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Profile F*ge 3
Kabuki star Tamasaburo sheds his kimono. He's still playingawoman,
but there's a better twist waiting.

Jazz Fage 5 Has Branford Marsalis got the late


night blahs? Is he happy withJay? He's straight with his answers.

1; Movies ffia&* S
Are trrose cute dogs really having a good time being movie stars? Well,
since you asked, some aren't.

LOS ANGELES

TIMES

MAY 22,1994

THE
EAGTES ARE

BACK
Was it love, greed or

long-terrn memory loss that reunited them?


Let's ask.

COYEB S

ORY

Don Henley, left, and Glenn Frey perform with the reunited Eagles in April for an MTV speciat to be shown tater this year. Says Hentey:

:?'";1ffiilg?ff:1".T''*

They CanTll You Why


By ROBERTHILBURN

Welcome back to Hotel California: After

Grop . . .

split.up that left anything

9rehearsal wirf, enough'urgency to raise the blood pressure of anyone familiar v/ith the band's history. The Eagles didn't just break up 14 years ago. The quintet exploded from the tensions sumounding it-chiefly, the pressures they put on themselves to live up to huge artistic and commercial expectations. Despite the up to $300 million in potential $'orldwide album and

\shouts

stop," Glenn Frey during an Eagles

but peaceful, easy feelings, the Eagles are together again,Don Henley and
Glenn Frey are writing songs-and they promise it's norjust a money thing
listens again to the music as an
engineer adjusts the controis. Satisfied, he rejoins the musicians on stage. At the end of the Nobody has to make any reparations.' " But the biggest surprise is the change Henley, who was knorvn in the '70s as the most

"But you know what? I don,t really give a damn," he says, smiling at the return of his old
combativeness. "I'm having fun."

Henley catches himself.

song, he smiles. "Nice guitar parts," he says to band mates Don


Felder and Joe Walsh.

in

tour

grosses looming

for

this

reunion, it's easy to imagine those pressures returning and a single

This peaceful, easy feeling is typical of the reunion, says Frey, who with Don Henley was a chief alchitect of the group's musica.l
vision.

intense Eagle-so fiercely protective of the Los Angeles band's legacy that he would dash off heated letters to critics whom he felt slighted the group. "This is fun," Henley, 46, says

gles talk about coming back together for friendship and for the love of music, lots of people are going to suspect that the real motivation is the big bucks in-

E
Fun.
associated over the Eagles.

That's not exactly the word the years wilh

volved. And the band-which

foul-up shattering it. A 1990 reunion attempt disintegrated before it even got to rehearsals. But Frey's only concern this
afternoon is that he can't hear the piano in the sound mix Looking as trim as he did in the mid-'80s ads for a fitness center chain, Frey, 45, leayes the band and walks to the center of a massive soundstage in Burbank, where he

"We've all grown up a lot," Frey says after the rehearsal.


"When you first break up, the wounds are open. . . . There is
going to be some anger and some

with a disarming grin as

he

relaxes backstage after the rehearsal. "We are musicians. We are supposed to go out and play for people. Getting back together is nomal. The abnormal thing

hurt.

"But as years go by, all you remember is the gorid times. I said
when we got back together, 'I don't live in the past. As far as I am concerned, this is Day One.

was breaking up

in the first
one

place." Just when no topic seems likely

to rattle Henley and Frey,


emerges: money.

No matter how much the Ea-

time," he says sharply. "The press is cynical. The public is cynical. . . . The truth is they have been offering us buckets of money every year to get us back together and the truth is there's not enough money in rhe universe to get us to do this if we didn't want to do it."

begins its reunion tour on Friday at the lrvine Meadows Amphitheatre-certainly made itself a big target by charging $115 for top tickets in certain markets. Henley is a proud man, and the accusation stings. "We live in a very cynical

rehearsing

It's fitting thar rhe group is this afternoon on a

movie sound stage. This is a band, that has always been surrounded by drama. The name of the summer tour-"Hell Freezes Over',is itself a playful reminder of how for years this was the one gToup

that no one ever thought iould


get back together.

"Life in the Fast Lane" were a more accurate description of the band's anxious pace, when it was known in the rock world as much for internal strife and its reported
r-i55

the troubled strains ol

The Eagles'first hit single may have been the soothing ,'Take It Easy" in the summer of 1922, but
1g76's

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AirSel$ Times

Above, Eagles guitarists Don Felder, left, and Joe Walsh; at right, bassist Timothy B. Schmit. we are prepared that if it stops being tun, it'll stop-just as it stopped before," says Felder.

"lthink

fast-lane excesses as for such gems as "Hotel California" and


"New Kid in Town."

In many ways, Henley and Frey, who came to Los Angeles


from Texas and Michigan, resPectively, to follow their rock 'n' roil goals, wrote about the state of the American Dream, using their experiences in rock to conveY the innocence, temptations and disillusionment of that Pursuit. The pressure of trying to top

flavored narratives ("LYin'

Whether serving uP ballads ("Best of My Love"), country-

doing this or Iiving uP to that," he said. Walsh described the atmosphere in the band at the time as "paranoid." He said the group "lost perspective. We just kinda

days, has said, "The longer you're

in a band, the harder it is. The first album was recorded in two,

Beach Arena lor then-Sen. AIan Cranston. When the rest of the Eagles

sat around in a
months."

daze...

for

Eyes") or bluesy workouts ("One of These Nights"), the Eagles were the most consistent makers

of quality hits of any American


band since Creedence Clearwater

"Hotel California" caused the


making of the next album-l9?9's "The Long Run"-to be a nightmale. Frey at the time described the biggest casualty of those sessions as his friendship with Henley. "We always had to worry about

Frey also cites burnout and drugs as conlributing factom. "I hesitale to blame it on drugs because that's such an easY [excusel, but

three weeks. The second in four weeks and so forth. 'Hotel Caiifornia' took nine months. 'Long Run'took 114 years. "[By then] they were 32, 33. They've built houses. They've made tons of money, but they haven't had rime off to really

RevivaI. But those high standards took

it is fair to

say that
saYs

cocaine may have brought uP the

their tol] on the band,

whose original lineup consisted of FreY, Henley, guitarist Bernie Leadon and bassist Randy Meisner.

worst in a lot of us," Frey


now.

it. So there are lots of reasons to back off from all the pressufe." The end came in a phone call
enjoy

returned to Miami that year to complete lhe group's live album, Frey stayed in Los Angeles. The band had to fly tapes back and forth to get il completed in time for a holiday season release. Not even the iure of an extra $2 million advance from Asylum Records if the album contained

two new Eagles songs


enough to breach the gap.

was

By the time Felder was added in


1974 to give the band a harder

Speaking about the breakup period, Irving Azoff, who managed the band during its glory

from Frey to Henley, shortly

after the group's final performance-a 1980 benefit at the Long

With wounds still open two years later, Frey ridiculed the idea of ever playing with the
Eagles again. "There'll never be a

rock feel, there were

already

'Greed and Losr Yourh' [our,'he said flatly. He said he'd rather make music on his own.

reports of Srueling recolding ses-

sions and screaming matches


backstage. "When I first walked in, everYthing seemed crazy," Felder once said. "Bernie was quitting and Randy was talking about quitting. Everyone was yelling at each other and fighting. TheY had just

It would be another 12 years before he changed his mind.


n
Eagles went on to make solo albums in the'80s, but only Henley continued to prosper at anywhere near the same creative and commercial leve.l. Afier a sluggish start with his 1982 solo album, his next two-

All five

fired their manager and their


producer. I thought I had joined a

band that had just broken

'Oh,'

uP.

said

to

myself, 'smart
the

1984's "BuiIding

the Perfeci

move."'
Leadon

Eagles

"Hotel California" by Meisner. They were replaced bY Walsh


and Timothy B. Schmit, resPec'

in

finally did leave

1975, followed after

Beast" and 1989's "The End of the Innocence"-sold 2 miliion and 3 million copies, respectively. The

best of the songs, including

tively. It was the "Hotel California" album in i9?6 that was the band's crowning achievement-and, in

"Heart of the Matter" and "Boys of Summer," also reflected the craft and character associated
with the Eagles, It wasn't such smooth sailing for Frey. Despite such hit singles as "The

its albatross' The work, which spent nine weeks at No. 1, chronicled the attitudes of a generation trapped between the fading idealism of the '60s and the
rctrospcct,
encroaching greed of the'80s.

Heat
HENRY DILTZ

Is 0n"

Blues"
From left, Schmit, Frey, Walsh, Felder and Henley backstage during "The Long Run" tour in 1980.

mid-'80s, Frey's recording career stalied. None of his five solo albums made the
Pkase see Page 61

in the

and "Smuggler's

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"Wnen sometFng U[e ttrat trap-

pens, you laybackand

say,'whai's

important?' The answer to me was --q write songs in the moming' play' continued,frornPage| h"u" narionar rop 10. He made some Elf--T-..9"-{'::::.oX.."nd ';:.. .. dinner vrith my beautiful new wife sloesleps mlo acung, rncluorng lne who was just presrlant with our lead role in ths ggg-1y 5s;; :,il"ti-"r---Srr*t],- u"t it- iili first,child. The timins was bad for canceled last year after one epi- "'";- ,-.As late as Iast January, the sode. t:,"t"dvrong-and all Fetder, walsh and schmit also :ii"g',til . five -uasles were making separate Ialleo rc DeCOme Consrslenl sales prans ror rne summer. torces. work on so it y/as only narurat rha! rhe 5-Tl:I J-t',-^q:tiq,-* solo-album and reunion rumors wouro negin crcul ::.19:^1::-ht:,ltt overseeing his campaign to preiating. The swprise, in retrospect, is that it was Frey-rather than Henley-who tended to be the
holdout.
Pl,ease see Page 621

"Every couple of years, I'd run

into Irving [Azoff] and he'd

go,

'You know there is a bushel basket of $100 bills waiting for you if you guys could just do an album or do a tour,' " Frey says now. "But I'd go, 'Yes, but I have a nice life now,

Irving. It's not that important to me."'


reunion.

Henley was generally open to a

"I

went in cycles about it," he

says, sitting in a trailer backstage after the rehearsal. "I think there

wele times when I thought, 'Never-if they begged me, I wouldn't do it.'And then there would be

times where

would think, 'It

wouldn't be so bad.'

"Those thoughis kept going around like that for years, but I don't think I ever totally discounted the possibility of

it. As

our

friend J.D. Souther always used to say, 'Time passes, things change.' "

tgg0 for Henley and Frey to take a stab at writing together. The idea was to include two or three new songs in a greatest hits album that would be rel.eased in
conjunction with a U.S. tour.

Things

had changed enough by

But Frey ultimately


"I wasn't ready," Frey

backed

away,
says now

of that period. "I hadjust remalried . . . had just had major surgery to

remove a section of my large intestine-a congenital thing since birth-that left me laying on my back in Cedars-Sinai with a bunch
of staples in my stomach.

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Eagles
Continued lrom Page 61 serve Walden Woods in Massachusetts. Frey was heading to Nash-

Azoff says he Put the album together to raise funds for l{enley's Walden Woods Preservation cam-

mote

ville to make a country-rock


aLbum. Between studio sessions,

paign and to kick off the country division of Azoff's Giant Recordsnot to lure the Eagles back into the nest. However, when sales topped

million within six months-it

Felder was looking forward to spending time with his familY on a new boat. Schmit and Walsh were also thinking about separate album projects. . The first step in the change of plans was the success of "Common Threadr The Songs of the Eagles," an album that featured versions of Eagles hits bY sueh countrY stars as Clint Black and Travis Tritt.

went to No. 1 on Billboard's country charts and No. 3 on the PoP charts-the album's PoPuiaritY und.erscored the public's interest in a
reunion.

Easy" from "Common Thread." Schmit, 46, knew the importance of the day, but he tried to downplay it in his mind. "I went around for a Iong time after the breakup changing the station when Eagles songs came on because it was sad to think about

'lritt's version of "Take It

times, but it always seemed strained," Azoff saYs.

ililile

air

still do it."

. . . just to know that we can

"But this time it all felt right l could feel that things were different . . . tha! after all these Years,
the wounds were reallY healed." Agreed Lopez, "It was just one of those special moments when Glenn

lsoid-out lrvine Meadows concerts and one sold-out GIen Heien Blockbuster Paviiion show are just the start of what maY be a Yearlong
Eagles assault.

I f everything goes righr. the five

and Don realized how much of a history there was between


back."

what had haPPened," says the singer and co-writer of "I Can't
Tell You WhY." "The [Tritt video shoot] was fun, but that's as lar as it went. i said I am not going to start thinking ohal if. I am just going ahead with mY
plans for the summer." The video shoot went so smoothly, however, that steps were soon under way to change those PIans. The Eagles reunion always depend.ed on the green light from

bond there

themand how much they wanted it


For one thing, the timing
was

was

how much

two-hour special that will


shown on MTV

The band has already taped

be

in

SePtember-

But would the five Eagles get

along after all these Years? Though

finaUy right.

the musicians said they kept in


touch, relations between HenleY
and Frey remained delicate'

Henley was free to work with

around the release of a Iive album will include irom the taping. studio versions of four new songstwo of lhem written bY HenleY and

It

'

Henley says now oI his relationship

lthe conflictl was

"In

some waYs,

think a lot of
imaginarY,"
dozen

the Eagles, since his own recording career was on hold because of a Iawsuit with Geffen Records. FreY

Frey.

The first leg of rhe rour

is

wasn't tied uP with an acting or


recording projecl. With Henley and FreY on board, calls were made to the other band members and Pians for a tour were begun. "To me, this isn't a reunion, but a resumption," says Azoff. "There ts a thirst in Don to work with Glenn . . . that I think is going to keep them together." Henley agrees that the goal is to keep the Eagles together beyond the tour. He looks forward to writing with FreY.

with FreY during the last

years. "We were apart, and rumors would get back to us about something the other guy might have said and it might send us off, but

both HenleY and FreY, so the matter was in their hands when
they got together for lunch with Azoff, who manages HenleY, and
Peter Lopez, who manages FreY, in Aspen, Colo., on Feb. 11. Azoff sensed an immediate rapport. "There had been times over the years in AsPen where Glenn and Don would get together and we

scheduled to end Oct. 8 at the Rose Bowl or the L.A. Coliseum, but the shows are likely to continue overseas until riext sPring. In all, the tour couid gross uP to $100 million in the United States and PossiblY

another $50 million overseas' sources say. T-shirts and other


merchandise at, concerts could add another $25 million.

every time we were actuallY in each other's Presence, we wele

fine. Every time we would run into each other, there was no bitterness or animosity." The test came last Dec. 6, when they ali agreed to guest in a video being shot in Los Angeles to Pro- - would

The album could gross $125 million lo $150 miliion, based on


projections of 10 miliion in worldwide sales. But there are complications with the coliection. Because its old Elektra Records contract has expired, the band is a free agent thai can sign with any

try to Pretend it

was

old

"I'm a collaborator bY nature," he says. "I went out to Glenn's

house the other day and I just had the beginning of a song. I threw it at him and he Picked uP on the idea and we finished it that day It felt

wonderful writing with Glenn again. I left his house walking on

label. The problem is that Henley and Frey have contracts with Geffen Records and MCA Records, respectively, and both labels have warned that they'll sue if the artists make an Eagles album-on

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LOS ANGELES TNTES

CALENDA

the grounds that the.artists are tied exclusively to their labels.

various forces-including the


emergug punk generation-as too iaid back, irrelevant and overly
cynical.

The band could release the album anyway and deal with the lawsuits, or release it on MCAowned Geffen Records, perhaps as a way for Henley and Frey to gain their release from the labels. Geffen may be willing to take the live album in lieu.of two more Henley albums on the gf,ounds the

for the long seast!il' i:':' :l':l t i t ti "It real! felt good right away," says the upbeat Schmit, who lives

1976.

"I think

one big difference is we

"I never thought every

song v/e

did smelled like a rose," Henley says now. "There is some of the
stuJf that Glenn and I listen back to

Eagles album will outsell themand that could end what has been a bitter legal squabble. Not that all the $300 million will go to the Eagles. Azoff and Lopez decline to discuss a breakdown of the potential gross, but sources say bands on a stadium-arena tour should walk away after expenses

now and we cringe. But that's the way it alv/ays goes. "I think we were just trying to

figure out our place in the world. It's not so different now from all

these kids

in

Seattle and the


always

grunge groups. Anger is one of the

primary motivators of rock

and there
adds:

is

'n'roll
certain
he

hopelessness out there."

About the cynicism charge,

with about

40Vo

lo

50Vo

of lhe

box-office take and about $2 per album sold. This could conceivably mean $75 million to $85 million for
best-case scenario. It is assumed that Henley and Frey-as founding members-

the Eagles under the

"Back when we were accused of being hopeless and cynical, I always lhought there was a lot of hope and idealism in what we were writing.

"We were trying to encourage


people to stand on their own two feet . . . to see that idols of any kind, whether they be rock'n'roll or religious, generally have feet of clay. I think a lotof our songs were memos to ourselves." With the tour approaching, the mood at the rehearsal was businesslike, even subdued-as if everyone involved was saiving his energy for the days ahead, Walsh,46, who is living on a boat

will
be

receive the largest share of


an

Woodland Hills viith his wife and their lwo children. "There is something about playing with a certain group of people that you can't replace. . a connection that works." The enthusiasm is tempered by the memories of how everything was torn apart beiore. "I think most of the time in the back of everybody's mind there was the kind of yearning for it to come back together, yet also kind of afraid of re-entering the whole thing," says Felder, 46, a father of four who lives tn Malibu with his wife. "We all remember what happened last time and we remember the good and the bad . . and we hope that we are a.ll older, more mature now and can learn from the mistakes. So far, it has been gxeat. But I think we are prepared that if

in

have learned how to differentiate between what to worry about and

what not to worry about,"

says

Henley, who is single and has a house in Los Angeles-and who tends to be the most philosophical of the band members. "We used to

I don't think anyone who bought the tickets complained about the price." Like Henley earlier on the same topic. Frey catches himself tensing
tou.r. Besides, and sighs.

"The only way we can prove


ourselves is through the music," he says finally. "That's why we had to all be committed to this to make it work. This isn't something we can just wa.lk through. I wouldn't have gotten near this if thought we were going to embarrass ourselves. My nightmare is to have the Eagles end up like the old [washed-up] heavyweight fighters and have people say, 'Gee, the Eagles should have never come back. . . . They

worry about and try to control ineverything that went on stead of just worrying about the
music."

Frey, who also has a house in


Los Angeles, is the most outgoing member of the band, the kind of guy who could have been the star quarterback and class president in
high school.

Looking

at the now

deserted

gotmurdered.'"
at Iruine

rehearsal stage, he is asked about his 1982 "Greed and Lost Youth" remark.

tr

The Eagbs open their tour FridnA

Meadnws Arnphitheatre,

"I am prepared to be called

and. continue there SaturdaA, nest

that. Both have earmarked

it

stops being fun, it stopped before."

it'll stop-just

as

unspecificed amount-believed to

in the hiillions-for

Everyone

is counting on

that

'Jurassic rock' and I'm prepared for certain people to not want to believe it is sincere, ..that we are just in it for the moneY," FreY saYs of the reunion tour. "But we have turned down millions and millions

plny June
soll, out.

Sundag, Mag 31 and June

Blockbuster Pauili,on. AII these shows, uhich begin at I p.rn., are


nobert Hihurn is The
mlisic critic.

3 at

the Glcn Hebn

l. Ihe!

Tine!

pop

various

charities, including environmental and humanitarian groups. "Despite the figures involved, this isn't a case of Don and Glenn being desperate for money," says someone close to the band. "They have made so much money from Eagles publishing that they can Iive comfortably the rest of their Iives. This tour is something they

maturity. There was such an adult ring to the Eagles'material that it's surprising to rcalize that Henley and Frey were roughly the age of such troubled '90s youth spokesmen as i the late Kurt Cobain and Eddie i

in

corporate sponsorship on this

in

Vedder when they were wriring

Madna del Rey while earth-

uantedlo

do,"

Fl

evond the debate over ticket EDp.i"". and whether "greed" is

quake damage at his Studio City house is being repaired, compared the six-day-a-week sessions to baseball's spring training, where everyone is trying to get in shape

many of the Eagles hits. Frey and I Henley were in their late 20s when I "Hotel California" was released in I

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