* En anglais uniquement
Blessed with a crystalline voice, a remarkable gift for phrasing, and a restless creative spirit, few artists had as profound an impact on contemporary music as
Emmylou Harris. She traveled a singular artistic path, proudly carrying the torch of "cosmic American music" passed down by her mentor,
Gram Parsons, which made a profound mark on both country and rock. Beginning as a folk singer in New York City,
Harris released her first album in 1970, only to see it disappear with the bankruptcy of her record label. But a year later, she was playing a folk club in Washington D.C. when
Chris Hillman saw her perform, and he recommended her to his former bandmate
Gram Parsons.
Harris would contribute superb vocals to
Parsons' solo albums, 1972's
G.P. and 1974's
Grievous Angel, and he would be her guide in country music until his death in September 1973.
Harris moved on to a solo career with albums like 1977's
Pieces of the Sky and
Elite Hotel, and 1977's
Luxury Liner, where she blended an abiding respect for country music's history with a passion and flair informed by rock. While
Harris was a superb interpretive vocalist, she would later come into her own as a songwriter with 1985's ambitious concept album
The Ballad of Sally Rose, and in 1987 she enjoyed a major critical and commercial success with
Trio, a collaboration with
Dolly Parton and
Linda Ronstadt. With 1992's
At the Ryman,
Harris revitalized her muse with a superb acoustic session, and on 1995's
Wrecking Ball, she teamed with producer
Daniel Lanois to create a strikingly atmospheric set informed by alternative rock as much as country. Moving into the 2000s,
Harris continued to explore her creative boundaries, keeping one foot in country while also finding inspiration in rock and alternative sounds. She also found time for collaborations with
Mark Knopfler (2006's All the Roadrunning) and
Rodney Crowell (2013's
Old Yellow Moon and 2015's
The Traveling Kind). With the exception of
Neil Young -- not surprisingly an occasional collaborator -- no other mainstream star established a similarly large body of work as consistently iconoclastic, eclectic, or daring; even more than four decades into her career,
Harris' latter-day music remained as heartfelt, visionary, and vital as her earliest recordings.
Harris was born on April 2, 1947, to a military family stationed in Birmingham, Alabama. After spending much of her childhood in North Carolina, she moved to Woodbridge, Virginia while in her teens and graduated high school there as class valedictorian. After winning a drama scholarship to the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, she began to seriously study music, learning to play songs by
Bob Dylan and
Joan Baez. Soon,
Harris was performing in a duo with fellow UNC student
Mike Williams, eventually quitting school to move to New York, only to find the city's folk music community dying out in the wake of the psychedelic era.
Still,
Harris remained in New York, traveling the Greenwich Village club circuit before becoming a regular at Gerdes Folk City, where she struck up friendships with fellow folkies
Jerry Jeff Walker,
David Bromberg, and
Paul Siebel. After marrying songwriter Tom Slocum in 1969, she recorded her debut LP, 1970's Gliding Bird. Shortly after the record's release, however,
Harris' label declared bankruptcy, and while pregnant with her first child, her marriage began to fall apart. After moving to Nashville, she and Slocum divorced, leaving
Harris to raise daughter Hallie on her own. After several months of struggle and poverty, she moved back in with her parents, who had since bought a farm outside of Washington, D.C.
There she returned to performing, starting a trio with local musicians Gerry Mule and
Tom Guidera. One evening in 1971, while playing at an area club called Clyde's, the trio performed to a crowd that included members of the country-rock pioneers
the Flying Burrito Brothers. In the wake of the departure of
Gram Parsons, the band's founder,
the Burritos were led by ex-
Byrd Chris Hillman, who was so impressed by
Harris' talents that he considered inviting her to join the group. Instead,
Hillman himself quit to join
Stephen Stills'
Manassas, but he recommended her to
Parsons, who wanted a female vocalist to flesh out the sound of his solo work, a trailblazing fusion of country and rock & roll he dubbed "cosmic American music." Their connection was instant, and soon
Harris was learning about country music and singing harmony on
Parsons' solo debut, 1972's
G.P. A tour with
Parsons' backup unit, the Fallen Angels, followed, and in 1973 they returned to the studio to cut his landmark LP
Grievous Angel.
On September 19, just weeks after the album sessions ended,
Parsons' fondness for drugs and alcohol finally caught up to him, and he was found dead in a hotel room outside of the Joshua Tree National Monument in California. At the time,
Harris was back in Washington, collecting her daughter for a planned move to the West Coast. Instead, she remained in D.C., reuniting with
Tom Guidera to form
the Angel Band. The group signed to
Reprise and relocated to Los Angeles to begin work on
Harris' major-label solo debut, 1975's acclaimed
Pieces of the Sky, an impeccable collection made up largely of diverse covers ranging in origin from
Merle Haggard to
the Beatles. Produced by
Brian Ahern, who would go on to helm
Harris' next ten records -- as well as becoming her second husband --
Pieces of the Sky's second single, a rendition of
the Louvin Brothers' "If I Could Only Win Your Love," became her first Top Five hit. "Light of the Stable," a Christmas single complete with backing vocals from
Dolly Parton,
Linda Ronstadt, and
Neil Young, soon followed;
Harris then repaid the favor by singing on
Ronstadt's "The Sweetest Gift" and
Young's "Star of Bethlehem."
For her second LP, 1976's
Elite Hotel,
Harris established a new backing unit, the Hot Band, which featured legendary
Elvis Presley sidemen
James Burton and
Glen D. Hardin as well as a young songwriter named
Rodney Crowell on backup vocals and rhythm guitar. The resulting album proved to be a smash, with covers of
Buck Owens' "Together Again" and the
Patsy Cline perennial "Sweet Dreams" both topping the charts. Before beginning sessions for her third effort, 1977's
Luxury Liner,
Harris guested on
Bob Dylan's
Desire and appeared in
Martin Scorsese's documentary of
the Band's legendary final performance, The Last Waltz.
Quarter Moon in a Ten Cent Town followed in 1978, led by the single "Two More Bottles of Wine," her third number one. The record was
Crowell's last with the Hot Band; one of the tracks, "Green Rolling Hills," included backing from
Ricky Skaggs, soon to become
Crowell's replacement as
Harris' vocal partner.
Released in 1979,
Blue Kentucky Girl was her most country-oriented work to date, an indication of what was to come a year later with
Roses in the Snow, a full-fledged excursion into acoustic bluegrass. In the summer of 1980, a duet with
Roy Orbison, "That Lovin' You Feelin' Again," hit the Top Ten; a yuletide LP,
Light of the Stable, followed at the end of the year. Shortly afterward,
Harris quit touring to focus on raising her second daughter, Meghann.
Evangeline, a patchwork of songs left off of previous albums, appeared in 1981. Shortly afterward,
Skaggs left the Hot Band to embark on a solo career; his replacement was
Barry Tashian, a singer/songwriter best known for fronting the '60s rock band
the Remains.
In 1982, drummer
John Ware, the final holdover from the first Hot Band lineup, left the group; at the same time,
Harris' marriage to
Ahern was also beginning to disintegrate. After 1981's
Cimarron,
Harris and the Hot Band cut a live album,
Last Date, named in honor of the album's chart-topping single "(Lost His Love) On Our Last Date," a vocal version of the
Floyd Cramer instrumental. Quickly, they returned to the studio to record
White Shoes,
Harris' final LP with
Ahern at the helm. Her most far-ranging affair yet, it included covers of
Donna Summer's "On the Radio,"
Johnny Ace's "Pledging My Love," and
Sandy Denny's "Old-Fashioned Waltz."
After leaving
Ahern, she and her children moved back to Nashville. There,
Harris joined forces with singer/songwriter
Paul Kennerley, on whose 1980 concept album, The Legend of Jesse James, she had sung backup. Together, they began formulating a record called
The Ballad of Sally Rose, employing the pseudonym
Harris often used on the road to veil what was otherwise a clearly autobiographical portrait of her own life. Though a commercial failure, the 1985 record proved pivotal in
Harris' continued evolution as an artist and a risk-taker, and she would release an expanded edition of the album in 2018. It also marked another chapter in her personal life when she and
Kennerley wed shortly after concluding their tour.
Angel Band, a subtle acoustic collection of traditional country spirituals, followed, although the record was not issued until 1987, after the release of its immediate follow-up,
Thirteen.
Harris,
Dolly Parton, and
Linda Ronstadt had first toyed with the idea of recording an album together as far back as 1977, only to watch the project falter in light of touring commitments and other red tape. Finally, in 1987, they issued
Trio, a collection that proved to be
Harris' best-selling album to date, generating the hits "To Know Him Is to Love Him" (a cover of the
Phil Spector classic), "Telling Me Lies," and "Those Memories of You." The record's success spurred the 1990 release of
Duets, a compilation of her earlier hits in conjunction with
George Jones,
Willie Nelson,
Gram Parsons, and others. (In 1999,
Harris would reunite with
Parton and
Ronstadt for a second collaborative album, Trio II, and the two albums and a number of unreleased tracks were later compiled into a box set, 2016's The Complete Trio Collection.) Fronting a new band,
the Nash Ramblers, in 1992,
Harris issued
At the Ryman, a live set recorded at Nashville's legendary Ryman Auditorium, the former home of the Grand Ole Opry. At the time of the record's release,
Harris was also serving a term as president of the Country Music Foundation.
In 1993, she ended her long association with Warner Bros./
Reprise to move to Asylum Records, where she released
Cowgirl's Prayer shortly after her separation from
Paul Kennerley. Two years later, during a stage in her career when most performers retreat to the safety of rehashing their greatest hits again and again,
Harris issued
Wrecking Ball, perhaps her most adventuresome record to date. Produced by
Daniel Lanois, the New Orleans-based artist best known for his atmospheric work with
U2,
Peter Gabriel, and
Bob Dylan,
Wrecking Ball was a hypnotic, staggeringly beautiful work comprised of songs ranging from the
Neil Young-penned title track (which featured its writer on backing vocals) to
Jimi Hendrix's "May This Be Love" and the talented newcomer
Gillian Welch's "Orphan Girl."
A three-disc retrospective of her years with Warner Bros.,
Portraits, appeared in 1996, and in 1998
Harris resurfaced with
Spyboy. Following the release of Trio II later that year, she and
Ronstadt again reunited, this time minus
Parton, for 1999's Western Wall: The Tucson Sessions. In 2000,
Harris returned with
Red Dirt Girl, her first album of original material in five years, featuring appearances from
Bruce Springsteen,
Patti Scialfa,
Jill Cuniff, and
Patty Griffin. She also made an appearance on the soundtrack for
O Brother, Where Art Thou?, along with a number of traditional blues, country, and folk artists. In 2003,
Harris released
Stumble Into Grace; two years later, she collaborated with
Conor Oberst on
I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning, as well as recording a version of "The Scarlet Tide" with
Elvis Costello for the soundtrack to Cold Mountain. The retrospective
The Very Best of Emmylou Harris: Heartaches & Highways was also released in 2005 on Rhino.
All the Roadrunning, a collection of songs written with
Mark Knopfler over the course of seven years, was released in 2006. In 2007
Harris sang a duet with
Anne Murray, which appeared on
Murray's 2008 album
Duets: Friends and Legends. The
Brian Ahern-produced
All I Intended to Be arrived in 2008 as well.
Hard Bargain,
Harris' 21st studio album, was released by Nonesuch early in 2011. Produced by
Jay Joyce, the album featured the striking
Harris originals "Darlin' Kate" (written for
Kate McGarrigle) and "The Road" (written for
Gram Parsons). She contributed vocals to three songs on the
Nick Cave/
Warren Ellis-composed score to the film Lawless, including "Cosmonaut" and "Fire in the Blood," as well as a reading of
Townes Van Zandt's "Snake Song."
Harris also recorded
Old Yellow Moon, a duet album with songwriter
Rodney Crowell, a reunited version of her Hot Band, and producer
Brian Ahern, performing the work of songwriters they admired. The album was issued in February of 2013. The pair followed it with
The Traveling Kind, produced by
Joe Henry. A mirror image of its predecessor, it showcased the pair's writing in collaboration with Mary Carr,
Cory Chisel,
Will Jennings, and
Larry Klein, among others, as well as covers of songs by
Lucinda Williams and
Amy Allison. Nonesuch released the album in May 2015. ~ Jason Ankeny