First of all, I have to say it’s simply crass to use a band
member’s untimely demise as a platform to attack a band as Gersh Kuntzman
does in this vitriolic diatribe for the New York Daily News, in which he calls the Eagles a horrific band. Why he is then astonished by the strong reactions of already
grieving fans amazes me. It seems that the New York Times agrees,
recently publishing an article on how to speak of the dead, partly as a reaction to these anti-Eagles tirades, the gist of which is summed up by this comment: 'Hey, it’s ok to not like the Eagles. It’s also ok to shut up about it for a few days
when one of them dies.' Try to remember some of us are heart-broken.
Bernie Leadon, Randy Meisner, Don Henley, Glenn Frey – Eagles |
They invariably act like these bands were always dinosaurs and should be extinct by now. But to longtime fans, part of the appeal is their endurance and the fact that the songs, which were fresh and exciting when you first heard them and immediately memorable are now like old friends who you don't see that often but always get on well with when you do. They're as familiar and comfortable as the flannel shirts Don and Glenn wear onstage.
Heartfelt thanks to those, like Bob Lefsetz, who wrote moving
tributes to Glenn. It's a shame that for every positive, there's a negative, like the aforementioned Kuntzman and a
venomous piece from the Houston Chronicle that I can no longer access.
Jeff Bridges, The Dude in The Big Lebowski |
With Don Felder |
So, to rebut some of his assertions. Don't get me wrong, I know he has a right to his point of view, as much as I have a right to disagree.
1 The Eagles were a lousy band (or 'horrific' as he puts in the title)
This is a statement designed purely to provoke attention and
response. Surely no one who's heard Hotel California can really think this? Even if you think you don't know it, you know it.
2 The Eagles produced 'pop pap'.
To label One of These Nights, a song that could set my heart
racing, it was so exciting, so atmospheric, 'pop pap' just beggars belief. It's possible that
GK's childhood was a lot less mundane than mine. Either that or he has no imagination.
Has he ever heard Outlaw Man (listen to that banjo), No More Walks in the Wood, Waiting in the Weeds,
Doolin' Dalton? Pop pap would be Calvin Harris and his ilk.
3 The Eagles have too many songs with 'easy' in the titles.
Well, this does seem to be his point. Delve a bit deeper.
There are plenty that don't.
Jackson Browne |
This is plain crazy. Only a man could have written this. Ok,
I know that JB was a ladies man in his day but sexier than Glenn, who simply
oozed pheromones? I don't think so. I always thought of Jackson Browne as
sensitive and thoughtful while Glenn was master of the snap retort, every hair
toss replete with unabashed sex appeal. More on this in Glenn
Frey, Cowboy Casanova and in this appreciation of Timothy B. Schmit. Plus only Glenn could have delivered these immortal
lines: 'It's a girl, my Lord/In a flatbed Ford/Slowing down to take a look at
me'. Or have the humour and self-awareness to sing in Already Gone:* 'Well, I heard some people talkin' just the other day/And they said you were gonna put me on a shelf/But let me tell ya/I got some news for you/And you'll soon find out it's true/And then you'll have to eat your lunch all by yourself'.
* Already Gone was written by Jack Tempchin and Robb Strandlund but the lyrics seem to be quintessentially Glenn.
* Already Gone was written by Jack Tempchin and Robb Strandlund but the lyrics seem to be quintessentially Glenn.
5 You can't like the Clash if you appreciate the Eagles.
Hmm, I'm pretty sure that I bought a Clash album and an
Eagles album on the same day. They're not mutually exclusive. Although the
Adverts are my favourite band from the punk era. Yes, and that was a totally
gratuitous nod to the One Chord Wonders, simply because I could and more people should.
Bernie Leadon |
Joe Walsh |
Another thing you’ll notice about these carping critics.
They always make an exception for Joe Walsh because they think he’s a
card-carrying rockstar (complete with drugged-up past) with street cred because
of his previous cool (read 'bad') behaviour, and his skill on the guitar. All
the hipsters think Joe is cool – partly because he used to smash things up. Sure, he
adds something but he’s not the Eagles (no offence to Joe fans, who are legend and legion), neither is Timothy B. Schmit (much as I
like him now). They’re the Johnny-Come-Latelys, the New Kids in Town. Although I do make an exception for Don Felder. Whatever people say now, he'll always be an Eagle to me.
There were some straightforward but perfectly crafted country rock songs, but country rock itself wasn't even a proper genre then and what there was had little purchase on the music scene until the Eagles arrived. There was
(the) Buffalo Springfield then Poco, but their reach was limited. And that's not to
mention the influence the Eagles have had: Fleet Foxes, Jayhawks, Golden Smog and so
on, all building careers on the template of exquisite harmonies, contagious
melodies and something to say. Protest songs are now sadly a thing of the past but I love it when a writer cares about a cause or a situation. although I focus on some of my favourites here, in a list that includes Jackson Browne's tour de force, For America.
And there's so much wit and so much self-awareness in the title of their comeback tour: Hell Freezes Over. They simultaneously don't take themselves seriously while being deadly serious and cashing in on their previous pledge.
And there's so much wit and so much self-awareness in the title of their comeback tour: Hell Freezes Over. They simultaneously don't take themselves seriously while being deadly serious and cashing in on their previous pledge.
The trouble is that the Eagles are too successful and this
kind of unprecedented achievement leads people to carp and moan. Once, when I
was younger and more arrogant, I used to like to say that I thought the Beatles
were overrated, in order to provoke a reaction. Now I think it's sort of great that I like some of the same music as my Dad and can take him to see the Eagles or Fleetwood Mac.
Glenn Frey, RIP Outlaw Man |
I’m not saying that I love every Eagles song – there are
some on each album that I consider Eagles by numbers but these very tracks are
other fans’ favourites: Busy Being Fabulous, Chug All Night (well maybe not
Chug All Night) and so on.
And I'd like to ask: When does the Dude lose his 'coolness'? And surely, if everybody thinks he's cool, he's now too mainstream to actually be so. But what I meant to say was that Eagles music is timeless and will hopefully move and entertain future generations. They're not this week's fancy or last year's trend. They are much more than this, they are beyond cool and, as Glenn said, 'a band for all time'.
Every time I start to listen to an Eagles song now, I get all choked up and I know I'll feel this way for some time. I really wish I didn't have to write this but
And I'd like to ask: When does the Dude lose his 'coolness'? And surely, if everybody thinks he's cool, he's now too mainstream to actually be so. But what I meant to say was that Eagles music is timeless and will hopefully move and entertain future generations. They're not this week's fancy or last year's trend. They are much more than this, they are beyond cool and, as Glenn said, 'a band for all time'.
Every time I start to listen to an Eagles song now, I get all choked up and I know I'll feel this way for some time. I really wish I didn't have to write this but