Close Menu
    What's Hot

    WU LYF Live Review

    June 15, 2026

    Rick Ross feat. T.I. – Mahogany Caskets [Video]

    June 15, 2026

    It didnt matter wed got a gold record – we still came off tour and had to go back to our day jobs. How Type O Negative created goth metals greatest album: October Rust

    June 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    smashhitsmusicmagazine.com
    • Home
    • ALTERNATIVE
    • R&B
    • HIP HOP
    • METAL
    • POP
    • ROCK
    • COUNTRY
    • MOVIES
    • CONTACT
      • LEGAL STUFF
    smashhitsmusicmagazine.com
    Home»ROCK»Emmylou Harris live at the Royal Albert Hall – everything thats great about American music
    ROCK

    Emmylou Harris live at the Royal Albert Hall – everything thats great about American music

    AdminBy AdminMay 18, 2026
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Emmylou Harris live at the Royal Albert Hall – everything thats great about American music
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest


    When Emmylou Harris made her UK debut at London’s New Victoria Theatre in November 1975, she was barely a year into a solo career precipitated by tragic circumstance. In September 1973, her mentor and singing partner Gram Parsons fatally overdosed in a desert motel room, before the release of Grievous Angel, their second album together.

    At a time when she and Parsons should have been taking their music to even greater heights, she found herself a guardian of Gram’s legacy – even as she made the new musical life for herself she has lived now for over 50 years, during which she has often seemed to represent everything that’s best about American music (large swathes of it, anyway). It would be trite, perhaps, to talk about Country Royalty, but if she’d been delivered to the stage of the Royal Albert Hall in a gilded chariot after sailing up the Thames in a replica of Cleopatra’s Barge, it would not have seemed excessive.

    She is at the Albert Hall as part of her European Farewell Tour, Emmylou – 80 next year – retiring from the stage with these goodbyes. The set, as you’d probably expect from a farewell show, is wide-ranging; reminiscent, actually, of the sets from the 1986-1997 Spyboy tour. Eight of tonight’s songs also appeared on the live Spyboy album that followed, including the spine-chilling, acapella gospel of “Bring My Children Home”.

    Her voice remains remarkable, if a little frail at times. But it is sensational on “Making Believe”, and she later brings a lot of wallop to a bar band version of Delbert McClinton’s “Two More Bottles Of Wine”. Another highlight is a version of a song originally recorded for Pieces Of The Sky, her solo debut, the album she was promoting all those years ago at the New Victoria with the legendary Hot Band.

    She opens, however, with “Love Hurts”, one of her most celebrated duets with Parsons, sung with tour opener Jim Lauderdale – who looks, with his white mane and well-kept teeth, like a Tennessee televangelist in a Nudie suit. They are joined after a couple of verses by Harris’s impeccable band, The Red Dirt Boys: guitarist Will Kimbrough, Phil Madeira on keyboards, bassist Chris Donohue, drummer Bryan Owings, and the breathtaking Eamon McLoughlin – last seen playing with Rodney Crowell at the Kilkenny Roots Festival – on fiddle and mandolin.

    There is still much applause when she starts the beautifully forsaken “Here I Am”, which she wrote for 2003’s Stumble Into Grace. Her reputation as an interpretive singer is, of course, peerless. But she is also an underestimated songwriter; never prolific, perhaps, but whenever her name appears in brackets after a song, it’s going to be worth listening to.

    She doesn’t play either “The Road” or “Michaelangelo”, songs of almost apocalyptic woe, awash with allusions to Gram Parsons. But “Tulsa Queen” is sultry and evocative, “Red Dirt Girl” a thing of trembling beauty, and “Prayer In Open D”, from 1993’s Cowgirl’s Prayer, is desperately bereft.

    Elsewhere, there’s Gillian Welch’s “Orphan Girl”, from the career redefining Wrecking Ball, stunningly done; bluegrass nods to Bill Monroe on “Get Up John”, that she recorded with The Nash Ramblers; and Ralph Stanley’s “Green Pastures”. There’s a rousing take on Johnny Cash’s “Help Him, Jesus” from the 1980 Paul Kennerley-written concept album, The Legend Of Jesse James. And she virtually glides through Nanci Griffiths’s “Gulf Coast Highway”.

    An inevitably beautiful “Pancho And Lefty” is introduced with a lovely anecdote about first meeting Townes Van Zandt in Greenwich Village in the late ’60s, when she was playing three sets a night at Gerde’s Folk City. It’s followed by an equally poised “If I Needed You”, another Townes gem. A version of Steve Earle’s “Goodbye” nearly brings the house down.

    Parsons is evoked again on the Flying Burrito Brothers’ “Wheels”, noble and grandly realised. She goes further back into his career, to The International Submarine Band, for “Luxury Liner”, taken at an incredible lick, driven by Brian Owings’ drums and lashings of McLoughlin’s fiddle. The show’s most heart-stopping moment follows: a transcendent version of “Boulder To Birmingham”, her requiem for Gram, written soon after his death and also the highlight of her 1975 New Victoria concert. After this, Neil Young’s “Long May You Run” is a valedictory closer.

    The closing-time heartache of Buck Owens’ “Together Again”, part of her repertoire since Elite Hotel, is the single encore. For all the grand theatres and fancy concert halls Harris has played over the last 50 years, there is a part of her music whose home will always be a honkytonk somewhere off Route 66, a roadhouse, cantina or saloon. Out there with the truckers and the kickers, and all the cowboy angels. Unforgettable, all of it.

    SETLIST
    1 Love Hurts
    2 Here I Am
    3 Orphan Girl
    4 Making Believe
    5 Green Pastures
    6 Get Up John
    7 Gulf Coast Highway
    8 One Of These Days
    9 Pancho And Lefty
    10 If I Needed You
    11 Red Dirt Girl
    12 Two More Bottles Of Wine
    13 Help Him, Jesus
    14 Born To Run
    15 Calling My Children Home
    16 Prayer In Open D
    17 Goodbye
    18 Tulsa Queen
    19 All The Roadrunning
    20 Wheels
    21 Luxury Liner
    22 Long May You Run
    ENCORE
    23 Together Again

    When Emmylou Harris made her UK debut at London’s New Victoria Theatre in November 1975, she was barely a year into a solo career precipitated by tragic circumstance. In September 1973, her mentor and singing partner Gram Parsons fatally overdosed in a desert motel room, before the release of Grievous Angel, their second album together.

    At a time when she and Parsons should have been taking their music to even greater heights, she found herself a guardian of Gram’s legacy – even as she made the new musical life for herself she has lived now for over 50 years, during which she has often seemed to represent everything that’s best about American music (large swathes of it, anyway). It would be trite, perhaps, to talk about Country Royalty, but if she’d been delivered to the stage of the Royal Albert Hall in a gilded chariot after sailing up the Thames in a replica of Cleopatra’s Barge, it would not have seemed excessive.

    She is at the Albert Hall as part of her European Farewell Tour, Emmylou – 80 next year – retiring from the stage with these goodbyes. The set, as you’d probably expect from a farewell show, is wide-ranging; reminiscent, actually, of the sets from the 1986-1997 Spyboy tour. Eight of tonight’s songs also appeared on the live Spyboy album that followed, including the spine-chilling, acapella gospel of “Bring My Children Home”.

    Her voice remains remarkable, if a little frail at times. But it is sensational on “Making Believe”, and she later brings a lot of wallop to a bar band version of Delbert McClinton’s “Two More Bottles Of Wine”. Another highlight is a version of a song originally recorded for Pieces Of The Sky, her solo debut, the album she was promoting all those years ago at the New Victoria with the legendary Hot Band.

    She opens, however, with “Love Hurts”, one of her most celebrated duets with Parsons, sung with tour opener Jim Lauderdale – who looks, with his white mane and well-kept teeth, like a Tennessee televangelist in a Nudie suit. They are joined after a couple of verses by Harris’s impeccable band, The Red Dirt Boys: guitarist Will Kimbrough, Phil Madeira on keyboards, bassist Chris Donohue, drummer Bryan Owings, and the breathtaking Eamon McLoughlin – last seen playing with Rodney Crowell at the Kilkenny Roots Festival – on fiddle and mandolin.

    There is still much applause when she starts the beautifully forsaken “Here I Am”, which she wrote for 2003’s Stumble Into Grace. Her reputation as an interpretive singer is, of course, peerless. But she is also an underestimated songwriter; never prolific, perhaps, but whenever her name appears in brackets after a song, it’s going to be worth listening to.

    She doesn’t play either “The Road” or “Michaelangelo”, songs of almost apocalyptic woe, awash with allusions to Gram Parsons. But “Tulsa Queen” is sultry and evocative, “Red Dirt Girl” a thing of trembling beauty, and “Prayer In Open D”, from 1993’s Cowgirl’s Prayer, is desperately bereft.

    Elsewhere, there’s Gillian Welch’s “Orphan Girl”, from the career redefining Wrecking Ball, stunningly done; bluegrass nods to Bill Monroe on “Get Up John”, that she recorded with The Nash Ramblers; and Ralph Stanley’s “Green Pastures”. There’s a rousing take on Johnny Cash’s “Help Him, Jesus” from the 1980 Paul Kennerley-written concept album, The Legend Of Jesse James. And she virtually glides through Nanci Griffiths’s “Gulf Coast Highway”.

    An inevitably beautiful “Pancho And Lefty” is introduced with a lovely anecdote about first meeting Townes Van Zandt in Greenwich Village in the late ’60s, when she was playing three sets a night at Gerde’s Folk City. It’s followed by an equally poised “If I Needed You”, another Townes gem. A version of Steve Earle’s “Goodbye” nearly brings the house down.

    Parsons is evoked again on the Flying Burrito Brothers’ “Wheels”, noble and grandly realised. She goes further back into his career, to The International Submarine Band, for “Luxury Liner”, taken at an incredible lick, driven by Brian Owings’ drums and lashings of McLoughlin’s fiddle. The show’s most heart-stopping moment follows: a transcendent version of “Boulder To Birmingham”, her requiem for Gram, written soon after his death and also the highlight of her 1975 New Victoria concert. After this, Neil Young’s “Long May You Run” is a valedictory closer.

    The closing-time heartache of Buck Owens’ “Together Again”, part of her repertoire since Elite Hotel, is the single encore. For all the grand theatres and fancy concert halls Harris has played over the last 50 years, there is a part of her music whose home will always be a honkytonk somewhere off Route 66, a roadhouse, cantina or saloon. Out there with the truckers and the kickers, and all the cowboy angels. Unforgettable, all of it.

    SETLIST
    1 Love Hurts
    2 Here I Am
    3 Orphan Girl
    4 Making Believe
    5 Green Pastures
    6 Get Up John
    7 Gulf Coast Highway
    8 One Of These Days
    9 Pancho And Lefty
    10 If I Needed You
    11 Red Dirt Girl
    12 Two More Bottles Of Wine
    13 Help Him, Jesus
    14 Born To Run
    15 Calling My Children Home
    16 Prayer In Open D
    17 Goodbye
    18 Tulsa Queen
    19 All The Roadrunning
    20 Wheels
    21 Luxury Liner
    22 Long May You Run
    ENCORE
    23 Together Again

    View Original Article Here

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
    Previous ArticleJK FLESH/MONRELLA: SHOUTING THE ODDS – Album Review
    Next Article Psychedelic and spiritual adventures, wild parties, tragedies, and a surreal trip into the unknown – the inside story of the Magical Mystery Tour

    Related Posts

    Take your crown! Linkin Park reclaim their throne at Download

    June 15, 2026

    Ready to break: What happened at Spitting Glass' Download debut

    June 14, 2026

    The big review: Download 2026 – Saturday

    June 13, 2026

    Elvis Costello & The Imposters reviewed live in Brighton: early classics reframed with contemporary urgency – UNCUT

    June 13, 2026
    LATEST POSTS

    WU LYF Live Review

    June 15, 2026

    Rick Ross feat. T.I. – Mahogany Caskets [Video]

    June 15, 2026

    It didnt matter wed got a gold record – we still came off tour and had to go back to our day jobs. How Type O Negative created goth metals greatest album: October Rust

    June 15, 2026

    Afroham ft: Aidintiy – Planes Dont Crash (Single)

    June 15, 2026

    DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH: JaVan Jerrod – Pretty Boy Summa

    June 15, 2026

    Take your crown! Linkin Park reclaim their throne at Download

    June 15, 2026

    The Kid LAROI Extends GIRLS Momentum With Kehlani Remix

    June 15, 2026
    Archives
    Our Picks

    WU LYF Live Review

    June 15, 2026

    Rick Ross feat. T.I. – Mahogany Caskets [Video]

    June 15, 2026

    It didnt matter wed got a gold record – we still came off tour and had to go back to our day jobs. How Type O Negative created goth metals greatest album: October Rust

    June 15, 2026
    About Us

    Welcome to Smash Hits Music Magazine — the home of everything music. Whether you live for the rush of a new album drop, the thrill of breaking artist news, or the deep stories behind your favourite songs, you've found your people. We cover every corner of the music world, from mainstream chart-toppers to underground gems, hip-hop to heavy metal, pop to classical and everything in between.

    Our passionate team of writers brings you the latest news, reviews, interviews, and industry insights — fresh every day. Pull up a seat, turn up the volume, and let's talk music. You belong here.

    © 2026 Smash Hits Music Magazine. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.