Don Henley is the one in the middle |
Seven Bridges Road (Steve Young cover)
Take It Easy
One of These Nights
Take It to the Limit
Tequila Sunrise
Witchy Woman
In the City (Joe Walsh song)
I Can't Tell You Why
New Kid in Town
How Long (J.D. Souther cover)
Peaceful Easy Feeling
Ol' '55 (Tom Waits cover)
Lyin' Eyes
Love Will Keep Us Alive
Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away (Vince Gill cover)
Those Shoes
Already Gone
Walk Away (James Gang cover)
Life's Been Good (Joe Walsh song)
Heartache Tonight
Funk #49 (James Gang cover)
Life in the Fast Lane
Encore:
Hotel California
Encore 2:
Rocky Mountain Way (Joe Walsh song)
Desperado
Encore 3:
Victim of Love
**
It was curious to me that any time the audience got on their feet, the following song was downbeat so everyone sat down again. I couldn't fathom it really. The Toronto audience is loud, raucous and really wants to get on their feet and stomp. Any time the setlist allowed that to happen, they brought it down again and ended the evening with two really downbeat tunes.
Sounds like I'm being critical. This is the first time I've seen the Eagles and with only one being there it almost makes me feel that it could have been a tribute band. It was actually on Joe Walsh's tunes that the band really stretched out and I must say that I never thought I'd ever get to see the mighty Joe strut his stuff in such a way. He is a mighty guitarist and I still have no idea why on earth he'd want to join the Eagles in the first place.... obviously overlooking the monetary aspect. He is a far better musician that they are/were even and he clearly holds the band together these days.
Whilst I am on this subject I am also surprised how little Timmy Schmidt did too. He abandoned one of my favourite bands (Poco) in 1973 or 1974 for the Eagles and since that time has I think one song that he sings. With Poco he was a major contributor but of course the monetary aspect is very compelling and 40 years with the Eagles isn't too bad. He sang one song.
So everything else pretty much was sung by the younger Frey or Vince Gill. They did fine but they really aren't the Eagles.
I read the autobiography of Don Felder (one of the earlier guitarists) and have seen some biopics where of course Glenn Frey took much of the limelight. He was a very good talker. It must have been in one of those where he said that every show had to be perfect and every song had to be note for note from the album as that is what the crowd wanted, so that is what they are going to get. This show was exactly that too. Note for note. As I mentioned before it was only on Joe Walsh's tunes that there was any playing out, all the standards were per the album.
I hate thinking it because I paid so much for the tickets, but my overall feeling was that it was all a little dull.
Nearly forgot. My Eagles story.
Back in 1973, the Eagles played a show at the Oval in South London and there was a real buzz because they were this new, big thing. Tickets were GBP 3.50. Back then this was a lot of money as I watched Frank Zappa headlining the same venue for GBP 2 two weeks before. It was a full day show starting at midday running to midnight or thereafter. No curfews in those days, just endless breaks in between sets. Two hours for Frank Zappa! On the same bill as the Eagles was a no name playing his first major tour... Elton John, and I don't remember who else. I gave it a pass and played cricket instead! So catching up some 45 years later...
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