Some of the most hated rock groups of all time are also the most
loved. People can’t hate you unless they know you, and they’re not gonna know
you unless you’re successful. Look at that modern-day phenomenon, Nickelback. Many
people who have never heard Nickelback’s music know that they are the most
hated band of the 21st Century.
Even after Glenn Frey passed away, many writers couldn’t
help but lambaste the Eagles as the most hated successful band of the 20th
Century.
Yacht Rock is hip now,so how can Eagles music be
“horrific”, as a NY Daily News article described it after Frey’s death?
“Hotel California” is more horrific as compared to what, “Feelings” or
“Afternoon Delight”, two other songs that shared the chart with Eagles hits in
the mid-70s ?
People hate the Eagles because:
- Songs are overplayed
- An unlikable duo helmed the band (Henley and Frey)
- Songs are too wimpy
- It’s hip to hate them, gives you street cred
- Lebowski hated them
But a lot of music fans aren’t quite as cynical. Marc
Eliot’s beautifully written article
about Glenn Frey’s passing reminds us that youth has long gone for fans who liked the band and their music in the ‘70s. ( Read Eliot's book "To The Limit: The Untold Story of the Eagles" for an in-depth look at the band.)
YouTube commenters tend to come up with the most poignant
assessments, though, as Baby Boomers move closer to that Great Gig in the Sky.
“Makes a grown man cry... Everyone is so happy. Everyone
in the building is young, in their prime, and full of life. I wish every day
could be half as perfect as these moments.”
Imagine the World
Before Sirius, the Internet, MTV or Walkmans!
I can’t listen to the ballads, because like everyone else, I
heard them too many times in the ‘70s. Even though I haven’t heard some of the
songs for decades, I still get out of earshot when I hear one start to play.
Everybody bought Eagles records in the ‘70s, which meant your irritating,
non-musical classmates and co-workers, including the squarest of the square,
counted the Greatest Hits 71-75 among their albums.
I bought the single “The Best of My Love” in high school,
but I listened to the flipside, “Ole 55” instead.
Despite being crazy about bands as a teen, my friends and I
never got into the Eagles that way. We didn’t care about their personalities,
looks, etc., just the music. I studied the Hotel
California gatefold sleeve with my friend Mary, (before we made fun of my
John Travolta album and after I proudly introduced her to the Runaways’ first
album). We did like Joe Walsh, however.
He was the only animated person in the band, and we appreciated his sense of
humor and hotel-trashing skills.
I was particularly intrigued by the lyrics to “Life in the
Fast Lane” and wrote a novel based on it in my senior year of high school.
Thankfully, the only manuscript I had is long gone now, but it would have fit
right in with the exploitation flick craze of the 70s/early 80s.
You think “Take It Easy” is overplayed on classic rock radio
now? Ha! Were you even alive in 1972? I was. The summer between sixth and
seventh grade holds many fond memories for me.
I identify it with that transitional period in my life, so I like the
song, no matter how many times I hear it. (The song reached #12 on the
Billboard Top 100 in July 1972.) The
Eagles songs were popular when I was in junior high and high school, and their
music just happened to be everywhere.
However, Eagles songs don’t rate that high on the list of
the offensively overplayed. “Take It Easy” is number 19 on this list. The worst
offenders, to my ears, are “Black Water,” “Old Time Rock n Roll”, “Stairway to
Heaven”, and “Don’t Stop Believing”. Enough already!
On my Bucket List: A trip to Standin’ on the Corner
Park
In the ‘90s, I watched the Hell Freezes Over tour on
MTV. I was more interested in hearing the Henley solo
songs, but I did watch the whole concert. I didn’t know, however, that the band
included original material on the Hell Freezes Over album. I also had no
idea the Eagles released an album in 2007 – sold exclusively at Walmart!
Eagles Songs I Listen
to On Purpose
Rock and Rock-ish
Witchy Woman
Outlaw Man
Already Gone
James Dean
Victim of Love
Too Many Hands
Those Shoes
Ballads
The Last Resort
King of Hollywood
Try and Love Again
Country-esque
Doolin Dalton
Hotel California
Life in the Fast lane
Take It Easy
I Can’t Tell You Why
Take It to the Limit
Tequila Sunrise
Desperado
With all the emphasis radio and mainstream media place on
just a handful of songs, it’s probably been years since you’ve heard “Outlaw
Man” or “James Dean” and maybe decades since you’ve heard “Too Many
Hands”.
“Witchy Woman” hit #9 on the charts in November 1972, and it
was played almost as much as “Take It Easy”. It had that sinister vibe which
was intriguing to a junior high girl. It’s the closest the band had to a sexy
song. Ugh! I said Eagles and sexy in the same sentence.
Waiting for Randy Meisner to hit that high note on “Take It
to The Limit” or Timothy B. Schmidt on “I Can’t Tell You Why” is a lot more
pleasant than listening to “Best of My Love”
yet again.
Also, “Desperado”, later covered by Linda Ronstadt, is
dismissed as country rock tripe by idiots who don’t listen to the lyrics.
$$$$$$$$
I read Don Felder’s book, and he comes off as a really thoughtful guy. Of course, he seemed too nice and a bit of a push-over in some
situations (well, that is until he sued them), but when you’re up against
Azoff/Henley/Frey, you don’t have much bargaining power. One non-lawsuit
subplot in the book involves a male stalker and is a reminder that weird,
overzealous fans can make life hell for even less-conspicuous celebrities.
The facts, as laid out in Felder’s book, state that the band
had an agreement in the early days wherein monies would be split between the members equally. Of course, then things
changed, as Henley remarked in the History of the Eagles. The
fact that there was a pesky legal document in the way was a minor
inconvenience, and Azoff took care of it, with only Felder putting up a
fight.
This brings to mind the same situation that occurred when Van Halen cut Michael Anthony out of their original agreement. Once the band reached
a certain point, the main songwriters figured they should get a bigger slice of
the pie, regardless of any agreements made at the beginning of the band’s
career.
The Eagles’ business choices may not endear them to many
people, though. Here’s an entertaining bit from Letterman, where Dave wants to
play an Eagles song but the show can’t afford it.
As I look back, I’ve always been more interested in “New
York Minute” and other Henley solo songs than Eagles
songs because of the lyrics. Yes, the lyrics are more mainstream than New
York intellectual, but more haunting because of their
simplicity. “Sunset Grill”, “Boys of Summer”, “I Will Not Go Quietly” are undisputedly well-crafted and poignant. I wore out my cassette of The End of the Innocence in ’89 and ’90.
I managed to make it all the way through a Youtube video of
Billy Joel interviewing Henley at the 92nd
Street Y. A few minutes in, I thought, “Ya know, Henley
has so much Virgo in his chart, it’ll
make your head swim." I checked his horoscope and yes, his Ascendant and Moon
are in Virgo and he has three planets in moody Cancer. Frey had his Sun in Scorpio (like you
couldn’t tell from his facial features) and Moon in Capricorn. That’s a match
made in hell if you’re on the wrong side of the twosome. And I don’t even want
to know Azoff’s chart.
The Eagles in 2018 consist of Henley, Walsh, Timothy B.
Schmidt, Travis Tritt and Frey’s son, Deacon.
The band (such as they are) will be playing three nights at
the Forum in September. Ticket prices range from $59 for nosebleed seats to
$700 for main floor, according to a recent look at Ticketmaster and StubHub.
Verdict: No, the Eagles aren’t horrific. Bland maybe, when
compared with some of their overplayed contemporaries. (Which group has more
interesting songs/personalities, Fleetwood Mac or the Eagles?) Try listening to one of their lesser known
songs if you can’t stand the overplayed ones. Don’t
be afraid. You won’t lose your coolness factor by listening to a few Eagles
songs.
I think corporate takeover and consolidation of radio killed the essence that made The Eagles' music so edgy and cool pre-Hotel California, due to overplaying certain hits ad nauseam as you've pointed out.
ReplyDeleteMy favs list includes:
"Victim of Love" ("I see a broken heart, I could be wrong but I'm not")
Of course, "James Dean" and "Already Gone" (awesome rockers), "Old '55," "You Never Cry Like A Lover," "Good Day In Hell," "On The Border" ("I'm sick and tired of all your law and order, say goodnight Dick." Those fade-out lyrics always struck me as being directed at Richard "Tricky Dick" Nixon, former California Senator, Eisenhower's VP and resigned-in-disgraced president, who won a highly contested 1968 election running on a, "Law and Order," platform.) Come to think of it, I generally like the entire "On The Border" album with the exception of "Best of My Love."
For a Randy Meisner ballad I like, "Try And Love Again," guy was a great talent but issues with fame, alcohol over-indulgence and mental issues have taken their toll on this kind soul.
"Last Resort" from "Hotel California," "You call someplace paradise, kiss it goodbye." Truer words were never spoken (sung?).
A Don Henley solo pick: "Dirty Laundry." I spent some time in LA in the 1980s and there was a woman on Channel 7 who reminded me of the, "bubble headed bleach blonde comes on at five," Christine Lund. Awesome song about the trials and tribulations of those people caught up in the glare of L.A.'s tv, radio and print news media. It's also more or less Henley's ode to his own O.J. Simpsonesque (Kafkaesque?) experience with the local Los Angeles news machine, when they used to camp outside his front door. It succinctly captures the news media zeitgeist of the era, "to a T."