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Jackson Browne
Posted on 10/17/22 at 10:43 am
Posted on 10/17/22 at 10:43 am
I always thought don't think J.B. gets the attention and acclaim that he deserves. I never considered him a Laurel Canyon "sound", but he's a great singer and puts outs some great stuff. What's the board think?
Posted on 10/17/22 at 10:50 am to GentleJackJones
fell out of favor when he beat darryl hannah
Posted on 10/17/22 at 10:52 am to GentleJackJones
Certainly a capable singer, IMHO, but his strength was songwriting.
I mean, I don't think anyone would have paid him to sing other folks' songs. He came along during that massive wave of singer songwriters that included Carly Simon, Linda Ronstadt, Warren Zevon, and, obviously, I think the "Laurel Canyon" scene had some overlap with this group, notably James Taylor, J.D. Souther and the entire "Eagles" gravity well.
I mean, I don't think anyone would have paid him to sing other folks' songs. He came along during that massive wave of singer songwriters that included Carly Simon, Linda Ronstadt, Warren Zevon, and, obviously, I think the "Laurel Canyon" scene had some overlap with this group, notably James Taylor, J.D. Souther and the entire "Eagles" gravity well.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 10:53 am to MorbidTheClown
quote:
fell out of favor when he beat darryl hannah
But there is no proof of this and folks close to both, including Hannah's family members, don't believe it happened.
Jackson Browne got Amber Hearded before that was a thing.
And I bet he wasn't the first.
(ETA: Hannah makes it impossible for a CSNY reunion before they start dying, too.)
This post was edited on 10/17/22 at 10:54 am
Posted on 10/17/22 at 10:57 am to GentleJackJones
Meh
He's ok.
I saw him open for James Taylor six or seven years ago, and he played his hits for 40 minutes and he was tolerable.
He's ok.
I saw him open for James Taylor six or seven years ago, and he played his hits for 40 minutes and he was tolerable.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 11:31 am to GentleJackJones
This is the only album I have of his. It’s not my genre, but it’s a helluva album. I appreciated it more the older I’ve become.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 11:42 am to GentleJackJones
Decent musician but an absolutely incredible songwriter. He wrote Birds of St Marks when he was only about 16 I believe. His songs have Been covered by legends in the industry.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 11:47 am to GentleJackJones
quote:He is without question the greatest of that era - one of the greatest singer/songwriters of all time. No weaknesses whatsoever. His oeuvre is of stunning depth and quality.
Jackson Browne
I always thought don't think J.B. gets the attention and acclaim that he deserves. I never considered him a Laurel Canyon "sound", but he's a great singer and puts outs some great stuff. What's the board think?
To this day, he really hasn't lost a step. He sounds incredible.
He surrounded himself with elite, virtuosic musicians who themselves haven't received enough credit. Most relevantly, David Lindley. His steel and slide work will make you weep.
Browne came out of the gate hard with a magnificent debut album. The lead track Jamaica, Say You Will is one of the most beautiful ballads of all time and remains criminally obscure and underrated.
Lindley joined on the sophomore effort - For Everyman (which of course included Browne's "Take It Easy") - and they never looked back.
The true breakthrough came with Late for the Sky in 1974. Start to finish, this is arguably a top 5 album of all time. My favorite off of that is the haunting Farther On - it begins with Lindley's slide work and proceeds to walk through lyrical, instrumental and musical brilliance in every aspect. (BTW, here's a live version from his home he did during the pandemic - Farther On again) Then there's For a Dancer - played at Belushi's funeral live by Browne to not a dry eye (reportedly also at Phil Hartman's funeral). One of the most poignant meditations on death and loneliness every put to wax.
The Pretender put out some big hits, but then came Running on Empty, which was a live album featuring all new songs! Among other hits, it finished with one of the greatest "life on the road as a musician" songs ever - The Load Out
Those 5 albums are a murderer's row of quality unmatched by any other supposedly comparable act of the era. And it's not like it wasn't recognized by his peers - Eagles sang back up on several of his tunes and obviously took Take It Easy to new heights.
Browne went on to stay relevant throughout the 80s and 90s, having the random radio hit here and there, but that 70s run would be impossible to follow for anyone.
The Darryl Hannah thing was a bullshite meme canceling in the days before that was a thing.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 2:31 pm to GentleJackJones
His albums from the 70s are damn good. I still go back and listen to those albums like Pretender,Late for the Sky, Running on Empty. I dont care for much starting with Lawyers in Love.
This post was edited on 10/17/22 at 4:58 pm
Posted on 10/17/22 at 2:35 pm to GentleJackJones
He wrote These Days when he was 16. That's pretty impressive.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 2:43 pm to Big Scrub TX
quote:
He surrounded himself with elite, virtuosic musicians who themselves haven't received enough credit. Most relevantly, David Lindley. His steel and slide work will make you weep.
Agreed 100%. David Lindley is a hell of a musician but hardly anybody knows that name.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 5:36 pm to GentleJackJones
He was one of the more tolerable perpetrators of the Laurel Canyon Yacht Rock sound, at least at first. "Doctor My Eyes" is a well-crafted pop song.
Eventually he grew even more pompous and pretentious, and finally Warren Zevon came along to blow him out of the Yacht Club Bay water, artistically if not commercially.
Eventually he grew even more pompous and pretentious, and finally Warren Zevon came along to blow him out of the Yacht Club Bay water, artistically if not commercially.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 5:43 pm to Ace Midnight
quote:
his strength was songwriting.
Bought a copy of The Pretender on vinyl recently and that's the first thing that came to mind. Just rich, complex songwriting. "Somebody's Baby" is one of the best songs of all time, imo.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 6:03 pm to shutterspeed
Beating a dead horse, but absolutely incredible songwriter. In "One Way Out", Greg Allman talks about how he looked up to him, they roomed together when younger and also mentioned he couldn't believe the talent to write songs like "These Days" as a freaking teenager. Good stuff!
Posted on 10/17/22 at 7:00 pm to GentleJackJones
Late For The Sky is A Masterpiece.
Posted on 10/17/22 at 8:48 pm to Big Scrub TX
quote:
And it's not like it wasn't recognized by his peers
People lined up to play with him. Various configurations of The Section (Kortch, Doerge, Sklar and Kunkel) toured with him in the 70s and early 80s (and obviously a one-of-a-kind genius like Lindley), and if they couldn't go, they got folks like Jim Gordon and folks of that caliber to fill in. These were in that elite group of "first call" L.A. session musicians of the 70s and 80s that also included the so-called "Wrecking Crew"(which no one but Blaine called them that), Waddy Wachtel, Jeff Porcaro and all those guys who played on Steely Dan records.
This post was edited on 10/17/22 at 8:49 pm
Posted on 10/18/22 at 2:55 am to GentleJackJones
He’s awesome. I love me some JB
Posted on 10/18/22 at 5:43 am to shutterspeed
quote:
"Somebody's Baby" is one of the best songs of all time, imo.
Fast Times At Ridgemont High! Love it.
Posted on 10/18/22 at 7:32 am to GentleJackJones
I thought his vocals improved over the years. Incredible songwriter. I thought his first album was so personal it was like reading a stolen diary. Btw saw him at the Lsu student union in 72. He only played Dr My Eyes in sound check. Followed by the Doobie Bros who filled in for Batdorph and Rodney who canceled.
Posted on 10/18/22 at 12:22 pm to MountainTiger
I had one of David Lindley's solo albums...on cassette
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