002 | God’s Own Singer: A Life of Gram Parsons | Jason Walker
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“Walker does an admirable job in taking us as close to the heart and soul of Gram Parsons as any author could.”— Nigel Williamson, Uncut
“The perfect introductory book for those who are curious about the anomaly that is Gram Parsons.”—Ear Candy
Gram Parsons sang like an angel and dressed like a country star. Sadly he was neither, at least not in his lifetime. But before his tragically early death he played a key role in bringing together the worlds of rock and country music.
Born into a wealthy but ill-fated Southern family, Parsons started out playing folk with the Shilos, whose story is told here in depth for the first time. After founding the International Submarine Band during his brief time at Harvard, Gram headed to Los Angeles, where he turned the Byrds on to country music, before quitting to form the Flying Burrito Brothers. Later he recorded two magnificent solo albums and helped launch bandmate Emmylou Harris towards her subsequent fame. Yet none of Gram’s musical ventures captured the imagination of the record-buying public, and his dreams of stardom were repeatedly frustrated. He nevertheless lived out the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle to the full; by the time his masterpiece, Grievous Angel, was released in September 1973, he had been dead for four months.
The rich musical legacy of what Parsons called his “cosmic American music” paved the way for 70s country-rock acts such as the Eagles and also the later alternative-country movement exemplified by Wilco. But regrettably, Parsons’s musical output and his pioneering role are often not what he is most known for. He has become an mythological figure, remembered less for his prodigious talents than for his prodigious drug intake, his friendship with the Rolling Stones, his premature death, and, perhaps most titillating of all, for the manner in which his corpse was cremated in the California desert by two drunken friends bent on honoring a promise.
An accomplished musician himself, Jason Walker places the focus squarely on Parsons’s music. He spent years interviewing Gram’s friends and collaborators for this biography, first published in 2002 and reissued here in a thoroughly revised edition. And for this reissue he turned up an important source no previous researcher had found – Michael Martin, Gram’s sometime “valet” and one of only two participants in the abduction and unofficial cremation of Gram Parsons’s body. He had quite a story to tell . . .
Writer and country musician Jason Walker has written two biographies—God’s Own Singer: A Life of Gram Parsons, first published in 2002 by Helter Skelter and now reissued in a revised edition; and Billy Thorpe’s Time on Earth (2009)—and released four solo albums. He has also worked as a pedal-steel player and musical collaborator with Aboriginal country legend Roger Knox. Born in Huntly, New Zealand, Walker lives in Sydney and publishes regularly on his Substack, Arcadia Arcade.