I would LOVE for this album to be released while we are in LA in January!
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I would LOVE for this album to be released while we are in LA in January!
That would be great! Fingers crossed!
Thanks for the article, Buffyfan. This is the first time I ever heard that Glenn loved country music. I would love to hear those tunes he co-wrote with Jack but unfortunately didn't have a chance to record.
From the Jack Tempchin interview:
Would anyone like to comment?Quote:
One thing about Glenn, unlike anybody else, he could somehow see and sniff out the woman's point of view to a song, like 'The One You Love' or 'Lyin' Eyes,'
Glenn was quoted in Interview Magazine saying, "Except for a few guitar chords, everything I've learned in my life that is of any value I've learned from women."
To me, if that is your attitude, you must be actually listening to them! That would go a long way toward understanding a female point of view! You will tell a lot more personal things to someone who seems interested- and give them insights into the way you think. He took good notes!
Thanks for posting the link buffyfan145.
I look forward to hearing some new Frey/Tempchin songs in January.
As Jack himself declares, he's not much of a singer or player so I hope, this isn't the only posthumous Frey release i get to hear.
I'm very pleased that Jack is releasing this but his level of performance is several divisions below Glenn and Eagles so I can't see it becoming one of my favourites. :neutral:
Found this nice article today about the Celebration of Life held at The Forum.
http://www.storytellersunplugged.com...our-world-now/
It worked for me. I'll post the relevant part in case it doesn't work for someone else. I got tears in my eyes as I read it. :weep::-(
Quote:
Q: [Newport Beach, CA]: …sorry for your loss [Glenn Frey], Sully. Another leftie creative genius is gone.
A: Left-handedness does seem to correlate or at least associate with creativity. However, Glenn was ambidextrous (which may be an even deeper association with creativity). He golfed, wrote and swung a baseball bat left but played guitar right-handed.
Q: [Many recent emails/messages ask if I was at the private memorial for Glenn Frey at The Forum in California which has been reported in the media and speculated about on fan blogs.]
A: Actually, it was styled as a celebration of Glenn’s life, and I was there. Celebration with music, celebration with stories and laughter, celebration with food – this was life lived large in the key of G(lenn). It was a little surreal, as if all walks of life had suddenly come together, as indeed they had.
No pretenses, no putting on airs, no intrusive media. The invitation said that dress was Glenn Frey standard – “Jeans and a sport coat or a damn fine suit. Players choice!” And the quality of the communication, the music, and the table, as always with Glenn and Cindy Frey, was first-class plus.
Picture DisneyWorld where the frontiers are all intermingled: one minute you’re chatting with Stevie Wonder, Don Henley or Kareem Abdul Jabbar and 15 minutes later it’s Randy Newman, Cameron Crowe or Paul Shaffer. The musical offerings culminated with a rockin’ finale that included the Eagles past and present, Bob Seger, Paul Stanley of KISS, Jackson Browne, JD Souther, and too many others to remember. But the number that got to me the most was the poignant last performance of “Desperado” – the signature song that brought Glenn and I together in the first place. I’d seen the grim and tragic (it seemed to me) presentation of that musical masterpiece the night before at the Grammys, and it suddenly struck me here at The Forum that this was the last time it would ever be performed with the remaining Eagles. There were the dimmed lights and the empty space where Glenn should have stood, and suddenly with the last fading chord the waves of shock and denial ended and I knew with crushing finality: Glenn was gone.
It’s called closure, but it’s never that. Acceptance is what it is. Acceptance and celebration, which is what I felt sharing quality time at the Frey house the next day. Accomplished and capable Cindy Frey is a beacon of positive energy and honest emotion, and the younger Freys have left nothing untapped in the gene pool. Taylor’s muse has all the fire and pz-azz of Glenn’s muse, especially in her writing; Deacon can melt the hearts and rock the socks off any audience; and Otis will charm you with his candor and zest for life. America’s future and the Frey legacy are in good hands. Maybe Glenn said it best in one of his last songs, the eerily prophetic It’s Your World Now:
“It’s your world now
Use well the time
Be part of something good
Leave something good behind
The curtain falls
I take my bow
That’s how it’s meant to be
It’s your world now…”