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The Flying Burrito Brothers - The Gilded Palace Of Sin (2017)

The Flying Burrito Brothers - The Gilded Palace Of Sin (2017)
  • Title: The Gilded Palace Of Sin
  • Year Of Release: 1969 / 2017
  • Label: Intervention Records – IR-SCD3 / SACD, Reissue, Remastered
  • Genre: Country Rock, Folk Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log artwork)
  • Total Time: 37:44
  • Total Size: 224 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Christine's Tune (3:05)
02. Sin City (4:11)
03. Do Right Woman (3:58)
04. Dark End of the Street (3:59)
05. My Uncle (2:40)
06. Wheels (3:05)
07. Juanita (2:32)
08. Hot Burrito #1 (3:41)
09. Hot Burrito #2 (3:20)
10. Do You Know How It Feels (2:10)
11. Hippie Boy (5:01)

Each Sunday, Pitchfork takes an in-depth look at a significant album from the past, and any record not in our archives is eligible. Today we revisit the cosmic country rockers’ 1969 debut, a strange, short-lived truce in the long battle between hippies and squares.

One of the first times Gram Parsons played an open-mic night at the Palomino, a dive in North Hollywood that, in the late 1960s, was patronized mostly by hippie-hating country-music fans, a bar regular approached him right after his performance. “I want you to meet my three brothers,” the man said to Parsons, who was wearing his favorite pair of satin bell-bottoms and whose chestnut hair was longer than pretty much anyone else’s in the place. “We were gonna kick your ass,” the man continued, “but you can sing real good, so we’ll buy you a beer instead.”

No response could have flattered Gram Parsons more. The grand aim of what he would come to call his “Cosmic American Music”—an aural/spiritual fusion of country, R&B, gospel, rock, and good ol’ Southern charisma—was to find subcutaneous common bonds between people who, on the surface, seemed to be at odds. And in the late 1960s, as the Vietnam War raged and the generation gap widened, that kind of unity was hard to come by. But Parsons sought to bridge divides. He wanted to convince more conservative folks that unshorn draft-dodgers couldn’t be all bad if they could appreciate, say, the bottomless pathos of a George Jones ballad or the glittery grit of Buck Owens. And on the flip side, as the writer John Einarson put in his 2008 book Hot Burritos: The True Story of the Flying Burrito Brothers, Parsons was also interested in “educating the hippie masses on the wealth of wonderfully authentic American music hidden right under their noses.” Parsons had lofty goals for his art. A superstar in his own mind before almost anybody knew who he was, he believed fervently that his Cosmic American Music could deliver nothing short of salvation.

“Cosmic American Music?” Chris Hillman, Parsons’ co-frontman in the first incarnation of the Flying Burrito Brothers, scoffs in Einarson’s book. “What does that mean? It’s the stupidest term I’ve ever heard. It means nothing. It didn’t make any sense then and it still doesn’t. We were just trying to be a country band with a little more backbeat.”




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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 14:37
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.