice Sounds Older Than the Hills in “Dreams”
  • ( Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)