#flying burrito brothers
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joegramoe · 6 months ago
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Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris
The Fallen Angels 1973
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lugosis · 5 months ago
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i don’t want no one but you to love me - digital collage
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cleopatragirlie · 6 months ago
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Gram Cracker Parsons on my mind 💕
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chaoticdesertdweller · 2 years ago
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Gram Parsons at Marlon Brando’s piano, 1968. Photo by Andee Nathanson.
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rastronomicals · 8 months ago
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The Flying Burrito Brothers
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krispyweiss · 2 months ago
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J.D. Souther Dies at 78
- Singer/songwriter co-founded Souther-Hillman-Furay Band; collaborated with Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, Bob Weir and others
J.D. Souther, the singer/singwriter who co-founded the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band and collaborated with Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, Bob Weir and others, has died at 78.
“On behalf of Team J.D., we are sad to share this news with all of you,” read a post on Souther’s social media pages that linked to a Los Angeles Times story that did not specify a date or cause of his death.
“J.D. Souther was a friend, and so talented,” Carole King said in a statement. “We’ll miss him.”
The co-writer of such songs as the Eagles’ “New Kid in Town” and “Heartache Tonight” and Ronstadt’s “Faithless Love,” Souther also contributed songs to Bonnie Raitt, James Taylor, George Strait and the Dixie Chicks.
“I knew J.D. for 54 years and we were best of friends all that time,” fellow songwriter Jack Tempchin said. “It really hurts to lose him.”
In 1973, Souther teamed with former Byrd/Flying Burrito Brother Chris Hillman and Buffalo Springfield co-founder Richie Furay to form their self-titled trio.
“J.D. was one of contemporary music’s most-gifted songwriters,” Furay said in a statement. “I am very thankful for the time we had together on this part of life's journey.”
Souther kept working through the decades, recently co-writing and appearing on stage with Weir and preparing a solo tour for later this year and another with Karla Bonoff in 2025.
“JD was a remarkable talent, and his contributions to music are immeasurable,” Stephen Bishop said. “He will be sorely missed, but his legacy will live on in the hearts of those who knew and loved him.”
9/18/24
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idasessions · 1 year ago
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Groupie/waitress Francine Brockey and singer-songwriter Gram Parsons, 1970. Photo by Andee Nathanson.
According to Francine’s close friend and fellow groupie, Nancy Deedrick, Francine was one of the reasons Gram and girlfriend Nancy Ross were frequently on-again/off-again throughout the late 1960s. Andee also claims the reason Gram’s appearance was so brief at the beginning of the 1970 Mad Dogs & Englishmen tour was because he was disappointed to discover Francine had moved on to Leon Russell’s drummer Chuck Blackwell.
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upperswampmonkey · 8 months ago
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Wild Horses - The Flying Burrito 
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pagan-stitches · 2 months ago
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Today’s stitching and blogging soundtrack:
Todays stitching and blogging soundtrack:
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accihoe · 1 month ago
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Y'all hmu with a playlist
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joegramoe · 6 months ago
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The Grievous Angel
Gram Parsons in color!
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ominous-synths-records · 9 months ago
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Roll Over Beethoven - The Flying Burrito Brothers
Listen to more by this artist
View our full out of print music library
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dry-valleys · 5 months ago
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chaoticdesertdweller · 11 months ago
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Gram Parsons in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1965. Before he was a Byrd or Flying Burrito Brother, he was a Harvard student. ❤️
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stevie-baby · 1 year ago
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Some pictures I got at the Western Edge exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame
They haven’t finished installing the exhibit yet (I think Michael Nesmith’s suit, The Hat™, and a few other pieces are still on display at the Troubadour for the remainder of the year). I have more in my camera roll, but I had to post Gram’s iconic white suit (plus Sneaky Pete & Chris’ suits) and his International Submarine Band era jacket. It was such a good exhibit and my poor friend had to listen to me tell every bit of history and fun fact I had because this era and niche of music has been my special interest for years. I also actually accidentally started leading a tour through the exhibit because a few older people started following to listen to all my history rants lol.
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krispyweiss · 6 months ago
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Rewind: The Byrds - Byrds (1973)
By the time the original Byrds reconvened in 1973 to put a proper cap on the band, David Crosby was a huge star, Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke were former Flying Burrito Brothers, Gene Clark was nursing a fledging solo career and Roger McGuinn was the last remaining original member of the Byrds in the lineup that recorded and were touring behind ’71’s Farther Along.
And although the Byrds LP has been much maligned in the intervening decades, the criticism is mostly unfair. The original Byrds - who hadn’t played as a quintet since 1966 - didn’t attempt to recapture their original sound; rather, they gave listeners an idea of where they were as individuals.
McGuinn was tired - writing only two of the 11 songs and turning back from country to his first love on “Born to Rock ‘n’ Roll.” Clark was hungry, writing and singing the apropos opener “Full Circle” and “Changing Heart” and leading the band though country-folk covers of Neil Young’s “Cowgirl in the Sand” and “(See the Sky) About to Rain.”
Like McGuinn, Hillman, too, returned to folk-rock music, collaborating with his Manassas bandmates Dallas Taylor and Joe Lala, respectively, on writing the driving “Things Will be Better” and the frenetic, mandolin-focused “Borrowing Time.” Crosby, meanwhile, is in the early stages of his drug-induced malaise, opting to cover Joni Mitchell’s “For Free,” re-record his own “Laughing��� in an inferior redux and rewrite “Cowboy Movie” as “Long Live the King.”
In some ways, Byrds sounds more like a various-artists album than a cohesive group effort, albeit with Clarke steering it all from behind the kit. Though the songs aren’t essential, neither are any of them filler. The result is a solid effort from the rare band that closed the book on its career the right and respectable way.
For there was never another Byrds album after the Byrds album.
Grade card: The Byrds - Byrds - B
5/19/24
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