Appropriately enough, the first volume of
Bear Family's seven-volume country-rock series
Truckers, Kickers, Cowboy Angels kicks off with the voice of
Gram Parsons, the man who wrote the line that gives this project its title and the man commonly acknowledged as the
Hank Williams of country-rock.
Parsons wasn't the first or only West Coast cowboy to get to this hybrid of Bakersfield country, Nashville craft, hippie ideals, and rock & roll amplification, which this double-disc, 41-track set makes perfectly clear.
Gram gave country-rock a mythos and enduring sex appeal but he was supported by a number of long-haired refugees, Music City freaks, and Hollywood misfits, all of whom feature prominently on this compilation. Covering the years 1966-1968, this first volume happily blurs borders not just between country and rock but between the respectable and not, rightly finding place for
Rick Nelson and
the Monkees' "What Am I Doing Hangin' Round" in between
Parsons' first band
International Submarine Band and his second,
the Byrds. Other L.A. folk-rockers show up, namely
Buffalo Springfield and
Bobbie Gentry -- who was always halfway between California and Tennessee -- and they also have a strong presence on the first disc. The second has places for
the Band and
Bob Dylan but this collection of 1968 sides is heavy on
the Byrds (who had then enlisted
Parsons to complete their country makeover,
the Dillards and the
Beau Brummels, along with
the Everly Brothers, who were the only '50s survivors working in this idiom. Every one of these names will be familiar to aficionados of country-rock and perhaps even to fellow travelers, but surprise isn't quite the goal of this set. What this intends to provide is a portrait of the rise of country-rock in all its wooly glory and
Truckers, Kickers, Cowboy Angels does so, quite gloriously. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine