Saturday, February 18, 2017

This 'ol earthquake's gonna leave me in the poorhouse

Porter Wagoner and Gram Parsons introduced me to the Nudie suit. Gram Parsons also introduced me to country-rock, first as a member of the Byrds and later the leader of the Flying Burrito Brothers.

As I rediscover my vinyl, I can't believe I neglected this record for so long. Parsons was someone who made it cool to like country, even if his country was just a bit different than the Ernest Tubb and The Statler Brothers that my dad was listening to at the time.

When I finally saw the Burritos, it was a few years later at Penn State. They were a shadow of themselves. Parsons was dead, and Chris Hillman had moved on to The Souther Hillman Furay Band. John Sebastian opened, debuting a new song that he had just written for a sitcom called "Welcome Back Kotter."

I think I was 16 when I bought "The Gilded Palace of Sin." I stared at that album cover for hours, wondering which one of those women was the "Devil in Disguise, " or if I would ever meet a woman like the song described.

I would, several times over.

I guess it goes without saying that I didn't really understand this music then. I get it now.


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