...Well it sure makes you wonder the things that some people will say. They can see black and white but they don't seem to notice the grey...
Absolutely. So true.
Again, i dont think Henley looks angry, upset or miserable. Find me one video of henley being all smiles while drumming. If Henley thought he would be miserable doing that show he probably wouldnt have done it. Of course he was probably upset about Glenn...but please tell me what he was angry about. Just facts please. There is no evidence that he was angry with CBS or the grammies or whatever other than opinions here based on zero facts.
There were a couple of posts where some said that they thought Don Henley looked 'angry'. My own expression was 'stony faced'. With grief.
I don't know why this has suddenly become such an issue.
We are having a communication breakdown:
my "complaint" about people repeatedly saying Henley was angry or miserable isnt because i think people are slighting Henley....its because i think there is zero basis of fact to say Henley was angry at anything. It seems like people are indicaticating that because of the grammys somewhat passé handling of Freys death compared to motorhead guy and bowie and bb...people have jumped to the conclusion that Henley is angry. I just dont see any evidence of him being angry...he was probably just generally saddened for the reason that they were even there. Until Henley makes a statement (dont hold your breath) its best we stick to the facts we know and we know he was sad...not angry.
Except that we don't have any facts that he wasn't angry either. None of us know what Don was feeling inside so all we have to go on are our perceptions. I'm not sure how it is that one person's perception is any more factual than another's. It's really a rather ridiculous discussion that only one person here seems to want to make an issue of. So OLMNJ, if you are really that interested in knowing how Don felt, I suggest you "get in touch with henleys people and see if we can get a statement from him". Otherwise, let's drop it.
"People don't run out of dreams: People just run out of time ..."
Glenn Frey 11/06/1948 - 01/18/2016
So, I just went backed and watched this for the 3rd or 4th time after a couple of days and lots of reading of comments, and here's what I noticed, when not focusing on technical production mess-ups:
The crowd gave the guys a lovely welcome when the curtain went up - keep in mind this was an "in memoriam," so there wasn't going to be raucous screaming. The visual of those guys up there without Glenn would more likely lead to silence, not whooping - it's a real punch in the gut.
During the crowd shots, I see the individuals singing along and boppin' along. They gave a heartfelt, robustly clapping standing ovation. When they realized there would be further action on stage, they remained standing. I'm not sure what more we were expecting from the audience, but upon further viewing, they seemed totally appropriate.
Even though the guys rehearsed, the performance must have been totally surreal for them.
I did not hear or see Henley dropping out of the harmonies as I've read somewhere, Jackson did - he was letting the other 5 make the harmonies.