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- MUSIC, Page 64Building on Prime Real EstateOnce an Eagle, Don Henley, flying solo, soars even higherBy Jay Cocks
-
-
- At the onset of the '80s, Don Henley was sitting behind the
- drums of the Eagles, a colossally successful Los Angeles band with
- a lot of hits behind it and a future of guaranteed disintegration.
- There was a fair portion of intramural rivalry among band members.
- There was also a sense, even among the group's fans, that the
- Eagles' sound -- smooth melodies and often aseptic lyrics that took
- listeners on a twilight tour of the Hotel California -- might be
- about played out.
-
- Glenn Frey, Henley's friend and co-writer in the band, was the
- one who put the wraps on it. He called Henley one September
- afternoon in 1980 and told him he was making an album on his own.
- No Eagles invited. "He didn't say that he was through with the
- group, but I knew what he meant," Henley says. "He was tired of all
- the diplomacy and compromise necessitated by a group situation.
- Still, I was shocked and hurt. You just don't think of ending
- something that was great."
-
- Henley responded to the crisis in classic rock-'n'-roll
- fashion: a fair amount of rambunctious confusion, running
- concurrently with some studious dissipation, followed by the
- release of his own solo album in 1982. I Can't Stand Still sold
- well, but nowhere near what it deserved to. It was a superb album,
- yet the solid commercial breakthrough would come with his second
- release, Building the Perfect Beast. Its keynote single, The Boys
- of Summer, a romantic song full of nostalgia and vitriol, won
- Henley a Grammy. Now Henley is closing out the '80s with a splendid
- third album, The End of the Innocence, which will shoo him into the
- new decade as one of the fleetest talents around. Not bad for 42
- and for a guy people still mistake for Frey.
-
- It doesn't much matter to Henley. "People have short memories
- and attention spans," he notes. "They forget me as soon as I'm off
- MTV. I'm glad." That kind of confidence can come not only from
- satisfaction in his work but also from a sense that the work has
- paid off. Out just a month ago, the new album has already gone
- gold: the title cut, released as a single, sounds similarly
- hit-bound. It is a ravishing love song, slightly world-weary and
- bracingly off-center, nostalgic for better loves and wiser times.
-
- Henley knows all the odd angles in the geometry of love. In one
- of his best songs, Long Way Home, he wrote, "There are three sides
- to every story:/ Yours, mine, and the cold, hard truth." There
- seems to be a lot of truth on this new album. Much of it sounds
- tough, as on one of Henley's favorite tracks, I Will Not Go Quietly
- ("It kicks ass more than any previous rock-'n'-roll songs I've
- done"), but nothing is delivered here with the jaded swagger that
- often got the Eagles branded as a slick bunch of SoCal libertines.
- That was mostly a bum rap, and it has taken Henley until now not
- only to find his own voice but also to get his own footing.
-
- There is a good bit of manicured savagery in songs like New
- York Minute and If Dirt Were Dollars ("I was flyin' back from
- Lubbock/ I saw Jesus on the plane/ . . . or maybe it was Elvis/ You
- know, they kinda look the same"), and a memorably nasty cameo
- portrait of Ronald Reagan as a cowboy named Jingo in Little Tin
- God. That's vintage Henley, delivered with a snarl and a smile, but
- The Heart of the Matter, which ends the record, is the struggle for
- a different sense of place, another state of grace: "I've been
- tryin' to get down to the heart of the matter/ Because the flesh
- will get weak and the ashes will scatter/ So I'm thinkin' about
- forgiveness/ Forgiveness/ Even if, even if you don't love me
- anymore." Brand new, that song already sounds like a classic.
-
- The reputation grew from a beginning that was so typically
- modest it could almost be mythic. The only child of an auto-parts
- salesman-farmer and an elementary school teacher in Linden, Texas
- ("Drive 20 miles to The Crossroads or, in the other direction, to
- Uncertain") -- Henley had a bedrock upbringing that permitted his
- musical excursions but gave him something to kick out against. When
- success with the Eagles hit fast and hard, he lived his share of
- the Los Angeles high life and paid a big price. In 1980 he found
- himself pickled in the press when he was given two years' probation
- for drug possession and fined for contributing to the delinquency
- of a minor. "I thought it was probably the end of my career," he
- says. But out of the scandal and distortions he salvaged a
- memorable song, Dirty Laundry, which could have just as neatly
- applied to his next brush with notoriety, as the host of the New
- Year's party at which Donna Rice met Gary Hart.
-
- "Someone introduced them," he recalls, "but it wasn't me. I was
- off cooking for 60 guests, but I got the credit . . . or the blame,
- whatever your perspective. Donna's a nice girl, personable and fun,
- but I feel sorry for her, and saddened and aggravated by the way
- she chose to exploit the situation. She figured her life was
- ruined, and she damn well wanted to get something out of it all.
- That's O.K., as long as it didn't involve me."
-
- If that kind of dirt were dollars, Henley would be flush
- enough. These days he lives in Los Angeles and travels to his small
- spread outside Aspen, Colo. ("my ranchette"). He also devotes time
- to social issues like the Southern Poverty Law Center, as well as
- a variety of environmental groups. But what he can always take to
- the bank is his gift for songwriting, which keeps growing. Talking
- about the legacy of the Eagles, he says, "The Eagles were another
- link in the chain, a logical extension of what came before. But I
- don't think the '70s will ever be as important in the history of
- rock as the '60s, because you don't have the cultural and
- sociological upheaval combined with music." Fair enough. But
- there's a corner of the '80s that ought to read "Property of D.
- Henley." And that real estate is prime space. He'll be building on
- it for quite a while yet.
-
-
- -- Elaine Dutka/Los Angeles