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Don Henley Biography
Henley got his
start playing in a late '60s Texas band named Shiloh, who moved to L.A.
and recorded an eponymous debut album for Amos Records in 1970. Oddly
enough, another Amos act named Longbranch Pennywhistle made its bow the
same year; featured in that group's ranks was one Glenn Frey, who would
soon invite Henley to join him in Linda Ronstadt's backup band. He did,
and by 1971 the pair had hooked up with guitarist Bernie Leadon and
bassist Randy Meisner to form the Eagles. With a 1972 debut album
boasting two top 20 singles--"Take It Easy," co-written by Frey and
Jackson Browne and "Witchy Woman," penned by Henley and Leadon--the
Eagles soared from the start. Though Frey and Henley had written no
songs together on their first album, by the time of 1973's follow-up
Desperado, they began a fruitful songwriting partnership that lasted for
the duration of the group.
Interestingly, the
solo careers of Henley and Frey share another parallel: Each writer is
heavily dependent on using songwriting collaborators. When together in
the Eagles, neither Henley or Frey had ever has written a song solely on
his own; the vast majority of their songs were written together, often
with other writers. Alone, Frey has penned exactly two songs on his
own--1982's "All Those Lies" and 1992's instrumental "Agua Tranquillo"--and
Henley, none. While Frey has typically used Jack Tempchin, Henley
generally works with guitarist/producer Danny "Kootch" Kortchmar.
Henley's third
solo album, 1989's The End Of The Innocence, reached No. 8, went
triple-platinum and--perhaps most amazingly--enjoyed a marathon stay on
the charts of 148 weeks. Considering that the singer had previously been
singing "don't look back," there was some irony in the fact that the
album's first single--the top 10 title track, written by Henley and
Bruce Hornsby--began by asking, "Remember when the days were long/ And
rolled beneath a deep blue sky/ Didn't have a care in the world/ With
mommy and daddy standin' by?" But rather than a simple nostalgia piece,
the song railed against "this tired old man that we elected king" and
lawyers. Henley's growing political activism and concern with
environmental issues became increasingly evident on Innocence--and in
his personal life as well. In 1990, the singer spearheaded a major
campaign to preserve the Walden Woods, the forest area surrounding Henry
David Thoreau's celebrated retreat at Walden Pond. By 1993, the cause
was furthered by the all-star benefit tribute album Common Thread: The
Songs Of The Eagles, featuring well-known country singers Clint Black,
Vince Gill, Alan Jackson, Trisha Yearwood and others performing the
songs Henley and his former band had made famous two decades earlier.
And shortly thereafter, the Eagles reunited, and much money was made
indeed.
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