The Very Best of Emmylou Harris: Heartaches and Highways

Me, I was brought up in the vinyl era, when one was taught to hate “greatest hits” albums. The reasoning was sound. Greatest hits albums simply tear up an artist’s real albums and you are at the mercy of producers merely selecting tracts according to their whim.
But those were the days of vinyl. Now there are album formats (aka CDs) that can summarize an artist’s career: retrospectives on Billie Holliday, Sun House, Credence Clearwater Revival, and The Allman Brothers, among many others.
Recently, in an album covering her career-long body of work, with Gram Parsons to a stunning new track with her original producer, Emmylou Harris’ Heartaches and Highways delivers the goods.
After a duet with Parsons, Emmylou does an elegy to his untimely passing. “Boulder to Birmingham” indeed begins, along with Willie and Waylon and “the boys”, to invent modern alternative country music. Harris co-wrote this song, a musical tribute to Parsons, as her songwriting did not fully blossom until almost 20 years later.
Then, right away, another classic.
I consider Townes VanZant’s “Pancho and Lefty” one of the greatest songs ever written. Here, Harris takes this ballad and turns the story to gossamer. Her voice on this melody makes you forget you are listening to lines like:
[Pancho’s] horse was fast as polished steel,
He wore his guns outside his pants,
For all the honest world to feel …
and
The dust that Pancho bit down South,
Ended up in Lefty’s mouth.”
The singer and the listener must both work to stay with the story.
One album this collection does not do justice to, in importance, is “Wrecking Ball” – this album marked her consummate “song miner” achievement which began her first really serious move into songwriting.
There’s an old yarn about George Jones and Keith Richards during a duet recording session together, late in Jones’ career. When George arrived, he first greeted Keith across a full bar that Richards had set up for their mutual comfort. Though Richards didn’t know it, by this time in his career Jones had quit drinking, and both musicians had a big laugh over Keith handing George a mixed drink as they met.
The range of George Jones’ influence, from “Keef” to Emmylou, is clear here as Ms. Harris includes two songs Jones recorded first. Emmylou does both “Together Again” and also “Beneath Still Waters” as “pure country”, though heavy on the rhythm guitar and world class harmony vocals.
In sum: Back in the late 70’s, when it came to seasoned white girls slogging it out on the crossover R&B circuit, Bonnie Raitt and Emmylou Harris were it. Both artists continue, to this day, to refine music crafts they grew up on.
“Heartaches and Highways” tries to sum up her career with songs. But there’s a better way to sum up her career: she’s been everywhere working with everybody for 30 years, Burrito Bros. to the new recording “The Connection”.
Emmylou is a thread in the tapestry that Carole King started o’ so long ago.
Posted on September 13th, 2006 by Paco Malo
Filed under: General
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My bad: “Pancho and Lefty” is on one of the greatest songs ever written, not over written.
Fixed the typo.
I just heard an MP3 of Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson performing Townes Van Zandt’s “Pancho and Lefty” live. Trying to compare this version to the 1977 Emmylou Harris version, I thought: Dylan is the singer at the cantina where tourists go after seeing Pacho’s grave (which, of course, is impossible, because only Lefty and the guy who killed Pancho know and they ain’t talkin’) — Dylan, his voice all guts and gravel and dust.
Nelson is the translator.
Emmylou is the angel who sings the song for you in heaven. Despite what the Catholics say, bandits like Pancho and Lefty go to heaven. Where Townes is now, smiling kinda.