The Gilded Palace of Sin was recorded at
A&M Studios in
Hollywood and produced by Larry Marks with Henry Lewy engineering. The sessions featured a variety of drummers. With harmonies that reveal the influences of the
Everly Brothers and the
Louvin Brothers, the songs on the Burritos' debut attempt to marry country music with the soul sound associated with
Otis Redding and the
Stax-Volt label, and singers such as
Percy Sledge. Another significant characteristic of the album is
"Sneaky" Pete Kleinow's unorthodox steel guitar playing, which provides an almost continuous commentary throughout some of the songs. As guitarist
Bernie Leadon (who wasn't a member of the band yet when this LP was recorded and released) explains to Meyer in
Twenty Thousand Roads, "Sneaky uniquely played an eight-string
Fender cable pull steel tuned to B6 instead of the more common C6. He played [a] usually more
jazz or swing tuning in a style that most other players use an E9 tuning for. His rationale was: B is the 'five chord,' or dominant chord, to the key of E. This resulted in absolutely-to-Pete steel licks. And no one else thinks like him anyway." Kleinow also utilized a
fuzzbox and played the instrument through a rotating Hammond
Leslie amplifier, adding a
psychedelic touch to several songs. Most of the songs were written by Parsons and Hillman at a house in the
San Fernando Valley dubbed "Burrito Manor." "Sin City", co-written by Hillman and Parsons and called a "loping lament" and a "cautionary dirge", mentions The Byrds's manager Larry Spector ("a gold plated door") and
Robert F. Kennedy ("tried to clean up this town"). It may have been influenced by The Louvin Brothers. In the 2004 documentary
Gram Parsons: Fallen Angel, Hillman recalls writing the song with Parsons: "Gram was sleeping. I woke up and had this idea, 'This old town's filled with sin, it'll swallow you in.' I got the first verse and most of the chorus and then I said, 'Gram, get up! I got somethin' here.' And he got up and we wrote that song in about thirty minutes. It actually wrote itself." In the same documentary bassist Chris Etheridge adds, "I told Gram I had a couple of old melodies from back when I was growin' up...I played 'em for him and we wrote the two songs that day, the "Hot Burrito #1" and the "Hot Burrito #2," and then that night went into the studio and cut 'em." "My Uncle" and "Hippie Boy" address then-contemporary countercultural concerns: the draft and the
1968 Democratic National Convention riots. Parsons later explained to
Fusion magazine, "We kept saying we got to do a song called 'Hippie Boy' about Chicago, and it's got to be a narrative song, and Chris Hillman has to do it...It was the toughest challenge on the album." The two R&B standards covered on the album, "
Dark End of the Street" and "
Do Right Woman", are examples of a country-soul fusion that Parsons would often refer to as "cosmic American music." in Nashville ==Album artwork==