A friend of mine who is a terrific bass player, all around musician and Harley rider told me he was learning pedal steel. Ron “King Bee” Raymond then asked me, ‘would I like to form a band?’ I thought, ‘Well, I have exactly one country number in my repertoire.’ It was “Dark End of the Street,” the famous cheating number written by Dan Penn and Chips Moman for soul singer Leroy Carr. I first heard the song on the Flying Burrito Bros album, The Gilded Palace of Sin, Gram Parsons most celebrated LP. But there were plenty of other great songs waiting in the wings, to my surprise.

I had just finished a well-researched bio, Twenty Thousand Roads – The Ballad of Gram Parsons and his Cosmic American Music, by David Meyer. And country was on my mind, having recently returned from my first trip to Nashville. It suddenly dawned on me – it was the perfect time to form a Gram Parsons tribute band!

Gram Parsons was introduced to me in a watershed, twentieth anniversary issue of Rolling Stone Magazine, The 100 Best Albums of the Last Twenty Years. I found a review of Sweetheart of the Rodeo by The Byrds, on which Gram was enlisted to provide a new direction to the then floundering superstars.  I was working at J&R Music World at the time – buying experimental, electronic and Greek music. I grabbed Palace and Sweetheart for my collection, and eventually started buying the country records for the store.

We have a little show coming up, playing at an open mic night at the old Brownies space at Avenue A at 10th street, now called HiFi Bar, on Sunday, November 8th. The address is 169 Avenue A, between 10th and 11th Streets in the East Village. We go on at 7:30. Hope to see you there! 

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4 responses to “A Tribute To Gram Parsons”

  1. James Hannigan Avatar
    James Hannigan

    Wish it was the next Sunday when I’m there! Sounds great. Gotta do Wild Horses! It’s on Burrito Deluxe

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  2. On Practicing Guitar Avatar

    Thanks for writing, Jim! Of course, one of the first songs we played in rehearsal was “Wild Horses.” The bluesprint for our Gram Parsons tribute band is ‘songs that Gram wrote or sang plus any music that is separated from Gram by no more than one degree.’ This of course includes the Stones. What’s that, one half of a degree? No degrees of separation? We are doing the Stones’ “No Expectations,” because the slide guitar translates so nicely to pedal steel. Also, songs like “I Threw It All Away” from Dylan’s Nashville Skyline are on the table. I don’t know how many degrees that is, but Bob would likely know. Then there are the hard country tunes, like “The Bottle Let Me Down” by Merle Haggard. It’s a great concept, if I do say so myself!

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  3. James Hannigan Avatar
    James Hannigan

    You’re making me even more disappointed that I can’t make the show. What a great set list. One of my favorites is Six Days on the Road, you can hear them do it at Altamont in the movie!

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  4. On Practicing Guitar Avatar

    Hi, Jim!
    Our set list for our upcoming first show is short – Dead Flowers, No Expectations, Dark End of the Street, Bottle Let Me Down, and Crazy Mama by JJ Cale. We’re also working on Wild Horses, High Fashion Queen, Sin City, Sing Me Back Home, and You’re Still On My Mind (Byrds!). Ten tunes. I’m sorry you will miss the show but we should be playing regularly. I’ve got the original Gram version of Six Days. I’d love to see the entire Altamont Burritos gig. Even for just two minutes in the movie it’s really cool.
    -Chris

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