Trio cover

Reflecting on: Trio by Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris, and Linda Ronstadt

My last reflection was on a Linda Ronstadt solo album, and I promised the next would be on this record, for the trio of Ronstadt, Dolly Parton, and Emmylou Harris is receiving a well-deserved star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Release date: 1987

Style: traditional country

People Who Might Like This album: fans of any of these three artists’ solo work, fans of any female group with three-part harmony

Standout Tracks: “The Pain of Loving You,” “hobo’s Meditation,” “Wildflowers,” “Those Memories of You,” “Telling me Lies”

Reflections: What a joy it was to revisit this record; I hadn’t listened to this in full in many years. As mentioned in the last reflection, Linda Ronstadt has been a really important artist to me personally, and she’s the reason I loved the Trio albums in the first place. Parton and Harris have been more important to country music, but it was Ronstadt whose music I loved first. Even to this day, I am not nearly as familiar with the discography of Emmylou Harris as I should be or as I’d like to be. This album, though, surpasses anything any of them could have done on their own, for it takes three already outstanding voices and puts them together in three-part harmony that can only be described as chilling.

Ironically, as I’ve been listening to this album, I’ve also been giving the new self-titled El Coyote record multiple spins. I should have a review on that project soon, but what I keep coming back to with the trio is that groups like El Coyote and others that are carrying on this tradition of three-part harmony in these modern days overwhelmingly lean toward the folk end of the spectrum. That’s no disrespect to any of these groups or to folk music, but there’s something about hearing Parton, Ronstadt, and Harris singing in perfect harmony with fiddle and steel and country chords supporting them that’s just beautiful and irreplaceable and hard to find in 2018. And to those that discount Linda Ronstadt as a singer of pop and rock who only crossed over into country briefly, this record and the other Trio material should solidify her place in country music history. It doesn’t get much more traditional than the Ronstadt-led “Hobo’s Meditation,” a song penned by Jimmie Rodgers.

It is true I came to appreciate these records first because of Linda, but each of the three has a highlight on this album. “The Pain of Loving You” is an excellent tune led by Emmylou Harris, and the Dolly Parton-penned “Wildflowers” is another standout. More than their individual highlights, though, this record is about the magic of these voices together, an album that none of them could have made without the others. It’s hard enough to write duets, let alone songs that fit three voices. Then, it’s difficult to make sure the voices all blend well, and care must be taken to ensure that each element of the harmony can be heard. They do all this perfectly, and bring character to these songs that none of them could have achieved on their own. Their star on the Walk of Fame is well-deserved, and this album has earned its iconic place in country music history.

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4 thoughts on “Reflecting on: Trio by Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris, and Linda Ronstadt”

  1. I love the instruments on this album, too. David Lindley’s autoharp on “Wildflowers” and dulcimer on “Rosewood Casket” sound perfect with Dolly’s Appalachian voice. An alternate version of “Wildflowers” used a different instrumental mix: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeDTV487S5c Ry Cooder and Steve Fishell and many other famous musicians worked on the album. Mark O’Connor played the fiddle, and here’s the 1987 Trio performance on the Johnny Carson Show of “Those Memories of You,” which featured Mark’s fiddle solo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BH2VZG5I4Aw Mark’s family bluegrass band still performs this song regularly.

  2. Thanks for this! I love this album, but I haven’t listened to it in a while. This article inspired me to listen to it again – those harmonies are incredible! Three legends at the top of their craft and complementing each other perfectly – what more could you ask for?! It’s such a shame that Linda Ronstandt’s career was cut short as the three of them could still be making phenomenal albums together.

    1. I’m glad it inspired you to listen again! Yes, Linda Ronstadt not being able to sing is tragic, I wish I would have seen her before it happened.

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