| | Eagles Long Run CD Eagles Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
 |
|
Our Price: $15.65 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $9.90
|  |
The Eagles: Glenn Frey (vocals, guitar, synthesizer); Joe Walsh (vocals, slide guitar); Don Henley, Timothy B. Schmit (vocals); Don Felder (guitar, organ). Recorded at Bayshore Recording Studio, Coconut Grove, Florida. Three years in the making (which was considered an eternity in the '70s), the Eagles' follow-up to the massively successful, critically acclaimed Hotel California was a major disappointment, even though it sold several million copies and threw off three hit singles. Those singles, in fact, provide some insight into the record. "Heartache Tonight" was an old-fashioned rock & roll song sung by Glenn Frey, while "I Can't Tell You Why" was a delicate ballad by Timothy B. Schmit, the band's newest member. Only "The Long Run," a conventional pop/rock tune with a Stax Records R&B flavor, bore the stamp and vocal signature of Don Henley, who had largely taken the reins of the band on Hotel California. Henley also dominated The Long Run, getting co-writing credits on nine of the ten songs, singing five lead vocals, and sharing another two with Frey. This time around, however, Henley's contributions were for the most part painfully slight. Only "The Long Run" and the regret-filled closing song, "The Sad Café," showed any of his usual craftsmanship. The album was dominated by second-rank songs like "The Disco Strangler," "King of Hollywood," and "Teenage Jail" that sounded like they couldn't have taken three hours much less three years to come up with. (Joe Walsh's "In the City" was up to his usual standard, but it may not even have been an Eagles recording, having appeared months earlier on the soundtrack to The Warriors, where it was credited as a Walsh solo track.) Amazingly, The Long Run reportedly was planned as a double album before being truncated to a single disc. If these were the keepers, what could the rejects have sounded like? ~ William Ruhlmann The long-awaited follow-up to Hotel California and the Eagles' last studio album proved a considerable disappointment, although it sold in the expected multimillions and included the hits "Heartache Tonight," "The Long Run," and "I Can't Tell You Why." ~ William Ruhlmann THE LONG RUN, the Eagles' long-awaited follow-up to their hugely successful HOTEL CALIFORNIA, was the celebrated group's final studio album. By the time THE LONG RUN was released in early 1979, the laid-back West Coast rock scene that The Eagles had dominated throughout the decade had pretty much run its course. Many of the biggest rock groups of the era -- including The Eagles--were incorporating new influences into their music and toughening up their sound. While similar in feel to HOTEL CALIFORNIA, THE LONG RUN is a far more diverse album that features an immaculately crafted set of songs ranging from the soulful pop of the Don Henley-sung title track and "I Can' t Tell You Why" to tough, country-influenced rocker "Heartache Tonight" and the epic, dynamic "In The City." Even though Don Henley, Glen Frey and Joe Walsh would all go on to lead successful solo careers in the ensuing years, they would rarely better the polished pop on THE LONG RUN. Long Run Music Review Average Rating: (4.7 out of 5 stars)   A great EAGLES album I really used to love this album, but it's kind getting old, after all these years. That said, this is one of the better albums of the late 70's. "The Long run" is a catchy pop tune, while "In the City" is one of the great rock anthems. I disagree with your earlier reviewer, that "disco strangler" isn't any good, its got a great beat to it. "Sad Cafe" and "Those shoes", are two of my favorite EAGLES tunes. JUST BUY IT!!!!!! Submitted by Mark (Wichita,KS,USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
another classic what can u say....another gem from the eagles, if the music doesn't hit you the lyrics will. a must in every record collection. Submitted by a reviewer (montreal, canada) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
highly polished and not the best this album is truly not their best. The song the disco strangler is completely strange and seems to be over before it even starts. The Sad Cafe, a long balad about broken dreams may be the best song off of it.The Title track and in the city hold up this rating while i can't tell you why and heartache tonight fails to impress me. King of Hollywood and those shoes are two psychadellic nothings. Teenage Jail is a hard rock/blues song that is vocaled by frey and henley. The ninth track the greeks don't want no freaks is a comical yet short funky rythm and blues song. Submitted by a reviewer (Detroit MI USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
| Have you heard this album? |  |
Purchase Long Run CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Eagles Hotel California CD (1976)
Long Run
$15.65 The Eagles: Glenn Frey (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Don Felder (vocals, electric & slide guitars); Joe Walsh (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Randy Meisner (vocals, guitarron, bass); Don Henley (vocals, drums, percussion). Engineers include: Bill Szymczyk, Allan Blazek, Ed Marshal. Recorded at Criteria Studios, Miami, Florida and the Record Plant, Los Angeles, California from March to October 1976. The Eagles took 18 months between their fourth and fifth albums, reportedly spending eight months in the studio recording Hotel California. The album was also their first to be made without Bernie Leadon, who had given the band much of its country flavor, and with rock guitarist Joe Walsh. As a result, the album marks a major leap for the Eagles from their earlier work, as well as a stylistic shift toward mainstream rock. An even more important aspect, however, is the emergence of Don Henley as the band's dominant ...
| | Eagles On The Border CD (1974)
Long Run
$15.89 Eagles: Bernie Leadon (vocals, guitar, steel guitar, banjo); Glenn Frey (vocals, guitar, piano); Randy Meisner (vocals, bass instrument); Don Henley (vocals, drums); Don Felder (electric guitar). The Eagles began recording their third album in England with producer Glyn Johns, as they had their first two albums, but abandoned the sessions after completing two acceptable tracks. Johns, it is said, tended to emphasize the group's country elements and its harmonies, while the band, in particular Glenn Frey and Don Henley, wanted to take more of a hard rock direction. They reconvened with a new producer, Bill Szymczyk, who had produced artists like B.B. King and, more significantly, Joe Walsh. But the resulting album is not an outright rock effort by any means. Certainly, Frey and Henley got what they wanted with "Already Gone," the lead-off track, which introduces new bandmember Don Felder as one part of the twin guitar solo that recalls the ...
| | Eagles One Of These Nights CD (1975)
Long Run
$15.65 Live Recording
The Eagles: Bernie Leadon (vocals, electric & steel guitars, banjo, mandolin); Don Felder (vocals, electric & slide guitars); Glenn Frey (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Randy Meisner (vocals, bass); Don Henley (vocals, drums, percussion). Recorded at Mac Emmerman's Criteria Studios, Miami, Florida. The Eagles recorded their albums relatively quickly in their first years of existence, their LPs succeeding each other by less than a year. One of These Nights, their fourth album, was released in June 1975, more than 14 months after its predecessor. Anticipation had been heightened by the belated chart-topping success of the third album's "The Best of My Love"; taking a little more time, the band generated more original material, and that material was more polished. More than ever, the Eagles seemed to be a vehicle for Don Henley (six co-writing credits) and Glenn Frey (five), but ...
| | Eagles CD (1972)
Long Run
$15.65 Eagles: Glenn Frey, Bernie Leadon (vocals, guitar); Randy Meisner (vocals, bass instrument); Don Henley (vocals, drums). Balance is the key element of the Eagles' self-titled debut album, a collection that contains elements of rock & roll, folk, and country, overlaid by vocal harmonies alternately suggestive of doo wop, the Beach Boys, and the Everly Brothers. If the group kicks up its heels on rockers like "Chug All Night," "Nightingale," and "Tryin'," it is equally convincing on ballads like "Most of Us Are Sad" and "Train Leaves Here This Morning." The album is also balanced among its members, who trade off on lead vocal chores and divide the songwriting such that Glenn Frey, Bernie Leadon, and Randy Meisner all get three writing or co-writing credits. (Fourth member Don Henley, with only one co-writing credit and two lead vocals, falls a little behind, while Jackson Browne, Gene Clark, and Jack Tempchin also figure in the writing credits.) ...
| | Eagles Desperado CD (1973)
Long Run
$15.39 Eagles: Bernie Leadon (vocals, guitar, banjo, mandolin); Glenn Frey (vocals, guitar, piano); Randy Meisner (vocals, bass instrument); Don Henley (vocals, drums). If Don Henley was the sole member of the Eagles underrepresented on their debut album, Eagles, with only two lead vocals and one co-songwriting credit, he made up for it on their follow-up, the "concept" album Desperado. The concept had to do with Old West outlaws, but it had no specific narrative. On Eagles, the group had already begun to marry itself to a Southwest sound and lyrical references, from the Indian-style introduction of "Witchy Woman" to the Winslow, AZ, address in "Take It Easy." All of this became more overt on Desperado, and it may be that Henley, who hailed from Northeast Texas, had the greatest affinity for the subject matter. In any case, he had co-writing credits on eight of the 11 selections and sang such ...
| | Jimi Hendrix Are You Experienced? CD (1967)
Long Run
$9.49 This 1997 reissue of ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? is a remastered version that restores the original LP's track order and album artwork. ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? was previously reissued in 1993 (MCA 10893) with new cover art and a new 17-track running order ...
| | Bossa Nova & Baion 3 Bossa Nova & Baion 3 CD (1996)
Long Run
$15.15
| | Les Elgart Bandstand Boogie CD (2003)
Long Run
$7.95
| | Larry Gittens Dual Identity CD (2003)
Long Run
$14.05 Personnel: Larry Gittens (vocals, trumpet, flugelhorn, Fender Rhodes piano, organ, keyboards, synthesizer, drum programming, background ...
| | Arena CD (2006) Import
Long Run
$27.95
| | Beauty Of Voices, Vol. 2 CD (2005) Import
Long Run
$32.59
| | Twin Sisters Gross Songs Kids Love To Sing CD (2005)
Long Run
$6.29
| | Robert Gordon With Link Wray/Fresh Fish Specials CD (1977)
Long Run
$10.99 ROBERT GORDON WITH LINK WRAY/FRESH FISH SPECIALS was originally released as 2 seperate LPs. The single compact disc contains 9 additional tracks that did not appear on the original albums. Personnel includes: Robert Gordon, Link Wray, Chris Spedding, Danny Gatton. Personnel: Robert Gordon (vocals); Link Wray (guitar); The Jordanaires, Wildcats. Lester Bangs once described Robert Gordon as looking as if he belonged in a natural history museum identified as "Bopcatus Americanus," and while his first album wasn't the one that inspired the comment, the vintage duds and greased-up pompadour he sports on the front cover would have done any pop-culture archeologist proud. While Gordon first hit the New York City rock scene as a proto-punk with Tuff Darts, when he struck out on his own in 1977 he was one of America's first rockabilly revivalists, covering the likes of Eddie Cochran, Billy Lee Riley, and Carl Perkins as if he was waiting for Sam Phillips to stop by and discover him. For this album, Gordon paired up with legendary guitarist Link Wray, and the result was a solid and evocative tribute to first-era rock & roll, though with a few details turned around. Wray was never really a rockabilly player, and while he brings plenty of fire and gritty presence to these sessions, the "Rumble" man sometimes seems to be holding back uncomfortably on the quieter songs, waiting for the opportunity to offer the full-bore blast that was his stock in trade (and he delivers it on cuts like "Flying Saucers Rock & Roll"). The rest of Gordon's band often sounds more utilitarian than inspired, but they also don't overplay and rock these tunes with clean power. And while Gordon doesn't bring much of a personality of his own to this material (the originals were written by Wray, not Gordon), there's no arguing that he had great pipes and sings these songs with the conviction of a true believer. It would be a few years before the great rockabilly awakening would truly happen in America, but Robert Gordon was one hepcat who already believed in the Big Beat in 1977, and his first album was filled with inspired moments. ~ Mark Deming Rockabilly was pretty much a dead issue as far as American music fans were concerned when Robert Gordon released the two albums featured on this CD, and if he didn't kickstart the revival that would take hold a few years later all by his lonesome, he was certainly carrying the flag at a crucial time. Gordon also gave a major boost to the career of legendary guitar mauler Link Wray, who gets co-star billing on their two albums together, and though Gordon's classical take on rockabilly didn't always ...
| | Charles Wizen Swing 39 CD (2007)
Long Run
$21.55
|
|
|