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Grievous Angel

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (357 ratings)
Grievous Angel album cover
01
Return Of The Grievous Angel
4:26
$0.99
02
Hearts On Fire
3:53
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03
I Can't Dance
2:25
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04
Brass Buttons
3:31
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05
$1000 Wedding
5:05
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06
Medley Live From Northern Quebec [A] Cash On The Barrelhead [B] Hickory Wind
6:29
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07
Love Hurts
3:42
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08
Ooh Las Vegas
3:33
$0.99
09
In My Hour Of Darkness (Remastered Album Version)
3:49
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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:53

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eMusic Review 0

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Andy Beta

eMusic Contributor

Andy Beta has written about music and comedy for the Wall Street Journal, the disco revival for the Village Voice, animatronic bands for SPIN, Thai pop for the ...more »

01.11.10
Gram Parsons, Grievous Angel
2008 | Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

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 »

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Gram Parsons, Grievous Angel

Vinelander

This piece of work has got to be one of the best ever if you appreciate the roots of the crossover between folk, rock, and country. Call it what you like, but if you don't love the harmonies, you must be tone deaf.

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Want to fill the gap between the Byrds & Eagles?

sportster1200

This will let you know what came in between.

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One of the all time greats

genebean

This and GP, the other solo album by Gram, what can you say? It is just the best. When Gram sings "one lonely horn" on "1000 Dollar Wedding," it is pure soul, and isn't that what it's all about?

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My oh my

realanncampbell

So, is this just nostalgia, or is this just great? After all this time . . . wow.

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Perfect...

Warrior4x

That is the only word to describe Gram and Emmylou's version of "Love Hurts". No recording of that song before or since even comes close, even the ones Emmylou recorded with others. Gram is in the left channel, Emmylou, the right. They sound like forlorn lovers, torn from one another, experiencing the same pains, resigned to the same fate. And their harmonies throughout are beautifully perfect. "Return of the Grievous Angel" and "Hearts on Fire" re-enforces the notion that these were soul-mates, now wanderers...

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Stunning Album

lancem

"Return of the Grievous Angel" and "$1000 Wedding" are 2 of the only songs that can reduce me to tears whenever I hear them. The whole album is amazing.

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They Say All Music Guide

Gram Parsons fondness for drugs and high living are said to have been catching up with him while he was recording Grievous Angel, and sadly he wouldn’t live long enough to see it reach record stores, dying from a drug overdose in the fall of 1973. This album is a less ambitious and unified set than his solo debut, but that’s to say that G.P. was a great album while Grievous Angel was instead a very, very good one. Much of the same band that played on his solo debut were brought back for this set, and they perform with the same effortless grace and authority (especially guitarist James Burton and fiddler Byron Berline). If Parsons was slowing down a bit as a songwriter, he still had plenty of gems on hand from more productive days, such as “Brass Buttons” and “Hickory Wind (which wasn’t really recorded live in Northern Quebec; that’s just Gram and the band ripping it up live in the studio, with a handful of friends whooping it up to create honky-tonk atmosphere). He also proved to be a shrewd judge of other folks material as always; Tom T. Hall’s “I Can’t Dance” is a strong barroom rocker, and everyone seems to be having a great time on The Louvin Brothers’s “Cash on the Barrelhead.” As a vocal duo, Parsons and Emmylou Harris only improved on this set, turning in a version of “Love Hurts” so quietly impassioned and delicately beautiful that it’s enough to make you forget Roy Orbison ever recorded it. And while he didn’t plan on it, Parsons could hardly have picked a better closing gesture than “In My Hour of Darkness.” Grievous Angel may not have been the finest work of his career, but one would be hard pressed to name an artist who made an album this strong only a few weeks before their death — or at any time of their life, for that matter. – Mark Deming

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