
Chris Hillman: Bluegrass Blessings & Music Milestones
As agreed, the two mandolin players met up at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. They opened their instrument cases and brought out their vintage Gibson F-5 instruments while a professional photographer stood by to capture their meeting. One was Bill Monroe, the Father of Bluegrass himself. The other was Chris Hillman, co-founder of the Byrds, the hugely successful rock band hailed in the 1960s and â70s as âAmericaâs Beatles,â and the Flying Burrito Brothers and the Desert Rose Band, innovative ensembles which would bring him recognition as a âDaddy of Country Rock.â
It was 1989, and Hillman had been invited by Rolling Stone magazine to be part of a special pictorial featuring rock stars and their music heroes. Chris had immediately accepted, naming Bill as his choice. (The pictorial, âSweet Inspirations,â ran in the September 26 issue.)
âMonroe showed up dressed to the nines,â Hillman recalls fondly. But why would Bill Monroe show up at all, to be depicted with a rock musician? Perhaps Bill knew that Chrisâs musical roots had taken hold in bluegrass and remained there, deeply. Indeed, Chris Hillmanâs musical development went hand-inhand and pick-on-string with the growth of the vibrant California bluegrass scene. The groups in which he playedânotably the Scottsville Squirrel Barkers, the Golden State Boys and the Hillmenâare now legendary in West Coast bluegrass lore. Hillman and his friendsâRoland and Clarence White; Tony and Larry Rice; Herb Pedersen; Don Parmley; and Scott Hambley, to name only a very fewâ won bluegrass fame far beyond even Californiaâs expansive territory.
And Hillman keeps returning to his bluegrass and classic country roots. Thatâs abundantly clear in his recent enthusiastically-received autobiography Time Between: My Life as a Byrd, Burrito Brother, and Beyond (BMG Books). Indeed, âTime Betweenâ is the title of a popular number penned by Hillman during the height of his Byrds stardom. When it was recorded in 1966, the group was still heavily identified with folkrock and psychedelic sounds. But itâs real country, foreshadowing the Byrdsâ landmark 1968 country-and bluegrassflavored album Sweetheart of the Rodeo…