Album artwork for The Saint Of Lost Causes by Justin Townes Earle

The Saint Of Lost Causes was the 8th album from American roots troubadour, Justin Townes Earle. Earle's latest album finds a songwriter and artist who is unflinching and unequivocal in his truth. When writing this album, Earle focused on a different America - the disenfranchised and the downtrodden, the oppressed and the oppressors, the hopeful and the hopeless. There's the drugstore-cowboy-turned-cop-killer praying for forgiveness (Appalachian Nightmare) and the common Michiganders persevering through economic and industrial devastation (Flint City Shake It); the stuck mother dreaming of a better life on the right side of the California tracks (Over Alameda) and the Cuban man in New York City weighed down by a world of regret (Ahi Esta Mi Nina); the used up soul desperate to get to New Orleans (Ain't Got No Money) and the sons of bitches in West Virginia poisoning the land and sea (Don't Drink the Water). These are individuals and communities in every corner of the country, struggling through the ordinary and sometimes extraordinary circumstances of everyday life.

Justin Townes Earle

The Saint Of Lost Causes

New West Records
Album artwork for The Saint Of Lost Causes by Justin Townes Earle
LP +

$29.99

Indie Exclusive

Teal and Orange Vinyl

Released 12/10/2021Catalog Number

LP-NW-5570LE

Learn more
Album artwork for The Saint Of Lost Causes by Justin Townes Earle
CD

$14.99

Released 05/24/2019Catalog Number

CD-NW-6454

Learn more
Justin Townes Earle

The Saint Of Lost Causes

New West Records
Album artwork for The Saint Of Lost Causes by Justin Townes Earle
LP +

$29.99

Indie Exclusive

Teal and Orange Vinyl

Released 12/10/2021Catalog Number

LP-NW-5570LE

Learn more
Album artwork for The Saint Of Lost Causes by Justin Townes Earle
CD

$14.99

Released 05/24/2019Catalog Number

CD-NW-6454

Learn more

The Saint Of Lost Causes was the 8th album from American roots troubadour, Justin Townes Earle. Earle's latest album finds a songwriter and artist who is unflinching and unequivocal in his truth. When writing this album, Earle focused on a different America - the disenfranchised and the downtrodden, the oppressed and the oppressors, the hopeful and the hopeless. There's the drugstore-cowboy-turned-cop-killer praying for forgiveness (Appalachian Nightmare) and the common Michiganders persevering through economic and industrial devastation (Flint City Shake It); the stuck mother dreaming of a better life on the right side of the California tracks (Over Alameda) and the Cuban man in New York City weighed down by a world of regret (Ahi Esta Mi Nina); the used up soul desperate to get to New Orleans (Ain't Got No Money) and the sons of bitches in West Virginia poisoning the land and sea (Don't Drink the Water). These are individuals and communities in every corner of the country, struggling through the ordinary and sometimes extraordinary circumstances of everyday life.