Unsung Heroes of Americana Music: The Desert Rose Band

Here’s a music trivia question. What was the name of the band Chris Hillman was in that had 12 songs chart in the top 40 nationally? Hint: they were innovative with a folk/country/bluegrass feel. Another hint: they created amazing harmonies, imaginative soaring guitar leads, and laid the groundwork for future popular music, especially Americana. Give up? If you said the Byrds, you’d be wrong. If you were hip enough in 1987 to turn on mainstream country radio, you most likely would’ve heard a country-rock song by the Desert Rose Band, fronted by Chris Hillman. While the Byrds legacy justifiably continues to grow, Desert Rose outranks them in hits, making it to #1 twice and a total of 12 songs making into the top 40 on the national country charts. They were a virtual super group of country music, but only to those who took a second look at the players. Along with Hillman, whose Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers, and Manassas days are well known, there was Herb Pedersen (the Dillards), lead guitarist John Jorgenson (later to join Elton John’s band), drummer Steve Duncan (Rick Nelson and the Stone Canyon Band), Bill Bryson (the Dillards), and Jay Dee Maness (Buck Owens). But, today, like many from the era between 1985 until 1991,they are forgotten. It seems mainstream country music today has amnesia. There is a rich history; pockets of inspired country music in the past. The Desert Rose Band were at the sharpest point in one of these places in music history.

In 1987 something strange happened to mainstream country radio. The music was good. It was really country music. Oddly enough, while there have been periods in country music history of exceptional artistry and craft, they have usually been short-lived, followed by a host of forgettable imitations and watered-down, contrived music. But, like most other genres, country music has a way of purifying itself. It began in the ’20s with Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family, then to the ’40s and Roy Acuff; the ’50s saw Ernest Tubb and Hank Williams, while the ’60s gave us Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard, then the ’70s Outlaw Movement brought us Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings, which leads to the ’80s. As the decade began country music had received a commercial boost with the release of the John Travolta movie, Urban Cowboy. In 1983 the charts were becoming populated with the likes of Emmylou Harris’ former mando player, Ricky Skaggs. He would go on to receive the Academy of Country Music’s cherished Entertainer of the Year award in 1985. His childhood friend, Keith Whitley, would soon follow in 1984 on his way to the top of the mainstream country charts a few years later. Emmylou Harris was already there with a string of hits that would continue through the decade. Roseanne Cash would score a #1 cross-over hit with “Seven Year Ache.” The Sweethearts of the Rodeo (Janis and Kristine Oliver) who made the transition from Southern California to Nashville, were also peaking artistically and commercially. It was a heady time. It was a time when it was not unusual to turn on mainstream country radio and hear up-and-coming artists like Lyle Lovett, k.d. Lang, Steve Earle, and Dwight Yoakam.

Meanwhile, back in Southern California, Chris Hillman was having his own personal revelation. After signing with Sugar Hill records in 1983, he released two solo albums that reclaimed his country roots. After years in a kind of rock wilderness, ably supporting Stephen Stills’ Manassas and the ill-advised Souther, Hillman, Furay Band, he followed his heart and began recording the music he loved most. This direction was no stranger to him, considering he began playing bluegrass on mandolin as a teenager. His first Sugar Hill solo effort, 1983’s Morning Sky, was a fine return to his roots with creative bluegrass and folk interpretations of songs by John Prine, Kris Kristofferson, Shel Silverstein, Dan Fogelberg, Jerry Garcia, and Robert Hunter. However, it was his next album, 1984’s Desert Rose, that, like its title, would foreshadow his future success. This album goes straight for the heart of real country music. He included originals and songs by Mickey Newbury, Jimmie Rodgers, the Louvin Brothers, and George Jones. It’s an energetic, inspired call to return country music to its original form. It takes the same approach used on the Byrds’ Sweethearts of the Rodeo and cranks up the honky tonk jukebox with some of the most accessible country music on record. In support were Herb Pedersen, James Burton, Ron Tutt, Bernie Leadon, and Jay Dee Maness.

As fate would have it, Hillman’s 1985 involvement with Dan Fogelberg’s bluegrass-tinted High Country Snows recording and tour reunited him with Herb Pedersen. He also met a young, talented guitarist, John Jorgensen. After playing on the side during the tour with Fogelberg, the trio began playing live acoustic gigs. It was Jorgenson’s idea to plug in and electrify the sound they were creating. With that addition, the Desert Rose Band was born. With Bill Bryson on bass, Steve Duncan on drums, and Jay Dee Mannas on pedal steel; Hillman found himself in a band that gave full voice to his love for country music. For the former Byrd, he had fully stepped out of the shadows of the other artists he had supported over the years. Like Hillman himself, the music was bright, consistent, and intensely loyal to country music. His Sugar Hill solo albums and the Desert Rose Band self-titled debut showed Hillman to have his own creative voice that in many ways would surpass the country leanings of many of those he had play with during his storied past. But, what made Desert Rose work was Hillman’s generosity in allowing room for the skilled musicians in the band. With Herb Pedersen singing high harmonies, Jorgensen playing lead guitar with inspired energy, and Jay Dee Manass’ pedal steel weaving along with Bill Bryson and Steve Duncan’s steady rhythm, this was a real band with all egos set aside for the good of the music.

The Desert Rose Band were something to behold on stage. One of their earliest shows in 1986 at McCabe’s Guitar Store in Santa Monica provided an intimate venue 150 people. present.  The entire band was set up on the small stage. What proceeded very nearly blew the walls from the guitar store. But, it was clear, Hillman was in his element. His country revelation from his early youth had come full circle. In 1987 the gigs got bigger. One now legendary night at the Roxy on Hollywood’s Sunset Strip, the band played to an audience that included Stephen Stills, Bruce Hornsby, Bernie Leadon, Rose Maddox, and Elton John, who was a huge fan of Hillman’s. After a few years the rock star managed to draft Jorgenson into his band.

So from 1987 until 1993, the Desert Rose Band reigned over the country charts with a series of 12 consecutive hits. They joined the New Traditionalists and became leaders of the Nashville centered movement. Country radio listeners were able to hear a California country-rock band soar majestically through the Nashville airwaves. According to Chris Hillman in a 2007 interview with this writer in the San Diego Troubadour, the Desert Rose Band was his favorite band. He said they operated without the ego problems he had experienced in the past. He said that he felt they would have been honored with more Country Music Awards if they had moved to Nashville. However, even though Hillman and the band remained in California, they were given Band of the Year/Touring, three years in a row by the Academy of Country Music. Jay Dee Maness, Bill Bryson, John Jorgensen, and Steve Duncan were all given several Instrumentalist of the Year awards during the era. But, even though they released five fine country albums with all of those hits, they were never nominated for the major categories.

By 1991, the New Traditionalist movement had run its commercial course. Almost too deliberately, sales dropped for all of the major artists of the era. Most of them would go on to win Grammys. They would develop fan bases that allowed them remain on their labels or sign to independent labels, allowing them creative freedom. Others released their music on their own labels. Today, Lyle Lovett, k.d. Lang, Steve Earle, Roseanne Cash among many others have found their niche in the newly formed Americana music genre.

The years since the success of the Desert Rose Band have been good to Chris Hillman. He has continued with the same country and bluegrass based direction, releasing albums with Herb Pedersen including the classic, Bakersfield Bound. Hillman and Pedersen remain in demand on the Americana festival circuit.

In 2010, the original members of DRB reunited for a tour. With its success, they have continued to play occasional shows. Currently, they are alternating between the full band and an acoustic trio version with Hillman, Jorgenson, and Pedersen. Today’s country radio has become a dismal fusion of rock, rap, corporate driven formula hits, and trite commercial pablum. But, it’s good to be able to look to the past and remember there once was a day when some of the best of our generation were heard on country stations. Meanwhile, we wait for another insurgent movement of real country music inspired, as Brad Paisley has said, by the likes of the Desert Rose Band.

This article originally appeared in San Diego Troubadour

Views: 1510

Comment by Ted Schmidt on November 16, 2012 at 9:12pm
I posted several Youtube videos of the Desert Rose Band playing at Copper Country in Colorado, one their show and the other in a live performance of "Sweetheart of the Rodeo." They are at "tedlpbc" and "tedlpbc1" on Youtube.
Comment by Terry Roland on November 17, 2012 at 12:03am

You're right Barry. That's the essence of the article...why weren't these guys and many others from the era more successful.  Actually, they were really big at the time, but then mainstream country music has such a short attention span; people didn't know some of the best artists of the genre were right there.  My favorite Chris and Herb album is Bakersfield Bound.  It carries the same Desert Rose sound.....with more than a hint of Buck!

Comment by Terry Roland on November 17, 2012 at 12:03am

@ Ted, Thanks!  I'll check that out!  

Comment by Easy Ed on November 17, 2012 at 5:55am

Couple of things. First, I love how many Hillman and Co. fans are on this site and jumping in on Terry's article. Chris' talent and contributions often get overshadowed by his partner in the Burrito Brothers. Couple years ago I posted this in the video section but I'll do it again here for ease. The Library of Congress invited Chris to give a lecture of sorts on how he grew up, what music he was influenced by, his career and success with so many different units and types of sounds. Its well over an hour, there is a little music and it's mainly an oral history of California country music and it's various offshoots and changes.  Highly informative and fascinating.

Herb did quite a bit of work on Emmylou's Pieces of a Sky album in 1975, and they appeared on Nashville Now along with Chris for this set. In the Louvin Bros. classic, you can here why he has always been one of the most sought out studio singers and in Sin City he does Gram's parts. He also is pretty good behind a console, with quite a few production credits under his belt including all of Chris' latter albums. There are a couple bluegrass albums available with side band the Laurel Canyon Ramblers as well as the solo albums. 

And last...the Desert Rose Band from 1987. Looks like Austin City Limits.

Comment by Terry Roland on November 17, 2012 at 12:14pm

Thanks, Ed for these videos. I remember when Chris did that gig. He was also out here in L.A. at Skirball around the same time. That old Byrds song, Time Between, sounded great by DRB. That's how I remember them!  

Comment by ace rice on November 17, 2012 at 1:29pm

Ed,  I have been working up a version of the Emmylou two song video you just posted...singing Chris's part and wishing i could play mando...but my old martin carries me on...enjoying this thread...and i have watched that whole interview of chris too earlier this year.  he is so underrated it seems...

Comment by Stuartstorm on November 18, 2012 at 4:55am

Just would like to take the opportunity to draw your attention to quite similar as
SOUTHER PACIFAC was!! With great John McFee as their leader....

Comment by DrMikey on November 18, 2012 at 4:32pm

I agree that the DRB was one of the greatest country bands in the 80's, but "Younger Than Yesterday" and "The Notorious Byrd Brothers" are among the greatest albums OF ALL TIME -- in no small part because Chris was coming into his own as a songwriter and bass player in "McGuinn's Group." 

Comment by Easy Ed on November 18, 2012 at 4:35pm

Truth be told, the Byrds were really the LA Wrecking Crew, the killer group of studio musicians that made all those great sounds behind Jim/Roger McQuinn's 12 string.

Comment by Will James on November 18, 2012 at 4:50pm

Agree with Ed, and Notorious, one of my favorite Byrds albums, in large extend to producer Gary Usher. To me, there wasn't a "true" Byrds band of any longer-term consequence until the Clarence White/Gene Parsons, etc., Byrds.

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Created by No Depression Feb 17, 2009 at 9:06pm. Last updated by No Depression Sep 24, 2012.