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The Thing ItselfReturn to Sin City: The Gram Parsons Tribute Concert, Santa Barbara, CA
by David N. Meyer
September 2004
Image courtesy of Musicians Assistance Program.
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About thirty-five years ago, Gram Parsons, the man who invented country-rock, abandoned his girlfriend Nancy and their infant daughter Polly. Growing up in the inescapable shadow of her fathers legend, but without her fatherwho died in 1973wrung some stringent emotional dues from Polly; it took her most of her adulthood to sort out her dads demons from her own. Armed with Parsonss smarts and Parsonss charmbut no Parsons moneyPolly spent two years creating a tribute concert to her dad. The proceeds went to MAP (Musicians Assistance Program), a nonprofit that helps get musicians off drugs and alcohol. For the cynical, its a California personal-redemption-through-growth-and-embracing-ones-pain kinda story. But it comes with a happy ending.
Even without the curiously absent Chris Hillman and Emmylou Harris, Polly gathered an all-star roster to play for no pay in the Santa Barbara Bowl, a stone amphitheater high above the town, surrounded by palms and eucalyptus, with the Pacific sunset visible between the California trees.
Next to Polly stands her strong right hand and link to her fathers era, Pamela Des Barres, an L.A. legend. Miss Pamela made her name as the queen groupie of the Sunset Strip/Whiskey-A-Go-Go scene, the leader of the Frank Zapparecorded GTOs (Girls Together Outrageously) and author of the quintessential rock tell-all memoir Im With the Band. Whatever sordidness shes witnessed during her life spent backstage, she still has a soul as light as a feather. Like most of the women with guest passes, Pamela wears a cosmic-cowgirl outfit harkening to the very first go-round of fringe and bell-bottoms. She and twenty nonmusician women spend the show shimmying with their arms in the air, as Pamela first did at the Whiskey nigh-on forty years ago.
Facing a crowd that knows all the words and holds their emotional connection to Parsonss music dear, the musicians walk a tightrope. Theyre preaching to the choir, but its a choir with high expectations. Its not a night to interpret songs, but to inhabit their strange landscapes. Canadian folkie Kathleen Edwards, Jim Lauderdale, a surprisingly weak-voiced John Doe, and the Mavericks Raul Malo all fall short.
Jay Farrar wanders out blank faced, dressed like a car parker in a baggy white shirt and baggier black pants. Without introducing himself, he sings "Drugstore Truck-Driving Man" and "Devil in Disguise" in a rich, full-throated voice at odds with his narcoleptic stage presence. Farrars passionate reverence underscores Parsonss brilliant, quirky arrangements and love of waltzesso much country anguish over the years hidden in 3/4 time.
Jim James of My Morning Jacket sports a tangerine nudie suit and the grin of a mule eating briars. The band needs half of "Dark End of the Street" to realize (1) how completely James surrenders to his love of singing it and (2) what an effortless set of southern Baptist church-choir pipes the boy has. During the banjo solo, James gleefully funky-chickens around the stage.
Steve Earle stalks on in a jean jacket and chain wallet looking dangerously skinny, agitated, and preoccupied. Turning sideways to the mike, he croons "Luxury Liner," Parsons lonesomest song. Earles soulful, heartfelt delivery gets the applause due a folk hero. Earning more, he gives a brief political intro to a political song, the Hillman/Parsons anti-Vietnam "My Uncle," about heading to Canada to avoid the draft. Its a generous performance; Earle makes sure the songs remain bigger than him.
Lucinda Williams, a battered straw cowboy hat obscuring her face, fearlessly embraces the pain-wracked "Sleepless Nights" and "Song for You." Her drummer demonstrates the subtlety of Satan, and Lucindas bottomless voice fills the night. Behind her, archetypal Nashville cat James Burton (Elviss guitarist, who played on Grams solo records thirty years ago) caresses his white Strat. He and pedal-steel maestro Al Perkins (who also recorded with Gram) watch Lucinda like bodyguards. Shes defenseless before the songs, so lost in their hurt, so attuned to all their loss. Lining the stage, awestruck, worshipful, is every other musician, turned to waxworks. Like the rest of us, theyre too swept away to move.
Dwight Yoakam, resplendent in a white sequined suit, leaps onstage, and his four-piece tears into "Wheels." Its all wrong. Yoakams arrangement butchers the song. He encores with Parsonss strangest waltz, "Sin City," featuring Grams least explicable but most moving chorus: "On the thirty-first floor/A gold-plated door/Wont keep out/The Lords burning rain."
Yoakam shits all over the song, turning it into a 4/4 rocker that drowns any meaning or poetry but showcases that little toes-up heel-swivel hes been doing for twenty years. He takes chorus after chorus as the crowd rears back, withdrawing from the spectacle. When its over, Dwight races to his giant RV, which he insisted be parked stage-side. Steve Earles backstage saying howdy, as are Lucinda and Norah Jones, but Dwights too cool for that school.
Norah Jones, all ten million album sales of her, ambles out looking like an ordinary girl. The J. Geils Band stomper "Cry One More Time" could not be less suited to her quavering, anonymous voice. James Burton, feeling the song get away from her, steps up to deliver a cascading solo that gently eases Norah to the side. When Burton finishes, she waits expectantly, like the rest of us.
Then, after a breathless moment, there he stands, Grams one-time best friend in the world. Keith Richards: the thing itself. The only man on earth, Terry Southern wrote, who can play a Chuck Berry song worse than Chuck Berry. Not a drop of his own blood left in his body, and the skin to prove it. Heres the only guy as mythical as Gram who still walks among us. But how long have the Stones been a joke, an abomination, the band you most wished would just fade away? The question is: Will Keith measure up to this night or remain the fraud hes seemed for decades?
Looking nervous, Richards reaches down in slow motion and hits the opening chords of "Wild Horses" on his boomy acoustic. And thats it. Then you remember why at one time he seemed the absolute incarnation of rock and roll, why the most discerning sensibilities on the planet, like Gram Parsons, turned their lives inside out just to hang.
Because no one in the history of rock or country can hit an acoustic guitar and make it sound like Keith. Then, as the effect of those chords reverberates, Keith opens his yap to sing. Only, he cant "sing." He cant find the notes or the key and his breath-starved croak barely lets him reach the end of each line. But the soul in his voice, the depth of feeling, the ache, the connection to that longing
its heartbreaking.
Its scary.
Keith sings, and the gospel choir kicks in behind him, soaring, and everyone in the showsave little asshole-boy Dwight cringing in his RVbackup musicians and stagehands and girls of all decades twirling in their Whiskey finery and Lucinda and Norah and Earle and Jim James and even James Burton, whos seen it all (twice), look around the stage and at the crowd and at each other, beaming, every one of them clearly thinking, "How fucking great is this?"
Steve Earle leads an adrenalized jam-session finale of "Ooh Las Vegas," with everybody sharing choruses as Polly Parsons swing-dances ecstatically with Lucinda down the middle of the stage. Santa Barbara has a strict nighttime noise policy: At 9:59 p.m., Polly takes the mike to say good night. Her speech is simple and eloquent, no showbiz clichés, no mention of God (thank God), her face glowing with the righteousness of one who found redemption in hard work and the embrace of difficult memories. Awash in the music shes brought together, and the genuine joy welling out of these well-traveled pros, you could believe the recurring theme of Parsonss music: that pain and heartbreak and irreparable lossfaced directly and described clearly and owned without sentimentalitycan actually provide transcendence.
In case you couldnt tell, David N. Meyer is writing a biography of Gram Parsons, to be published by Villard Books.
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The Rail invites you to a reading with Jason
Flores-Williams and Brian Carreira, along with musical
guest Steve Strunsky of the Lonesome Prairie Dogs.
Thurs., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m.
Vox Pop--Flatbush, Brooklyn
www.voxpop.net
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OFF THE RAIL FALL 2005 at the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library - Grand Army Plaza
(718) 230-2100 in the 2nd Floor Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 7 till 9
John Ashbery
Leslie Scalapino
Tuesday, Oct. 18 from 7 till 9
Kenneth Bernard
Lynda Schor
Tuesday, Nov. 15 from 7 till 9
Diane Williams
Christine Schutt
Curated and hosted by the Rail's Fiction Editor Donald Breckenridge
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
Come to the Brooklyn Waterfront Festival.
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