Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Great Rock Albums of 1979: The Eagles- The Long Run


"The Long Run" was the long awaited follow up to The Eagles' great 1976 album "Hotel California." That previous album began to take them away from their easy listening sound to more of a harder rock sound and "The Long Run" continued along in that direction. My first taste of this classic album was when I was on leave after just finishing boot camp and the song "Heartache Tonight" came on my AM car radio. I was very impressed by the harder sound of the guitars and even more impressed by the guitar solos in it. Side tracking for a moment, I will say that Joe Walsh and Don Felder never receieved the respect due them as guitarists, even after their solo tradeoff in the song "Hotel California." Anyway, tracks like the last one mentioned as well as "In The City" which Joe Walsh brought over from "The Warriors" soundtrack, "Disco Strangler" and "Teenage Jail" are just some of the harder rock songs that help make this album so great.
Saying that, "The Long Run" doesn't totally take them from their roots of the easy listening countrified sound. There are a couple of tracks that remind us where they came from. Such songs as "The Sad Cafe" and "I Can't Tell You Why" bear testimony to that fact and to me, the title track of the album serves as the bridge between the soft and the hard. Add all of these things together and you get a fantastic album that has continued to remain so over three decades.
Track Listing:
1. The Long Run
2. I Cant Tell You Why
3. In the City
4. The Disco Strangler
5. King of Hollywood
6. Heartache Tonight
7. Those Shoes
8. Teenage Jail
9. The Greeks Don't Want No Freaks
10. The Sad Cafe
The Eagles
Glen Frey- electric guitar, keyboards, synthesiser, vocals
Don Henley- drums, percussion, vocals
Don Felder- electric, accoustic and slide guitars, organ, vocals
Joe Walsh- electric and slide guitars, keyboards, vocals
Timothy B Schmit- bass, vocals ]
"The Long Run" was the first album not to feature founding member Randy Meisner on bass who was replaced by Timothy B. Schmit. I have also noticed that when I posted the tracks, I don't remember them being in that order in my cassette. I guess it's a trip back up the loft to see for myself or maybe I should just get a CD. Still, this is a brilliant album and the first new album I listened to as a marine.
This would be the last Eagles studio album before their break up in 1980. I have always put that down to so many talented musicians each wanting to go a separate way. The evidence is the solo albums each one of them recorded afterwards that I will be visiting down the line.
Next post: The Knack- Get The Knack
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