| Following the somewhat disappointing Burrito Deluxe, Gram Parsons and 
        the Flying Burrito Brothers parted ways, leaving the band -- especially 
        co-founder Chris Hillman -- with a huge void to fill. Hillman needed not 
        only a new songwriting partner, but also a strong singer to share the 
        vocal duties. For its eponymous third album, the group decided on Rick 
        Roberts, a singer/songwriter with a strong, clear tenor who had headed 
        west after leaving college in South Carolina. It's apparent that Roberts 
        owes more to the L.A. country and folk-rock that Hillman had been mining 
        with the Byrds than to the traditional country influences that Parsons 
        had brought to the original Burrito Brothers. And whereas Chris Hillman 
        was great in a support role behind Parsons and during his days with the 
        Byrds behind Roger McGuinn or Gene Clark, his role as co-leader with someone 
        who lacks that sort of forceful personality only brings his weaknesses 
        to the fore. On the previous two Burrito recordings, Hillman co-wrote 
        much of the best material and helped Parsons to realize his vision of 
        "cosmic American music." But here the sound is much closer to 
        that which bandmate Bernie Leadon would go on to record a year later with 
        the Eagles. And while tracks like Roberts' plaintive "Colorado," 
        Gene Clark's "Tried So Hard," and the Hillman-Roberts collaboration 
        "All Alone" are fine examples of the genre, there's little else 
        on this album that truly lives up to the band's name. Much of what's lacking 
        can be found in the performances; even the most upbeat tunes lack any 
        real oomph, while at times the singing can be less than compelling -- 
        compare Gene Clark's vocal on the session outtake "Here Tonight" 
        with Hillman's on "Tried So Hard" (also written by Clark). Reissued 
        on CD by Mobile Fidelity in 1991 and as a part of Hot Burritos! ten years 
        later (in its entirety, including "Here Tonight"), The Flying 
        Burrito Brothers is a solid if unspectacular country-rock record.  (by Brett Hartenbach, All 
        Music Guide) |