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Sleepless Nights
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Sleepless Nights
Current price: $32.99
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Barnes and Noble
Sleepless Nights
Current price: $32.99
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Three years after
Gram Parsons
' untimely death, his frequent duet partner
Emmylou Harris
helped arrange for the release of this collection of outtakes -- three songs he cut with
Harris
for his final solo album
Grievous Angel
in 1973, and nine others recorded live in the studio with
The Flying Burrito Brothers
in 1970. Anyone hoping to find the great lost
song is out of luck here; all 12 tunes are covers of vintage country classics, except for
"Honky Tonk Women"
(which at least sounds like a C&W classic in this arrangement) and
The Louvin Brothers
'
"The Angels Rejoiced Last Night,"
which is as spiritually uplifting as ever with
' pure, clear voice helping to bring it home. The three tracks with his duet partner fare best, while most of the cuts with
the Burritos
sound like demos, and though a few are inspired (particularly the deeply felt versions of
"Sing Me Back Home"
and
"Green, Green Grass of Home,"
a lot of the time both
Parsons
and the band sound like a solid bar band in the middle of a Wednesday night set -- more than competent, but less than inspired.
Sleepless Nights
was certainly a labor of love and it's a worthy purchase for committed fans, but neophytes are better off giving a listen to
' masterpiece
The Gilded Palace of Sin
, or either solo album,
G.P.
or
. ~ Mark Deming
Gram Parsons
' untimely death, his frequent duet partner
Emmylou Harris
helped arrange for the release of this collection of outtakes -- three songs he cut with
Harris
for his final solo album
Grievous Angel
in 1973, and nine others recorded live in the studio with
The Flying Burrito Brothers
in 1970. Anyone hoping to find the great lost
song is out of luck here; all 12 tunes are covers of vintage country classics, except for
"Honky Tonk Women"
(which at least sounds like a C&W classic in this arrangement) and
The Louvin Brothers
'
"The Angels Rejoiced Last Night,"
which is as spiritually uplifting as ever with
' pure, clear voice helping to bring it home. The three tracks with his duet partner fare best, while most of the cuts with
the Burritos
sound like demos, and though a few are inspired (particularly the deeply felt versions of
"Sing Me Back Home"
and
"Green, Green Grass of Home,"
a lot of the time both
Parsons
and the band sound like a solid bar band in the middle of a Wednesday night set -- more than competent, but less than inspired.
Sleepless Nights
was certainly a labor of love and it's a worthy purchase for committed fans, but neophytes are better off giving a listen to
' masterpiece
The Gilded Palace of Sin
, or either solo album,
G.P.
or
. ~ Mark Deming