“It’s a family trait: You know half the song, you make up the rest as you go along.” “My dad didn’t teach me the right words at all,” Browne explained with a wry smile. Introducing the 1920s-era song, Browne told the packed Ryman audience that he learned it from his father - incorrectly as he discovered when Googled the song to check the lyrics the night before he performed it with his former bandmates. “In an evening filled with highlights,” Hanna told The Times, “one of the moments that stands out for us was reuniting with our old pal, Jackson Browne, and playing his classic ‘These Days,’ which he wrote during his tenure with our band, and dusting off the old jug-band nugget, ‘Truthful Parson Brown,’ which we performed with Jackson in the band's early days playing clubs like The Paradox and Golden Bear in Southern California.” See the most-read stories in Entertainment this hour » The Ryman was an apt setting as it was the Dirt Band’s watershed 1972 triple album, “Will the Circle Be Unbroken.” It’s a work that helped knock down barriers then separating the traditional country and rock music communities, setting the stage for the eventual emergence of what came to be known as Americana music.įor the show, the Dirt Band was joined by numerous musicians the group had worked with over five decades, including Alison Krauss, Vince Gill, John Prine, Jerry Jeff Walker, Rodney Crowell, Jimmy Ibbotson and one other singer-songwriter who emerged at the same time and even had a stint as a member of the Dirt Band, Jackson Browne.
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