Sid Griffin is an acclaimed writer and musician. He wrote
the first full-length biography of Gram Parsons and was the
founding member of the bands The Long Ryders and The Coal
Porters.
BBC Four: Getting the Gram Parsons story to the
screen has really been a labour of love for you, hasn't
it?
Sid Griffin: I started working on this in 1993
or 94 at the BBC. We worked on it for at least six months but
it all fell through. Then in 1998 or 99 I met Gandulf Hennig,
the German producer-director of the film, and he said it could
be done and he was right.
BBC Four: So how did it all come together this time
round?
SG: I think because Gandulf wouldn't take no
for an answer and I was inspired by knowing how close I'd come
before. We continually supported each other and made a very
good team in that regard. He's very a technical guy and has
made documentaries before. I'm a very passionate guy who
doesn't know technical stuff but I do know where all the
bodies are buried. I have an absurd, labyrinthine knowledge of
popular music; not just the main river of pop music but indeed
its creeks, streams and tributaries. I could finally focus
that into a sensible, adult project and I owe Gandulf thanks
for that.
BBC Four: Considering that you wrote the first Gram
Parsons biography and have written about him and performed his
songs a lot since then; was there anything new or surprising
that you came across making this film?
SG: We were
reminded once again how important childhood and parenting is
to each one of us. All the big druggies in rock and roll, be
they Brian Jones or Jimi Hendrix, had a weird relationship
with their parents. Either their parents died young or they
abandoned the child or they were cold towards the child. It
was amazing how much Gram fit into that template. As Gram the
musician goes I really didn't learn that much because I
already knew it from being this detective-styled obsessed fan.
I've been a fan for so long that I've now actually exhausted
him. I stopped listening to his music years ago. I know how
those records go.
BBC Four: Did your perception of Gram change at all
in the making of the programme?
SG: Yes. He was a
really unhappy guy. You don't really focus on that when you're
listening to records. You tend to think people are larger than
life and you mythologise your heroes. For all of Gram's good
looks, women being thrown at him, charm and personality, and
all this money, he had a very sour, blue life and a big streak
of melancholia written on his DNA. That was something that
came into great relief working on this project.
BBC Four: Whenever there's a Gram Parsons article in
a paper or magazine, the letters pages afterwards are
invariably full of criticism of why Gram gets all the
attention or that he's overrated. What's your take on that
sort of criticism?
SG: I think partly they're right
and maybe he was overrated. But the thing about him is that
it's a hell of a story. Whether you like what Phil Kaufman
did, and it's open to great debate, the point is he did
jump-start the Gram Parsons legend. That's what offends
people. My fellow snotty record collectors point out that
people like Gene Clark, Chris Hillman and Mike Nesmith of The
Monkees all did country-rock groundwork and made incredible
records but nobody talks about them. Gram will always be 26.
Had Phil Kaufman not gone to the desert and burnt Gram's body
then I'm afraid the legend wouldn't have snowballed the way
that it has.
Gram Parsons homepage