The band Tom Waits likened to “watching paint dry”

(Credits: Far Out / Press)

(via Far Out) by Tim Coffman

Tom Waits has never been known as someone who minced words about how he felt about music. Throughout his career in front of the microphone, there was no doubt that Waits would deliver something 100% authentic to the story he wanted to tell. Though his intuition may have led him to multiple classic records like Rain Dogs and Bone Machine, he wasn’t afraid to talk about songs that he thought were below average either.

When first cutting his teeth in the rock scene, Waits was a far more dynamic presence than what he would become known for. Although many may associate Waits’ cadence with its off-kilter demeanour, many knew him as the kind of lonely barfly on his first handful of albums, sitting behind a piano and delivering biting songs about loneliness.

Out of all the tracks he wrote during that period, ‘Ol 55’ remains a particular highlight from his early years. Taking the basic premise of the titular car, Waits paints a dark tale on top of it all, delivering the kind of gruff voice that only he could muster in those days. If there were anyone who knew a thing or two about both lonely songs and cars, though, it would be the Eagles.

As Waits was starting his career, Glenn Frey and Don Henley had already been two of the kings of the California rock scene. Having already made their living with songs like ‘Take it Easy’ and ‘Tequila Sunrise’, the band were looking to go beyond their country roots on the album On the Border...

Read more: https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/band-tom-waits-watching-paint-dry/

How the Eagles’ ‘Greatest Hits Invented a New Kind of Blockbuster

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(via Rolling Stone)

by Steve Knopper

The old story goes that Glenn Frey, Don Henley and their bandmates were taking forever to finish Hotel California when their record label, Asylum, needed a new Eagles album to raise revenue in the first quarter of 1976. So the label released Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975 as a sort of placeholder – a way of placating fans until the real album could come out. But Irving Azoff, the band’s longtime manager, says the truth is far simpler. “We decided it was time to put out the first greatest-hits because we had enough hits,” he tells Rolling Stone.

The LP containing “Take It Easy,” “Desperado,” “Take It to the Limit,” “Peaceful Easy Feeling” and six others has sold a massive 29 million copies in the U.S.; back in 1999, it leapfrogged Thriller as the best-selling album of all time. “I think when Michael Jackson sees this on television, he’s going to go out and buy a million-and-a-half copies of Thriller,” Frey, who died Monday at age 67, quipped at the time. (The Eagles returned to second place after Michael Jackson’s 2009 death.)

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/how-the-eagles-greatest-hits-invented-a-new-kind-of-blockbuster-20160120

Glenn Frey of the Eagles to Undergo Major Surgery

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(via The Boot)

by Christina Vinson

Glenn Frey of the Eagles is facing major surgery, the band announced on Wednesday (Nov. 4). The group was supposed to attend and be honored at the 38th annual Kennedy Center Honors in December, but due to Frey’s health, they will not able to attend, and their recognition will be postponed one year…

Read More: Glenn Frey of the Eagles to Undergo Major Surgery

Songs You May Have Missed #163

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Low Stars: “Child” (2007)

Low Stars are, or were, sort of an “Eagles Lite” who released a self-titled debut album in 2007 containing the same breezy harmonies as the country rock heavyweights but with a third fewer calories on the lyrical side.

A highlight is the low-key acoustic “Child”, a reflection on the circle of life at the approach of middle age.