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II: Wheatstraw Sweet

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In California itself, country music was now setting the pace for late ’60s rock. Even as the Buffalo Springfield unravelled in the sessions for farewell album Last Time Around, country was clearly audible in the clipped rimshots of Neil Young’s ‘I Am a Child’– and even more markedly in Richie Furay’s song ‘Kind Woman’, featuring a pedal steel guitar. ‘I think Neil Young and I were playing country rock before [The Band] ever got out of what they were playing with Ronnie Hawkins,’ Stephen Stills told Circus in 1970. ‘I mean, we were playing Chet Atkins guitar and stuff like that, which may sound like an ego trip.’

If Stills and Young were barely speaking during the recording of Last Time Around, the sessions at Sunset Sound cemented the bond between Richie Furay and guitarist Jim Messina. As the two men worked on the Springfield’s swan song, the seeds of their own country rock band Poco were planted.

The Byrds themselves underwent the most radical of all stylistic changes when they made the bold decision to replace David Crosby with Southern-born Gram Parsons, late of the International Submarine Band. Skinny and cute with a warm boyish smile, what set Parsons apart from his country rock contemporaries was the $30,000 he received each year from a trust fund set up by his wealthy family. He suffered from rich kids’ dilettantism, dropping out of bands and other projects when he tired of hard graft. He’d also had an upbringing as dysfunctional as anything in a Tennessee Williams play. His father shot himself and his mother died of alcoholism. ‘Gram was a good kid, with a good heart,’ says Chris Hillman, who brought Parsons into the Byrds. ‘If you delve into his background, though, it’s pure Southern Gothic.’

Parsons had first come to Los Angeles in late 1966, in the company of actor Brandon De Wilde, a hyperactive screen rebel in the Dennis Hopper mould. Within a month De Wilde had introduced the lanky charmer to his circle of rock and roll friends. Just before Christmas the two men wound their way up to Beverly Glen to meet David Crosby. When Crosby’s girlfriend Nancy Lee Ross returned from shopping, Gram’s eyes locked with hers. That evening, Crosby split for a Byrds tour and Gram and Nancy fell in love. By early 1967 they’d moved into an apartment in West Hollywood, with the Submarine Band installed in a Laurel Canyon pad dubbed ‘the Burrito Manor’. Gram’s trust fund paid for everything. ‘Gram and Nancy lived on Sweetzer Avenue in a beautiful apartment with stained-glass windows,’ says Eve Babitz. ‘He was like a kind of F. Scott Fitzgerald hero in a place where nobody had ever heard of F. Scott Fitzgerald.’

A musical break of sorts came when De Wilde recommended the Submarine Band to Peter Fonda, another hip actor with rock aspirations. Fonda persuaded director Roger Corman to hire the band for his drugsploitation movie The Trip, a paean to LSD scripted by fellow acid-head Jack Nicholson. Converted to country music by John Nuese, Parsons made the first of several visits to Nudie’s Rodeo Tailors in North Hollywood, kitting himself out like a hippie Hank Williams. With Nuese he ventured out to redneck dives in distant satellite suburbs such as El Monte and City of Industry, soaking up the subculture of farmers and truckers and befriending a coterie of pickers that included Clarence White and Pete Kleinow. On Thursdays he’d play talent nights at the Palomino, north of Laurel Canyon in the San Fernando Valley. ‘It took me two years to win the talent contest,’ he said. ‘I would religiously drive out there and wait my turn. For two years I was beaten by yodelling grandmothers and the same guy who sang “El Paso” every week.’

In late June 1967 a new International Submarine Band auditioned for Suzi Jane Hokom, girlfriend of Lee Hazlewood. With her blessing they were signed to Hazlewood’s LHI Records, recording the Safe at Home album in two sessions in July and November 1967. ‘My main recollections are of the hours and hours of rehearsals Gram and John and I did at my house in Laurel Canyon,’ says Hokom. But there was immediate friction between Parsons and Hazlewood. ‘Lee was older and his ego just kind of got in the way,’ Suzi says. ‘I think he was jealous – he couldn’t stand all this attention I was lavishing on these guys who were more of my generation.’

There are those who dispute Safe at Home’s status as the first country rock album, along with Gram’s posthumous standing as godfather to the genre. ‘There were probably twenty, thirty guys on the West Coast who were all basically trying to do the same thing,’ says Chris Darrow. ‘I don’t think any of us thought of Gram as the Duke Ellington of our deal.’ This may sound like kvetching from an unsung hero who has watched Gram’s star ascend in death, but it is a fact that the true roots of LA country rock have been persistently overlooked or discounted by rock historians. (Former teen idol Ricky Nelson, no less, recorded the Bright Lights and Country Music album as early as February 1966.) Yet the very fact that Gram – like Neil Young and Joni Mitchell – was an outsider was what gave his music its distinctive flavour.

Sadly the Submarine Band sank before Safe at Home was even released. By the spring of 1968 Parsons was once again a free musical agent. One day he ran into Chris Hillman in a Beverly Hills bank. ‘I knew very little about Gram,’ Hillman says. ‘On first acquaintance he was very sweet, very naive in the sense of being in Hollywood.’ By Hillman’s own admission the Byrds were in crisis. ‘We were in a state of limbo,’ he says. ‘We were looking at each other thinking, “We’re the last guys left and we don’t know where this is going” – and now here comes Gram.’

We were simply looking for someone to replace Crosby,’ recalls Roger McGuinn. ‘It was only gradually that he started to play his Hank Williams things. And we thought, Wow, that’s really cool.’ McGuinn would be the first to admit that he was less interested in country than Hillman. But when he heard Chris and Gram harmonising on Buck Owens’s ‘Under Your Spell Again’ he was happy to let things take their natural course. The chemistry between the two country freaks led to a radical rethink in Byrdland. In March 1968 a session was booked at Columbia’s studio in Nashville.

When Sweetheart of the Rodeo was released in August, heads were scratched – and not just in Los Angeles. To hear the band that flew ‘Eight Miles High’ now sporting short hair and warbling bluegrass classics ‘I Am a Pilgrim’ and ‘The Christian Life’ came as a shock. ‘Our fans were heartbroken that we’d sold out to the enemy,’ McGuinn says. ‘Politically, country music represented the right wing – redneck people who liked guns.’ McGuinn also felt upstaged by Parsons. ‘He was a rich kid, which meant that he was already a star,’ he reflects. ‘It was as though Mick Jagger had joined the band.’

As with most of Gram’s musical involvements, his stint as a Byrd wouldn’t last long. And among those who played a part in his departure was Mick Jagger himself.

Hotel California: Singer-songwriters and Cocaine Cowboys in the L.A. Canyons 1967–1976

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