Gram Parsons
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- influence on country rock
- In country rock
Under the sway of Gram Parsons, the Byrds created country rock’s pivotal album, Sweetheart of the Rodeo (1968), the country-purist goals of which seemed somewhat avant-garde in a rock world that had come to disdain all things conceivably old-fashioned. To hear the Byrds perform the Louvin Brothers’ country standard…
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- In country rock
- Louris
- In the Jayhawks
…of Olson’s vocal resemblance to Gram Parsons, the Burritos’ front man. With Blue Earth, the Jayhawks became prime movers of alternative country, though their marriage of punk rock energy with traditional country was less evident than that of the emerging genre’s other principal bellwether, Uncle Tupelo (forerunner of Wilco and…
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- In the Jayhawks
association with
- Byrds
- Flying Burrito Brothers
- In the Flying Burrito Brothers
January 6, 2007, Petaluma, California), Gram Parsons (original name Ingram Cecil Connor III; b. November 5, 1946, Winter Haven, Florida, U.S.—d. September 19, 1973, Yucca Valley, California), and Chris Ethridge (b. 1947, Meridian, Mississippi, U.S.—d. April 23, 2012, Meridian). Later members included Michael Clarke (b. June 3, 1944, New York…
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- In the Flying Burrito Brothers
- Harris
- In Emmylou Harris
…to former Flying Burrito Brother Gram Parsons’s two solo albums (1973–74), landmarks in country rock. After Parsons’s death, Harris carried his vision forward, first in Pieces of the Sky (1975), which included her tribute to Parsons (“From Boulder to Birmingham”). Following this major-label debut album, she issued a remarkable string…
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- In Emmylou Harris
- Hazlewood