Eagles Long Road Out Of Eden Raritan
Eagles - Long Road Out Of Eden (Ukulele) ukulele by Eagles with free online tab player, speed control and loop. Correct version. Added on March 2, 2008. All albums made by Eagles with reviews and song lyrics. Long Road Out Of Eden (2007). Gonset Gsb 101 Manual Lawn. The Eagles-Lyin' Eyes (Lyrics). Eagles, Don Henley, Glenn Frey, Joe Walsh, Timothy B. Schmit - Long Road Out of Eden - Amazon.com Music.
Just because it took them 13 years to deliver a studio sequel to their 1994 live album, don't say it took a long time to cash in on their reunion. They started cashing in almost immediately, driving up ticket prices into the stratosphere as they played gigs on a semi-regular basis well into the new millennium. So, why did it take them so long to record a new studio album? It could be down to the band's notoriously testy relations -- did leave and sue the band in the interim, settling out of court in 2007 -- it could be that they were running out some contractual clause somewhere, it could be that they were waiting for the money to be right, or the music to be right.
It doesn't really matter: there was no pressing need for a new album. Fans were satisfied by the oldies, and the band kept raking in the dough, so they could take their time making a new album.
And did they ever take their time -- the 13-year gap between and, their first album since 1979's, was nearly as long as that between their 1980 breakup and 1994 reunion. Far from indulging in a saturation campaign for this long-awaited record, released the double-disc with surgical precision, indulging in few interviews and bypassing conventional retail outlets in favor of an exclusive release with Wal-Mart, which is not only the biggest retailer in America but also where a good chunk of the band's contemporary audience -- equal parts aging classic rockers and country listeners -- shops. (The album was also available on the group's official website, eaglesband.com via musictoday.com.). It was a savvy move to release as a Wal-Mart exclusive, but the album is savvier still, crafted to evoke the spirit and feel of ' biggest hits. Nearly every one of their classic rock radio staples has a doppelg채nger here, as the -written 'How Long' recalls 'Take It Easy,' the stiff funk of 'Frail Grasp on the Big Picture' echoes back to the clenched riffs of 'Life in the Fast Lane,' and while perhaps these aren't exact replicas, there's no denying it's possible to hear echoes of everything from 'Lyin' Eyes' and 'Desperado' to 'Life in the Fast Lane,' and turns 's 'I Don't Want to Hear Anymore' into a soft rock gem to stand alongside his own 'I Can't Tell You Why.' It's all calculated, all designed to hearken back to their past and keep the customer satisfied, but yet it often manages to avoid sounding crass, as the songs are usually strong and the sound is right, capturing the group's peaceful, easy harmonies and 's guitar growl in equal measure. The Eagles burrow so deeply into their classic sound that they sound utterly disconnected from modern times, no matter how hard strives to say something, anything about the wretched state of the world on 'Long Road Out of Eden,' 'Frail Grasp on the Big Picture,' and 'Business as Usual.'