This is Don Henley live in concert in Los Angeles California back in 1985. That's according to the limited notes that came with this recording and his comments throughout the show suggest that the location (LA) is correct, and the songs performed are from the right timeline. However I have a feeling that this may actually be material from more than one gig based only on the sound differences around 'Desparado' and a couple of other tracks, and I am not familiar with the Fox Bowl which the notes suggest was the venue. Feel free as always to add any comments on this one. The End Of The Innocence may have marked the end of an era, but it is unquestionably the musical pinnacle of Don Henley's career. The one drawback may be that Don spoke too soon by his disparages of Reagan and the social mindsets of the 80's. All of that said this is a great performance from Don when he was riding high as a solo artist following the initial break up of The Eagles. Source: FM Radio or Soundboard. Building The Perfect Beast 2. Dirty Laundry 3. Drivin' With Your Eyes Closed 4. You Can't Make Love 5. You're Not Drinking Enough 6. Them And Us 7. Not Enough Love In The World 9. Desperado 10. The Boys Of Summer 11. All She Wants To Do Is Dance 12. Ford figo music system manual pdf. Sunset Grill 13. Talking To The Moon 14. Hotel California Website: Official. Comments: Following the breakup of the Eagles, Henley embarked on a productive solo career, the most commercially successful of any of the Eagles. His first solo release, 1982's I Can't Stand Still, was a moderate seller. The single 'Dirty Laundry', a denunciation of tabloid media, was Henley's all-time biggest hit. It reached No. 3 on Billboard Hot 100 at the beginning of 1983 and earned a Gold-certified single for sales of over a million copies in the US. It was also nominated for a Grammy. This was followed in 1984 by Building the Perfect Beast, which featured layered synthesizers and was a marked departure from the Eagles' country-rock sound. A single release, 'The Boys of Summer', reached No.5 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song's haunting rhythms and lyrics of loss and aging, capped by seeing 'a Deadhead sticker on a Cadillac,' immediately connected with a certain age group. Don Henley also won the Grammy Award for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for the song. Several other songs on the album, 'All She Wants to Do Is Dance' (No. 9 on Hot 100), 'Not Enough Love in the World' (No 34) and 'Sunset Grill' (No.22) also received considerable airplay. Henley's next album, 1989's The End of the Innocence, was even more successful. The song 'The End of the Innocence', a collaboration with Bruce Hornsby, is a melancholy, piano-driven tale of finding bits of happiness in a corrupt world, and reached No. 8 as a single. The hit follow-up, 'The Heart of the Matter', is an emotive chance remembrance of a lost love.
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