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  1. Hace 1 día · One of his favourites from the genre is The Flying Burrito Brothers’ 1969 debut album, The Gilded Palace of Sin. “I used to hang out with Gram [Parsons], sometimes not for the good. I survived, Gram didn’t,” Richards lamented. “He turned me onto cats like Merle Haggard and George Jones. He crystallised the country for me.

  2. Hace 4 días · Parsons mentored Harris, featured her on his last record, and probably loved her before dying of a morphine overdose. After 8 or 9 listens I can’t help but hear Welch emphasizing “now” of that line along with the names and pronouns, like she’s calling for a role-reversal. Once, he was Gram and she was Emmylou.

  3. Hace 5 días · 1963. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images. Before there was “White Line Fever,” “Convoy,” or “East Bound and Down,” there was “Six Days on the Road,” the song that forever hitched ...

  4. Hace 2 días · Richards and Parsons were both keen songwriters who loved to do drugs, so it’s not a shock that they spent a lot of time together in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s before Parsons’ death.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jack_ParsonsJack Parsons - Wikipedia

    Hace 3 días · Born in Los Angeles, Parsons was raised by a wealthy family on Orange Grove Boulevard in Pasadena, California. Inspired by science fiction literature, he developed an interest in rocketry in his childhood and in 1928 began amateur rocket experiments with school friend Edward Forman.

  6. Hace 2 días · The reason both “Purple Haze” and “Foxey Lady” are on this list is twofold: 1) “Foxey Lady” was the first track on the original U.K. and international editions of the Experience’s debut album, while “Purple Haze” kicked off the U.S. release, and 2) the songs sound remarkably similar, as they both rely on the “ Hendrix chord ...

  7. Hace 2 días · Gram Parsons, ‘$1000 Wedding’ Devotees have been puzzling over the meaning of this enigmatic masterpiece for 40 years, but it has yet to yield a definitive interpretation. Gram Parsons’ protagonist is a none-too-bright bridegroom at a low-rent (possibly shotgun) wedding, where he is stood up for reasons unknown.