Emmylou Harris and the Angel Band Red Fox Inn, Bethesda, Maryland 1974-05-08 01 Hot Burrito #1 02 Hickory Wind 03 Shop Around 04 Honky Tonk Blues 05 Louise 06 California Cottonfields 07 High On The Hilltop 08 Reconstructed 09 When Will I Be Loved 10 God Knows I Love You 11 Before Believing 12 Queen Of The Silver Dollar 13 Someone I Used to Know 14 Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down 15 A Song for You 16 High On The Hilltop 17 Born Again 18 Drifting Too Far From Shore 01 Country Baptizin' 02 That's all it Took 03 Together Again 04 Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad 05 Our Father 06 Maybe Mexico 07 Sold it All Away 08 Instrumental (Jeff Wisor & J.B. Morrison) 09 Satan's Jewel Crown 10 Born Again 11 Country Baptizin' Angel Band : Bruce Archer - Guitar Mark Cuff - Drums Tom Guidera - Bass Danny Pendleton - Steel Guitar w/ John & Fayssoux Starling, J.B. Morrison & Jeff Wisor on last 5 tracks Recorded after GP's death but just prior to recording 'Pieces Of The Sky' This sounds better than a hand-held cassette machine recording; it's purportedly a sound board, but it's not by any means what we think of as soundboard quality by today's standards. From Bill De Young's article in Goldmine: {After Gram Parsons's death} Emmy moved back to D.C., where Tom Guidera had also become a country music convert. With pedal steel player Danny Pendleton and two other musicians, they put together the Angel Band and started gigging around the clubs, playing some of the songs she’d performed with Gram. Eddie Tickner made Harris his number one priority and he convinced Mary Martin, an A&R representative from Warner/Reprise Records (the label that had released Parsons’ solo work) to investigate an Angel Band show in a Washington nightclub. Emmylou Harris became a Reprise Records recording artist in 1974; with her daughter Hallie in tow, the Angel Band relocated to Los Angeles to begin work on Harris’s first true solo album. To produce, Martin paired Harris up with Nova Scotia native Brian Ahern, the mastermind behind Anne Murray’s spate of hits in the early 70’s. She brought the quiet Canadian to hear the Angel Band, and he recorded the performance on a hand-held cassette machine to study at home.