Clear Impetuous Morning
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| Clear Impetuous Morning | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1996 | |||
| Label | Mammoth | |||
| Producer | Warner Hodges, Jeff Johnson | |||
| Jason & the Scorchers chronology | ||||
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Clear Impetuous Morning is an album by the American band Jason & the Scorchers, released in 1996.[1][2] The band supported the album with a North American tour that included shows with Slobberbone.[3][4] The band's second studio album after their reunion, it was also their last with bass player Jeff Johnson.[5][6]
Produced by bandmembers Warner Hodges and Johnson, the album was recorded over three months at a friend's Nashville studio in an amp repair shop.[7][8] Frontman Jason Ringenberg considered the recording sessions for Clear Impetuous Morning to be the easiest of the band's career.[8] The band made more use of acoustic guitars than on previous albums, employing them on the majority of the songs.[9] Songwriter Tommy Womack worked on some of the songs.[10] Emmylou Harris sang on "Everything Has a Cost".[11] "Drugstore Truck Drivin' Man" is a cover of the Gram Parsons song, which Jason considered to be "an anti-Nashville-music-business song."[12][13] "Jeremy's Glory" is about the Civil War.[8] "Going Nowhere" is about a woman who decides to leave her hometown.[14]