eMusic Review 0
In Rolling Stone's 1973 obituary for the star-crossed Gram Parsons, they parlay the man as "the fucked-up young lord of zig-zagging…from purity to debauchery…[they] light their candles at both ends and sweep out the ashes in the morning." Like all great artists, their genius lies in somehow marrying the furthest extremes of their personas, even as such a merger ultimately destroys them. For the man born Ingram Cecil Connor III, the melding of his rich-boy upbringing with his down-and-out songwriting made for strange bedfellows, much as his reveling in sinful excesses and the stringent church-bound notions of redemption clashed within him. What incandescent sparks, though!
While his debut solo album, GP, had its sessions bogged down by drug abuse, Grievous Angel found Gram cleaned up and focused on putting down his tracks as quickly as possible. Wrapped quickly, Parsons never lived to see its release. Posthumously put onto the market, Grievous Angel faltered on the charts, peaking meekly at 195. By comparison, the death of soft rock crooner Jim Croce, whose plane crashed two days after Parsons OD'd in Joshua Tree, sent his product straight to number one.
While GP contains an even keel of classic songs, Grievous Angel hits bittersweet highs… read more »


