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West of Memphis: Voices For Justice

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West of Memphis: Voices For Justice album cover
01
Damien Echols Death Row Letter, Year 9
Artist: Henry Rollins (feat. Nick Cave & Warren Ellis Original Score)
2:32 $1.29
02
Mother
Artist: Natalie Maines
5:53 $1.29
03
Joy
Artist: Lucinda Williams
4:40 $1.29
04
The Jean Genie
Artist: Camp Freddy
4:19 $1.29
05
Little Lion Man
Artist: Tonto's Giant Nuts (feat. Johnny Depp and Bruce Witkin)
4:12 $1.29
06
You're So Vain
Artist: Marilyn Manson
4:01 $1.29
07
Dumpster World
Artist: Band of Horses
3:41 $1.29
08
DFW
Artist: Citizen Cope
2:44 $1.29
09
Satellite
Artist: Eddie Vedder
2:28 $1.29
10
Anything Made Of Paper
Artist: Bill Carter
4:13 $1.29
11
House Of Pain
Artist: White Buffalo
4:30 $1.29
12
Ring Them Bells
Artist: Bob Dylan
3:00 $0.99
13
Score Suite
Artist: Nick Cave & Warren Ellis
4:59 $1.29
14
Damien Echols Death Row Letter, Year 16 1/2
Artist: Johnny Depp And Nick Cave & Warren Ellis Score
3:23 $1.29
15
Road To Nowhere
Artist: Bill Carter
5:45 $1.29
16
Wing
Artist: Patti Smith
4:30 $1.29

eMusic Review 0

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Stephen M. Deusner

eMusic Contributor

01.15.13
A celebratory compilation honoring the West Memphis 3
2013 | Label: Legacy Recordings

West of Memphis: Voices for Justice, which is not quite a soundtrack to the new documentary about the West Memphis 3, opens with Henry Rollins reading a letter he received from Damien Echols about 10 years ago. Echols had been convicted along with two other Arkansas teenagers of the murder and mutilation of three young boys, despite little hard evidence linking them to the crime. For nearly 20 years, they languished in state prisons, their appeals ignored by the very courts that railroaded them. Describing the inhumane conditions of a new jail cell and the disappointment of yet another legal roadblock, Rollins’s voice never boils over with anger or rage. Instead, he trusts Echols’s words to convey all the fear and misery of a falsely accused man who has spent most of his life in prison. It’s a harrowing introduction to West of Memphis, which surprisingly turns out to be a celebratory compilation defined by the relief of their freedom (all three were finally released in 2012) than by the grief of their wrongful incarceration.

The musicians who contributed to West of Memphis have all been deeply involved in the case for many years, and most of them have chosen songs… read more »

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Natalie Maines - Mother

cliftdean

Heard her sing it on Howard Stern's Sirius XM show.....decent cover. Always liked her voice.

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