| DAVE'S 
        DIARY - 18 MARCH 2006 - EMMYLOU HARRIS   EMMYLOU 
        HARRIS A SURIVIVOR 
         
          |  | Alabama 
            born country star Emmylou Harris is a true survivor in a career that 
            starred as a solo artist in the mid-sixties. 
 She grew up near Washington, DC, and began playing folk clubs as a 
            student before moving to Greenwich Village.
 
 Emmylou shared stages with artists diverse as Jerry Jeff Walker and 
            Dave Bromberg and cut her debut disc Gliding Bird in 1968.
 
 Chris Hillman discovered her in 1971 and brought Gram Parsons to hear 
            her sing in a small club in the Washington area.
 
 In 1972, she answered the call from Gram to join him in Los Angeles 
            to work on his first solo album, GP.
 
 After Gram died in 1973, Emmylou went back to the D.C. area and formed 
            a country band.
 
 She played with them until her 1975 major label debut, Pieces of 
            the Sky, when she formed the first version of the legendary Hot 
            Band.
 |  The Hot Band 
        included a galaxy of musicians including Albert Lee, Rodney Crowell, Hank 
        DeVito, Emory Gordy Jr, Ricky Skaggs, James Burton and Glenn Hardin.
 Emmylou scored a brace of hits and embraced all sub genres of country 
        on albums that have stood the test of time.
 She also 
        cut her first live disc in 1992 at the Ryman Auditorium - mother ship 
        of the Grand Ole Opry with her Nash City Ramblers.
 Harris has won 12 Grammys in a career embracing more than 30 studio and 
        live discs, DVDS and two albums with Linda Ronstadt and Dolly Parton as 
        The Trio.
 
 Third husband Paul Kennerley produced her revered concept album The 
        Ballad of Sally Rose in 1985.
 
 The prominent social activist has also been honoured with many compilation 
        discs including the excellent duets pair on Australian label Raven.
 
 I have interviewed Emmylou several times including her 1984 tour for the 
        expatriate Australasian promoter and Nashville superstar manager and publisher 
        Barry Coburn.
 
 I also interviewed her famed tour manager and infamous Gram Parsons body 
        snatcher Phil Kaufman who chronicled his adventures in the book Road 
        Mangler Deluxe.
 
 Kaufman re-enacted the body snatch with his Aussie partner in crime Michael 
        Martin outside the Sebel Town House Hotel in Elizabeth Bay for the Sydney 
        Daily Telegraph and now defunct Daily Mirror.
 
 Here is my latest Emmylou Harris interview when she was promoting recent 
        discs.
 NU 
        COUNTRY INTERVIEW 2000   EMMYLOU 
        STILL QUEEN OF THE SILVER DOLLAR 
         
          | Emmylou 
            Harris vividly recalls a night she voted for a transvestite in a bizarre 
            beauty contest in Nashville and inspired two smash hits by the late 
            Playboy cartoonist, singer and author Shel Silverstein. 
 Silverstein, who died on May, 9, 1999 at 67, penned Queen Of The 
            Silver Dollar and Boy Named Sue about the tiara toting 
            transvestite.
 
 "I thought it was only appropriate that I chose a drag queen," 
            Emmylou, now 56, told Nu Country TV in a call from her Nashville home, 
            "but my decision was overturned."
 
 |  |  Emmylou Linda 
        Ronstadt, Dr Hook and Doyle Holly recorded Queen Of The Silver Dollar 
        but it was Tulsa Queen - a Harris-Rodney Crowell tune - that embroidered 
        her 25th album Spyboy on Festival.
 The thrice-wed Alabama born singer, whose recording career started with 
        Gliding Bird in 1968, also included Crowell tune Ain't Living 
        Long Like This - once a hit for Waylon Jennings.
 Another live 
        album, cut at Albert Hall in London during that tour, hasn't surfaced.
 But Spyboy - named after the leader of the New Orleans Mardi Gras 
        parade - earned one of three recent Grammy nominations.
 
 Harris was secretive about the locale of Spyboy, recorded in Europe 
        in 1997, and featuring the band - Buddy Miller, Daryl Johnson and Brady 
        Blade - who toured Australia with her.
 
 "That's my little secret," Harris teased.
 
 "What I would like is for anyone who came to any show was a part 
        of the making of the record. I didn't want to get specific about the actual 
        place - I wanted it to be a more spiritual realm.
 
 "I still love the old material and you want to keep that while adding 
        new songs to the old songs."
 
 DAVID OLNEY
 
         
          |  | Emmylou 
            cut David Olney tune Deeper Well - part of a sequence that 
            also features her solo version of her original tune Prayer In Open 
            D and acapella version of Calling My Children Home, originally 
            cut by bluegrass group The Country Gentlemen. 
 The album finale is a cover of Wrecking Ball producer Daniel 
            Lanois tune The Maker - the only song she hadn't previously 
            recorded.
 
 "The Maker is the main reason I decided to make a live 
            record in the first place," says Emmylou, "I started singing 
            it when Daniel and I were on a short tour. I performed it each night 
            with him. I really loved it and knew I wanted it on record.
 |   But there 
        was no way I could compete with his studio version so I thought I would 
        record our shows to get a live version of it to put on a studio record. 
        This album is representative of where I was during those two years of 
        my life, which is what a record should be." Emmylou initially 
        planned to include more songs from Wrecking Ball but Asylum records 
        vetoed that so she cut Jesse Winchester tune My Songbird, the late 
        Boudleaux Bryant's Love Hurts, Julie Miller's All My Tears, 
        Green Pastures and her third ex-husband Paul Kennerley's tune Born 
        To Run.
 "My audience wants me to try things that are different," Emmylou 
        revealed.
 
 "I might have alienated a few people with Wrecking Ball. There's 
        certain part of my audience that thinks I stopped making records in 1980. 
        I can't be responsible for that. I have to find things to keep myself 
        excited, otherwise I would just quit."
  GRAM 
        PARSONS 
 She also included Gram Parsons-Chris Hillman tune Wheels and Boulder 
        To Birmingham - the ode to Gram she wrote with Bill Danoff (who penned 
        late John Denver hit Take Me Home, Country Road.)
 
 "I went back to the drawing board and listened to some of the older 
        material we'd been doing just out of necessity," Emmylou recalled.
 
 "Ultimately, I think, that made for a better record."
 
 
         
          | She's 
            also devoting her energies to a tribute album to former singing partner 
            Gram who died at 26 on September 19, 1973, from a heroin and booze 
            overdose. 
 Tour manager Phil Kaufman and Aussie mate Michael Martin stole Gram's 
            body and coffin from Van Nuys airport, Los Angeles, and burned it 
            at Cap Rock in Joshua Tree national park desert in a bizarre death 
            pact made two months earlier at Byrds guitarist Clarence White's funeral.
 
 Harris and Parsons duetted on his two solo discs and now the belated 
            tribute has been released here by Festival Records and replaced Kinky 
            Friedman tribute disc Pearls In The Snow at No 1 on the prestige 
            Americana charts.
 |  |  "Lucinda 
        Williams cut Grievous Angel and Steve Earle and Chris Hillman did 
        High Fashion Queen," says the singer. 
          "They 
        are spirited recordings which capture the essence of Gram's work. It's 
        an amazing project." 
 Other tracks include She (Emmylou & The Pretenders), Ooh 
        Las Vegas (Cowboy Junkies), Sin City (Emmylou & Beck), 
        $1,000 Wedding (Evan Dando & Juliana Hatfield), Juanita 
        (Emmylou & Sheryl Crow), Sleepless Nights (Elvis Costello), 
        Return Of The Grievous Angel (Lucinda Williams & David Crosby), 
        100 Years (Wilco), Hickory Wind (Gillian Welch & David 
        Rawlings), In My Hour Of Darkness (The Rolling Creekdippers) and 
        Hot Burrito #1 (The Mavericks).
  LINDA 
        RONSTADT  
         
          |  Emmylou 
              Harris & Rodney Crowell | Meanwhile 
            Trio 2, recorded five years ago for Asylum, enjoyed healthy 
            sales despite radio apathy. 
 It's a fitting entree for her duets album with Ms Ronstadt, mother 
            of two, who quit the bright lights of Los Angeles to return home to 
            Tucson, Arizona.
 
 Harley Allen tune High Sierra, one of the four songs cut by 
            Linda on her solo album Feels Like Going Home, was the first 
            single from the disc which sold 150,000 plus.
 
 The Trio also reprised Olney tune Women Across The River from 
            the same disc for Trio 2 which may not be surpass success of 
            the original Trio, a two million seller, which enjoyed a sales 
            spurt because of publicity for the sequel and the CMT and free TV 
            exposure.
 |  "We're 
        really on our way," says Emmylou of the duets disc which is due in 
        July, "we're on the road in August-September to promote it and hope 
        to include Australia." 
 Harris also harmonised with Shotgun Willie Nelson on The Maker 
        from his solo disc, Teatro, filmed by Wim Wenders during a live 
        gig at the old Teatro Mexican theatre where his album was recorded in 
        Oxnard, California.
 
 Tribute discs are a bonus for fans of Emmylou who cut Golden Ring with 
        Linda and Anna and Kate McGarrigle on Tammy Wynette Remembered 
        and Love Still Remains on Treasures Left Behind - the Kate 
        Wolf eulogy produced by Nina Gerber who toured here as Mollie O'Brien's 
        guitarist.
 
 She also shared a Grammy with an even dozen peers for Same Old Train 
        on Tribute To Tradition.
 
 And, of course, Emmylou, daughter Meghann and Linda were in the large 
        choir on the Roy Huskey Jr tribute, The Pilgrim, on Earle's 10th 
        album The Mountain, with the Del McCoury Band.
  THREE 
        CHORDS AND THE TRUTH  
         
          | Despite 
            the longevity of her career Emmylou is not keen to talk about a short 
            stanza in her life, vividly described in a long chapter in Laurence 
            Leamer book, Three Chords And The Truth. 
 Harris, shunned by American radio and undertaking gruelling European 
            tour in 1995, reportedly told Leamer "I'm a hard woman, a hard 
            woman. And I'm at the bottom of the fucking heap."
 
 The singer, whose serenity was shattered by an uncustomary dose of 
            red wine, uttered home truths she didn't expect to be repeated.
 
 |  Emmylou 
              & Gram Parsons |  "I didn't 
        think it was accurate and don't want to discuss it," she said.
 "I had bronchitis and I was very sick on that tour. I was disappointed 
        and let him know what I felt about it."
 
 Emmylou is a grass roots artist with no superstar aspirations at the peak 
        of a 38 year recording career.
 
 "I've basically made my living in the trenches and I probably always 
        will," Harris admits,
 "I think it's always going to be uphill. I don't think I'm ever going 
        to be at the top of the charts."
 
 The eight time Grammy winner and most in demand harmony singer and duet 
        partner in Nashville is eager to discuss the future, not that savage snapshot 
        of her tear stained past.
 
 Harris's star is burning brightly again after a visit with her mother 
        to Vietnam and Cambodia to study the impact of land mines.
  BUDDY 
        MILLER  
         
          |  | Stamina 
              is a forte for the daughter of decorated Marine Pilot and Major 
              Walter Harris who spent 16 months as a POW during the Korean conflict.
 "Land mines are wrong and need to be got out of the ground 
              if people are to live some normal kind of life where they're not 
              subjected to terrorism in their life every day when they're supposed 
              to be living in peace time," Harris says, "it's civilians 
              who are the casualties. The people working there are trying to raise 
              the standard of medical facilities and schools. It's very inspiring 
              to know there are still people in the world trying to help other 
              people.
 < 
              Emmylou Harris & Buddy Miller |  Bobby Muller, 
        the Vietnam veteran who went back there and started the campaign to end 
        land mines was one of the co-recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize. He saw 
        the devastation and set up a clinic outside Phnom Penn and provides free 
        artificial limbs and rehab for victims of land mines."  Harris's 
        pro-active role prompted her guitarist and prolific singer songwriter 
        Buddy Miller to include his tune 100 Million Little Bombs on his 
        second disc Poison Love and perform land mine eradication benefit 
        concerts with Lucinda, Willie, Steve and Sheryl.
 The singer is a free spirit like her namesake paddle steamer at Echuca 
        on the Murray River.
 
 "I have no idea where I'm going but I'm enjoying the trip," 
        says Emmylou, "as long as I feel excited about music, I won't have 
        to worry about what will be next."
 top 
        / back to diary 
 |