The Flying Burrito Brothers
The 'band with a thousand line-ups' was formed by two ex-Byrds
(Chris Hillman and Gram Parsons) along
with pedal-steel guitarist "Sneaky" Pete Kleinow, bassist
Chris Ethridge and various drummers. In 1969 they released the album The
Gilded Palace Of Sin which took country rock even further than The
Byrds' with Sin City and The Dark End Of The Street, as
well as rocking excellently on Christine's Tune, complete with
Everly Brothers-style harmonies. The production was superb and The
Burritos looked set to be really big.
Mysteriously, their second album (Burrito Deluxe) lost their
original sound and, sadly, the band blew their chance. Parsons
and Ethridge left the group and were replaced by Bernie Leadon and
Rick Roberts, with Chris Hillman switching to bass. Around this time,
Michael Clarke (also ex-The Byrds) became the
group's permanent drummer.
In 1971 Leadon left to join The Eagles
while Kleinow opted to pursue a career as a session musician rather
than continue with the band. Hillman, Clarke and Roberts were joined
by Al Perkins, Kenny Wertz, Roger Bush and Byron Berline. The line-up
changes were not yet over though, and Hillman and Perkins departed in
October to join Stephen Stills in Manassas. Just for good measure,
Clarke left as well . . .
Gram Parsons died on September 19,
1973. It was a squalid death (at the Joshua Tree Motel
in the Mojave Desert) after feasting on marijuana, Jack Daniels,
Tequila and heroin, with possible side orders of morphine, cocaine and
barbiturates.
With no original Burrito's left, the core line-up of Roberts,
Wertz, Berline and Bush were joined by Alan Munde, Erik Dalton and Don
Beck on a tour of Europe before calling it a day. Much to Chris
Hillman's frustration, former band manager Ed Tickner "commandeered"
the band name for a new line-up of Pete Kleinow, Chris Ethridge, Gene
Parsons (no relation to Gram), Joel Scott Hill and "Gib"
Guilbeau. This 'new' Flying Burrito Brothers signed a deal with
Columbia Records and released the lackluster Flying Again in
October 1975.
The band were soon up to their old tricks and Ethridge was replaced
by Skip Battin (ex-Byrds) for the following
year's Airborne. Once again, it all fell apart. Various other
'reunited' line-ups came and went - primarily for European and
Japanese tours - and the band (or a version thereof!) scored a
surprise US Country hit with a live version of White Line Fever.
By the 80s the band was recording as simply The Burrito Brothers
(no longer flying...), relying heavily on songs written by latest
newcomer, country veteran John Beland. When the band finally split up
(again) in 1985, Pete Kleinow "reclaimed" the Flying Burrito
Brothers moniker and toured with Battin, Harris and Goodall.
Various line-ups of the band have re-formed for tours and recording
since then, but by 1997's California Jukebox nobody really
cared anymore. Pete Kleinow died on January 6, 2007.
|
Chris Hillman
Guitar, mandolin, bass, vocals
Gram Parsons
Guitar, vocals
"Sneaky" Pete Kleinow
Pedal steel guitar
Chris Ethridge
Bass, piano
Bernie Leadon
Guitar, vocals
Michael Clarke
Drums
Rick Roberts
Guitar, vocals
Al Perkins
Pedal steel guitar
Roger Bush
Bass
Kenny Wertz
Guitar
Byron Berline
Fiddle
Alan Munde
Banjo
Erik Dalton
Drums
Don Beck
Pedal steel guitar
Gene Parsons
Guitar, vocals
Joel Scott Hill
Vocals
Greg Harris
Guitar, vocals
Mickey McGee
Drums
Floyd "Gib" Guilbeau
Fiddle
Jim Goodall
Drums
Skip Battin
Bass
John Beland
Guitar, vocals
|
|