Emmylou Harris
(born April 2 1947 in Birmingham, Alabama) is an American country singer-songwriter and musician. In addition to her work as a solo artist and bandleader, both as an interpreter of other composers' works and as a singer-songwriter, she is a sought-after backing vocalist and duet partner, working with numerous other highly successful, well-known artists.
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Biography
Early years
Emmylou Harris is the daughter of a career military father, a
Marine Corps officer who was reported missing in action in Korea in 1952 and spent ten months as a prisoner of war. Born in
Birmingham, Alabama, she spent her childhood in
North Carolina and
Woodbridge, Virginia, where she graduated from
Gar-Field Senior High School as class
valedictorian. In high school she also won a drama scholarship to the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where she began to study music seriously, learning to play the songs of
Pete Seeger,
Bob Dylan and
Joan Baez on guitar. Leaving college to pursue her musical aspirations, she moved to
New York, working as a waitress to support herself while performing folk songs in
Greenwich Village coffeehouses. She married fellow songwriter Tom Slocum in 1969 and in the following year recorded her first album,
Gliding Bird
. Harris and Slocum soon divorced, and Harris and her newborn daughter Hallie moved in with her parents in the
Maryland suburbs on the edge of
Washington, D.C. [1]
With Gram Parsons
Harris soon returned to performing as part of a trio with Gerry Mule and Tom Guidera. One night in 1971, members of the
country rock group
The Flying Burrito Brothers happened to be in the audience. Former
Byrds member
Chris Hillman, who had taken over the band after the departure of its founder
Gram Parsons, was so impressed by Harris that he briefly considered asking her to join the band. Instead, Hillman ended up recommending her to Parsons, who was looking for a female vocalist to work with on his first solo album,
GP
. Harris toured as a member of Parsons' band, The Fallen Angels, in 1973, and the couple shone during vocal harmonies and duets. Harris was quite pleased, and invested a lot emotionally in their relationship. Later that year, Parsons and Harris were working together to record a studio album,
Grievous Angel
. Parsons died in his motel room near what is now
Joshua Tree National Park on
September 19,
1973, from an accidental
overdose of drugs and alcohol. Parsons's
Grievous Angel
was released
posthumously in 1974, and three more tracks from his last sessions with Harris were included on another posthumous Parsons album,
Sleepless Nights
, in 1976. There was one more album of recorded material from that period of time that was packaged with the name,
Live 1973
, but wasn't released until 1982.
The working relationship between Harris and Parsons is one of great importance in country and country-rock music history. Parsons offered Harris a study in true country music, introducing her to artists like
The Louvin Brothers, and provided her with a musical identity; Harris' harmony and duet vocals, on the other hand, were lauded by those who heard them, and helped inspire Parsons' performances. His death left her devastated at an emotional and musical crossroads. She eventually carried on with her own version of Parsons' musical vision, and was instrumental in bringing attention to his achievements. Harris' earliest
signature song, and arguably her most personal one, "
Boulder to Birmingham", written shortly after Gram's death, showed the depth of her shock and pain at losing Parsons. It was, according to her friend
Linda Ronstadt, the beginning of a "lifetime effort to process what had happened", and was just the first of many songs written and/or performed by Harris about her life with (and without) Parsons.
I would rock my soul in the bosom of Abraham
I would hold my life in his saving grace.
I would walk all the way from Boulder to Birmingham
If I thought I could see, I could see your face.
--Boulder to Birmingham
lyrics by Emmylou Harris''
Harris moved back to Washington D.C., and formed an electric band, The Angel Band, consisting of Bruce Archer on guitar, Tom Guidera on bass, Danny Pendleton on pedal steel and Mark Cuff on drums. Friend
Linda Ronstadt invited Harris to join her in Los Angeles. Ronstadt, having a deep admiration for Harris's musicianship, informed everyone she could of Harris's talents and was instrumental in helping to get her work in musical venues (often singing with her), along the
Sunset Strip. In fact, Harris credits Ronstadt with being the force behind her getting a record contract.
The Hot Band
Warner Brothers A&R representative Mary Martin introduced Harris to
Canadian producer Brian Ahern, who produced her
major label debut album,
Pieces of the Sky
, released in 1975 on
Reprise Records. The album was surprisingly eclectic, especially by
Nashville standards, including
cover versions of
The Beatles' "
For No One",
Merle Haggard's "Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down" and
The Louvin Brothers' "If I Could Only Win Your Love". It also featured "Bluebird Wine", a composition by young
Texas songwriter Rodney Crowell, who was the first in a long line of songwriters whose talents Harris has championed. The record was one of the most expensive country records produced at the time, featuring the talents of
James Burton,
Glen Hardin,
Ron Tutt,
Ray Pohlman, and
Bill Payne, as well as two tracks ("Before Believing" and "Queen of the Silver Dollar") that were cut with the Angel Band. Two singles were released: "Too Far Gone", which initially charted at #73 (a 1979 reissue hit #13), and Harris's first big hit, "If I Could Only Win Your Love", which peaked at #4.
Executives of
Warner Bros. Records (Reprise Records's parent company) told Harris they would agree to record her if she would "get a hot band". Harris did so, enlisting guitarist
James Burton and pianist
Glen Hardin, both of whom had played with
Elvis Presley as well as Parsons. Burton was a renowned guitarist, starting in
Ricky Nelson's band in the 1950s, and Hardin had been a member of
The Crickets. Other
Hot Band members were drummer John Ware,
pedal steel guitarist Hank DeVito, and bassist
Emory Gordy, Jr., with whom Harris had worked while performing with Parsons. Singer-songwriter Crowell was enlisted as a rhythm guitarist and duet partner.
[2] Harris's first tour schedule originally dovetailed around Presley's, owing to Burton and Hardin's continuing commitments to Presley's band. The
Hot Band lived up to its name, with most of the members moving on with fresh talent replacing them as they continued on to solo careers of their own.
Elite Hotel
, released in December 1975, established that the buzz created by
Pieces of the Sky
was well-founded. Unusual for country albums at the time, which largely revolved around a hit single, Harris's albums borrowed their approach from the album-oriented rock market; in terms of quality and artistic merit, tracks like "Sin City", "Wheels", and "Till I Gain Control Again", which weren't singles, easily stood against tracks like "Together Again", "Sweet Dreams", and "One of These Days", which were. While
Elite Hotel
was a #1 country album, the album did sufficiently well as a crossover success with the rock audience. Harris appealed to those who normally disapproved of the country market's pull toward crossover pop singles ("Together Again" and "Sweet Dreams" both topped the country charts).
Elite Hotel
won a
Grammy in 1976 for
Best Country Vocal Performance, Female.
Harris's reputation for guest work continued. Aside from contributing to albums by
Linda Ronstadt,
Guy Clark and
Neil Young, Harris was tapped by
Bob Dylan to perform on his
Desire
album. Harris also filmed one of the studio sequences, owing to her touring schedule, in
The Band's
The Last Waltz
, singing "Evangeline."
Burton left the Hot Band in 1976, choosing to remain with Elvis Presley's band, and was replaced by English guitarist
Albert Lee. Harris and Ahern were married in 1977. Harris's commercial apex was
Luxury Liner
, released in 1977, which remains one of her definitive records. On
Luxury Liner
, Harris's mix of songs from
Chuck Berry ("(You Never Can Tell) C'est La Vie"),
Gram Parsons (the title track and "She"),
The Carter Family ("Hello Stranger") and
Kitty Wells ("Making Believe") illustrate a continuity and artistic merit to country music often overlooked at the time. Despite Top Ten singles with "C'est La Vie" and "Making Believe," the album's best known track is the first recorded cover of
Townes Van Zandt's classic "
Pancho & Lefty", which would be a #1 hit for
Willie Nelson and
Merle Haggard in 1983. At the end of 1977, Crowell left the Hot Band to pursue a solo career; his replacement was
bluegrass multi-instrumentalist and singer
Ricky Skaggs.
Quarter Moon in a Ten Cent Town
signalled a slight change of direction from Harris's previous three albums. Rather than mixing classic and contemporary, the album is made up largely of recently written songs, though from a wide variety of writers. "Two More Bottles of Wine" became Harris's third #1 single, "To Daddy", written by
Dolly Parton, went to #3, and a third single, "Easy From Now On", went Top Twenty. The album included two songs apiece from Crowell ("I Ain't Living Long Like This" and "Leaving Louisiana In The Broad Daylight") and
Canadian songwriter
Jesse Winchester ("Defying Gravity" and "My Songbird"), and
Utah Phillips' "Green Rolling Hills."
The Roots Records
In 1977 (January), Harris married Brian Ahern.
[3] Their (Harris's second) daughter, Meghann, was born in 1979. During this time, Harris cut three studio albums that reflected a shift toward traditional country (the industry, on the other hand, was about to embrace
Urban Cowboy
). The first key to the change in direction was her
Grammy Award-winning 1979 album
Blue Kentucky Girl
. Apart from a cover of
The Drifters' "Save The Last Dance For Me", the album was largely made up of classic-styled country material in the vein of
Loretta Lynn and
Kitty Wells. One of her best-loved albums, the record includes songs ranging from
The Louvin Brothers' "Everytime You Leave" to
Willie Nelson's "Sister's Coming Home" to
Gram Parson's signature "Hickory Wind".
Wesley Rose took special interest in Harris's recording of "Beneath Still Waters", which became a #1 smash.
A Christmas album,
Light of the Stable
, was released in 1979; its title track featured backing vocals by
Dolly Parton,
Linda Ronstadt and
Neil Young, all three of whom Harris had been working with sporadically since the mid-1970s. The album is largely acoustic, featuring readings of traditional fare such as "Silent Night," "O Little Town of Bethlehem" and "The First Noel."
In the 1980s, Harris pursued country music's history even further with the
bluegrass-oriented recording of
Roses in the Snow
, featuring
Ricky Skaggs,
Tony Rice,
Albert Lee,
Emory Gordy Jr. and
Jerry Douglas. Harris's versions of the traditional "Wayfaring Stranger" and
Paul Simon's "The Boxer" were strong singles.
In 1980, Harris recorded "That Lovin' You Feelin' Again" with
Roy Orbison. The duet was a Top 10 hit on both the Country and Adult Contemporary charts. They would win the
Grammy Award for
Best Country Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group. She would also be featured on
Paul Kennerley's concept album
The Legend of Jesse James
, which also featured
Levon Helm of
The Band and
Johnny Cash.
Pop-chart success, songwriting
In 1981, Harris reached the Top 40 on the
Billboard pop chart with a cover of "
Mister Sandman"—again Top 10 Country as well as Adult Contemporary—from her
Evangeline
album. (The album version of the song featured harmony by
Dolly Parton and
Linda Ronstadt, but neither Parton's nor Ronstadt's
record companies would allow their artists' vocals to be used on the single, so Harris re-recorded the song, singing all three parts.)
White Shoes
in 1983 included an eclectic pairing of the rockish reading of "
Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend" with a remake of the
Donna Summer hit "On the Radio", as well as tracks from a diverse group of songwriters such as Hot Band member Crowell,
Sandy Denny and
T-Bone Burnett.
Harris's major-label releases thus far had included few self-penned songs, but in 1985 her songwriting skills were much in evidence with the release of
The Ballad of Sally Rose
, for which she co-wrote all of the songs. The album was semi-autobiographical in theme, based loosely on her relationship with Parsons. Harris described it as a "country opera". Her co-writer and producer on the album was
English songwriter and musician
Paul Kennerley, writer of the hit singles "Born to Run" (on Harris's 1981
Cimarron
album) and "In My Dreams" (on
White Shoes
). Kennerley also produced her next album,
Thirteen
. They were married in 1985 and divorced in 1993.
In 1987, Harris enjoyed the biggest commercial success of her long and varied career when she teamed up with Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt for their long-promised and much-anticipated
Trio
album. (Their original recording sessions for this project had begun 10 years earlier.) The album spent five weeks at #1 on Billboard's Country Albums chart (also quickly reaching the Top 10 on the Pop Albums chart), sold several million copies and produced four Top 10 Country hits, including "To Know Him Is To Love Him", which hit #1. The disc was nominated for the coveted
Album Of The Year Grammy award (given to
U2 that year for
The Joshua Tree
) and the three women won the statuette for Best Country Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
Harris also found time in 1987 to release a solo album,
Angel Band
, featuring traditional
gospel songs, on which she worked with, among others, rising country star
Vince Gill.
In 1989, she recorded two songs with the
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band on their album,
Will the Circle Be Unbroken: Volume II
. In a snippet of studio chatter included on one of the tracks, she talked during the recording session about her beginnings and how music had changed:
Years ago I had the experience of sitting around in a living room with a bunch of people and singing and playing, and it was like a spiritual experience, it was wonderful. And I decided then that was what I was going to do with my life was play music, do music. In the making of records, I think over the years we've all gotten a little too technical, a little too hung up on getting things perfect. We've lost the living room. The living room has gone out of the music, but today I feel like we got it back.
Around 1991, she dissolved The Hot Band and formed a new band of acoustic musicians—
Sam Bush on fiddle, mandolin and vocals,
Roy Huskey, Jr. on bass and vocals, Larry Atamanuik on drums,
Al Perkins on banjo, guitar,
Dobro guitar and vocals, and
Jon Randall on guitar, mandolin and vocals—which she named The Nash Ramblers. They recorded a
Grammy Award-winning
live album in 1992 at the
Ryman Auditorium in
Nashville, Tennessee, which led to the $8 million restoration of the facility into a premium concert and event venue. It was her last album with
Reprise Records.
New directions
By the 1990s, Harris started receiving less airplay as mainstream country stations began shifting their focus to the youth-oriented "new country" format. Harris's albums
Bluebird
and
Brand New Dance
(1989 and 1990, respectively) received ample critical acclaim and sold reasonably well, yet her chart success was on the wane. 1993's
Cowgirl's Prayer
—the first album since her switch to
Elektra Records—was critically praised but received very little airplay, and its lead single, "High Powered Love" charted very low, peaking at #63, prompting her to shift her career in a new direction.
In 1995, Harris released one of the most critically acclaimed albums of the decade,
Wrecking Ball
, produced by
Daniel Lanois, best known for his work with
U2,
Peter Gabriel and
Bob Dylan. An experimental album for Harris, the record included Harris's rendition of the
Neil Young-penned title track (Young himself provided guest vocals on two of the album's songs),
Steve Earle's "Goodbye",
Julie Miller's "All My Tears",
Jimi Hendrix's "May This Be Love",
Kate and Anna McGarrigle's "Goin' Back to Harlan" and
Gillian Welch's "Orphan Girl". U2's
Larry Mullen, Jr. showed up to play drums for the project. The album received virtually no country airplay whatsoever, but did bring Harris to the attention of
alternative rock listeners, many of whom had never listened to her music before.
Harris then took her
Wrecking Ball
material on the road, releasing the live
Spyboy
in 1998, backed with a
power trio comprising Nashville
producer,
songwriter and
guitarist Buddy Miller and
New Orleans musicians, drummer
Brady Blade and
bassist-
vocalist-
percussionist Daryl Johnson. In addition to performing songs from
Wrecking Ball
, the album updated many of Harris's career hits, including "Boulder to Birmingham".
Also in 1998, she appeared prominently on
Willie Nelson's moody, instrumentally sparse
Teatro
album, produced by
Wrecking Ball
producer Lanois.
During the summer of 1997 and 1998, Harris joined
Sarah McLachlan's all-woman musical touring festival, the
Lilith Fair, where new artists like
Patty Griffin could share new experiences and ideas with seasoned musicians like Harris and
Bonnie Raitt.
In January 1999, Harris released
Trio 2
with Parton and Ronstadt. Much of the album had actually been recorded in 1994, but remained unreleased for nearly five years because of
record label and personnel disputes, conflicting schedules, and career priorities of the three artists.
Trio 2
was much more contemporary-sounding than its predecessor and was certified Gold. It included their version of Neil Young's classic "After The Gold Rush", which became a popular music video and won another Grammy—this one for
Best Country Collaboration with Vocals. Harris and Ronstadt then released a duet album,
Western Wall: The Tucson Sessions
, later the same year. The two superstars toured together during the fall months in support of the disc. Both albums made the Top 10 of Billboard's Country Albums chart and did well on the pop side as well.
Also in 1999, Harris paid tribute to her former singing partner
Gram Parsons by co-executive producing
Return of the Grievous Angel: A Tribute to Gram Parsons
, an album that gathered together more than a dozen artists. Harris performed duets with
Beck,
Sheryl Crow and
The Pretenders on this album's tracks.
In 2000, Harris released her solo follow-up to
Wrecking Ball
,
Red Dirt Girl
, produced by Lanois protege
Malcolm Burn. For the first time since
The Ballad of Sally Rose
, the album contained a number of Harris's own compositions. Like
Wrecking Ball
, the album's sound leaned more toward alternative rock than country. Nevertheless it reached #5 on Billboard's Country Albums chart as well as a healthy #54 on the pop side. It also won Harris another of her 12 Grammy awards, in the category of
Best Contemporary Folk Album.
Harris also accompanied on
alternative country singer
Ryan Adams' solo debut
Heartbreaker
.
Also in 2000, Harris joined an all-star group of traditional
country,
folk and
blues artists for the
T-Bone Burnett-produced
soundtrack to the
Coen Brothers film,
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
The soundtrack won multiple
CMA,
ACM and Grammy awards. A
documentary/
concert film,
Down from the Mountain
, featured the artists performing music from the film and other songs at the
Ryman Auditorium. Harris and many of the same artists took their show on the road for the Down from the Mountain Tour in 2002. In 2003, Harris supplied the finishing touches in harmonizing with the
Dixie Chicks on a song they were recording in the studio, "Godspeed".
On September 9, 2005, Harris participated in "
Shelter from the Storm: A Concert for the Gulf Coast," a series of concerts
simulcast by most
American television stations to raise money for victims of
Hurricane Katrina and
Hurricane Rita. She performed with
Beth Neilsen Chapman and the Dixie Chicks, harmonizing on Patty Griffin's song, "Mary."
Recent work
Harris released
Stumble into Grace
, her follow-up to
Red Dirt Girl
, in 2003. Like its predecessor, it contained mostly self-penned material. In 2004, Harris led the
Sweet Harmony Traveling Revue tour with
Gillian Welch,
David Rawlings,
Buddy Miller and
Patty Griffin. They performed singly and together and swapped instruments.
In 2005, Harris worked with
Conor Oberst on
Bright Eyes' release,
I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
, performing backup vocals on three tracks. In July, she joined
Elvis Costello on several dates of his U.S. tour, performing alongside Costello and his band on several numbers each night. Harris and Costello recorded a version of Costello's song, "The Scarlet Tide", from the soundtrack of the movie
Cold Mountain
. July also saw the release of
The Very Best of Emmylou Harris: Heartaches and Highways,
a single-disc retrospective of Harris's career, on the
Rhino Entertainment label. This same year, Harris appeared as a guest vocalist on
Neil Young's widely acclaimed
Prairie Wind
. She also appeared in the
Jonathan Demme documentary-concert film
Neil Young: Heart of Gold
, released in 2006.
thumb
All the Roadrunning
, an album of collaborations with former
Dire Straits frontman
Mark Knopfler, was released in April of 2006 and supported by a tour of Europe and the USA. The album was a commercial success, reaching #10 in the UK and #17 in the USA. Selections recorded during the
All the Roadrunning
tour performance at the
Gibson Amphitheatre were released as a CD/DVD package titled
Real Live Roadrunning
in November of 2006. In addition to several of the compositions that Harris and Knopfler recorded together in the studio,
Real Live Roadrunning
features solo hits from both members of the duo, as well as a few classic tracks from Knopfler's days with Dire Straits.
Harris is featured on a
A Tribute To Joni Mitchell
, released on April 24, 2007. Harris covered the song "The Magdalene Laundries" (originally on Mitchell's 1994 album,
Turbulent Indigo
). She sang "Another Pot O' Tea" with
Anne Murray on Murray's album
Anne Murray Duets: Friends and Legends
, released November 13, 2007, in Canada and January 15, 2008, in the U.S.
A new solo album,
All I Intended to Be
, was released on June 10, 2008, to critical acclaim. Contributors include
Buddy Miller,
the McGarrigle sisters,
Vince Gill, and
Dolly Parton. She toured with an ensemble she dubbed the Red Dirt Boys, featuring
Phil Madeira on accordion and keyboards,
Colin Linden on guitar and banjo,
Rickie Simpkins on mandolin and fiddle,
Chris Donohoe on bass, and
Bryan Owings on drums.
[4] It did not include Buddy Miller, who was touring with
Robert Plant,
Alison Krauss and
T Bone Burnett at the time. In 2009, Harris toured with Patty Griffin,
Shawn Colvin, and Buddy Miller as "Three Girls and Their Buddy".
Harris wrote a song called "In Rodanthe" for the forthcoming film
Nights In Rodanthe
.
Activism
In 1997 and 1998, Harris performed in
Sarah McLachlan's
Lilith Fair, promoting
feminism in music. Since 1999, Harris has been organizing an annual benefit tour called Concerts for a Landmine Free World. All proceeds from the tours support the
Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation's (VVAF) efforts to assist innocent victims of conflicts around the world. The tour also benefits the VVAF's work to raise
America's awareness of the global
landmine problem. Artists that have joined Harris on the road for these dates include
Mary Chapin Carpenter,
Bruce Cockburn,
Sheryl Crow,
Steve Earle,
Joan Baez,
Patty Griffin,
Nanci Griffith,
Willie Nelson, and
Lucinda Williams. Harris is a supporter of
animal rights and an active member of
PETA.
[5] She founded, and in her spare time assists at, an
animal shelter in Nashville.
[6]
Awards and other honors
Grammy Awards
2005
Best Female Country Vocal Performance ("The Connection")
2001
Album of the Year (
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
)
2000
Best Contemporary Folk Album (
Red Dirt Girl
)
1999
Best Country Collaboration with Vocals ("After The Gold Rush", with Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt)
1998
Best Country Collaboration with Vocals ("Same Old Train", with
Alison Krauss,
Clint Black,
Dwight Yoakam,
Earl Scruggs,
Joe Diffie,
Marty Stuart,
Merle Haggard,
Pam Tillis,
Patty Loveless,
Randy Travis,
Ricky Skaggs &
Travis Tritt)
1995
Best Contemporary Folk Album (
Wrecking Ball
)
1992
Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (
Emmylou Harris & The Nash Ramblers At the Ryman
, as Emmylou Harris & The Nash Ramblers)
1987
Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (
Trio
, with Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt)
1984
Best Country Vocal Performance, Female ("In My Dreams")
1980
Best Country Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group ("That Lovin' You Feelin' Again", with Roy Orbison)
1979
Best Country Vocal Performance, Female (
Blue Kentucky Girl
)
1976
Best Country Vocal Performance, Female (
Elite Hotel
)
[7]
Country Music Association Awards
2001
Album of the Year (
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
)
1980
Female Vocalist Of The Year
1988
Vocal Event of the Year (
Trio
, with Dolly Parton and Linda Ronstadt)
[8]
Other honors
- VH1's 100 Most Influential Women in Rock and Roll (1998) - Number 22 out of 100
- Billboard's Century Award recipient (1999) - inducted by Sarah McLachlann
- CMT's 40 Greatest Women of Country Music
- #5 ranking (2002)
- Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on February 12, 2008 [9]
- Inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2009.
Discography
References
- "Charlie Rose Show" June 25, 2008
- The Hot Band, Emmylou.net, retrieved 2007-10-04
- Emmylou ... and Brian ... make beautiful music together.
- [1]/
- Kentucky Fried Cruelty :: Celebrity Support :: Emmylou Harris
- Bonaparte's Retreat
- Grammy Award Winners at www.grammy.com, retrieved 21 March 2008/
- Artist Detail Emmylou Harris www.cmaawards.com, retrieved 21 March 2008
- Morris, Edward (28 April, 2008) CMT News: Emmylou Harris, Ernest V. "Pop" Stoneman Enter Country Music Hall of Fame Retrieved 5 July, 2008