Thank you ladies for sharing this with us!! I will never forget this man!! And that tribute (on the Hard Rock Café Hotel) is just so awesome!!
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Thank you ladies for sharing this with us!! I will never forget this man!! And that tribute (on the Hard Rock Café Hotel) is just so awesome!!
Especially love the Springsteen/lights photo! :sad:
Actually, it's all good! Thanks everyone!
I posted this on Facebook. May I share it wit you friends.
Soon will be a Week already since Glenn’s passing and what I hate the most is the fact of it has been News you know, but Everyday life and the World naturally, takes it’s rhythm and goes back to normality. Naturally yes, but the same I feel frustrated because on that basis Glenn soon will be left out, I feel I have not mourn enough and maybe I won't ever, so is up to us to keep the fire burning and do not let his memory be eaten by political, terrorism, disasters or whatever issues. If it wasn't for you friends and fans these moments could have been unbearable so please let’s keep united through this social networks. As I said, no more Holes in the World either Heartache Tonight, let's celebrate this huge Artist life and works. My best.
I agree TLR - I think we all want to keep Glenn's memory alive and I'm sure gonna do what I can to make that happen.
Here is a tribute from veteran rock journalist and suthor Ben Fong-Torres ...
http://www.billboard.com/articles/ne...torres-tribute
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben Fong-Torres
I agree as well, TLR. We live in such a fast paced world that after a few days, a person's death becomes "old" news because of the "current" news. I'm glad and thankful that my uncle recorded several tributes off of NBC Nightly News and The Today Show, plus both Tavis Smiley episodes, so that I can watch them again. Glenn will live on through his music, his legacy, and his fans, both young and old(er).
Here's an article which talks about New Kid in Town. In all of the tributes and obits I've seen, NKIT seems to be forgotten about or passed over, which is a huge shame.
http://americansongwriter.com/2016/0...w-kid-in-town/
Quote:
http://i1283.photobucket.com/albums/...psojdgjyn1.jpg
Remembrances of the life and work of Glenn Frey have been plentiful since his passing just a week ago. When recalling his music with the Eagles, many retrospectives have listed the incredible string of hit songs the band ripped off in the ’70s and yet also noted the fact that these chroniclers of California excess and ennui were rarely critical darlings. It’s an odd conundrum, one that the band addressed in part on “New Kid In Town,” the chart-topping lead single off their 1976 masterpiece Hotel California.
Frey wrote the song in tandem with bandmate Don Henley and frequent Eagle collaborator J.D. Souther. In the liner notes to the Eagles compilation album The Very Best Of, Henley recalled the dual meaning of “New Kid In Town”. “It’s about the fleeting, fickle nature of love and romance,” he said. “It’s also about the fleeting nature of fame, especially in the music business. We were basically saying, ‘Look, we know we’re red hot right now but we also know that somebody’s going to come along and replace us — both in music and in love.”
The insight about their standing in the rock world could have come off as snarky, but Frey’s compassionate lead vocal removes any chance of that occurring. As the “talk on the streets” subtly advances from praise of the song’s “Johnny come lately” to shunning him in favor of somebody new, Frey’s vocal captures every nuance. Even when things are going well, he’s there to warn about the tricky business of “great expectations”: “Everybody loves you/ So don’t let them down.”
In the second verse, the song concentrates on romance, particularly a tender dance between two lovers, as Henley comes aboard for high harmonies. The line “Hopeless romantics, here we go again” subtly hints at both failure and boredom. This foreshadowing is seen through when the girl looks elsewhere, leading to one of those simple, yet deeply bittersweet lines the Eagles seemed to produce in abundance pulled off better than anybody thanks to those pristine harmonies: “It’s those restless hearts that never mend.”
After the bridge leaves the protagonist with “tears on your shoulder” and an eloquent guitar solo by Don Felder clears the air, the final verse shows how easily praise can turn to jealousy: “You’re walking away, and they’re talking behind you.” The closing refrain completes the kid’s journey from hero to has-been, from lover to loser: “Where you been lately? There’s a new kid in town/ Everybody loves him, don’t they?/ Now he’s holding her, and you’re still around.”
By that time the walled harmonies are soaring all around Frey, leaving him to deliver the stinging punch line which highlights both the disposability of fame and the ephemerality of romance: “Just another new kid in town.” Frey’s vocal performances were often understated, sweet and soulful on the slow songs or rambunctious and rascally on the fast ones. On “New Kid In Town,” he brings down the house.
The fact that the Eagles were self-aware enough to beat the critics to the punch on a song like “New Kid In Town” didn’t temper the vitriol they faced at the time, but none of that matters now. What matters is a body of work that’s unassailable and how much music fans have lost now that Glenn Frey, creator and performer of much of that work, is gone.
Well that was a beautiful encapsulation of this amazing song, with one exception - the writer ignored my favorite line, which I think is one of the most important to the theme of the song and one of the best Eagles' lyrics ever ...
"They will never forget you 'til somebody new comes along."
One thing's for sure though, that'll never happen for many of us here. No one can ever replace the incomparable Glenn Frey!
The Daily Telegraph's music critic (and much better than their obituary):
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/art...nt-checks-out/Quote:
The Eagles' Glenn Frey: a towering talent checks out
Neil McCormick, Music Critic
19 January 2016 • 12:47pm
Glenn Frey, the musical brain and guiding personality behind one of pop’s most glistening harmonic machines, has checked out at 67. In a sad opening to 2016, music lovers have lost another towering talent.
With his musical partner, Don Henley, Glenn Frey was one of the defining songwriters of the Seventies, responsible for the kind of tunes that will be carried on the breeze long after he’s gone. Every Eagles song is as immaculate as the expensive business suits Henley took to wearing in his later years, a sleek concoction of meaningful lyrics, flowing melody and gilded harmony. There is a seductive genius to be heard in the way all the parts blend together on shining gems such as New Kid in Town, Lyin’ Eyes, Heartache Tonight and, of course, that absolute monster Hotel California, a song that will always soar into the forever, achieving a kind of immortality.
Frey’s was the high-strung, mournful voice gliding through the gears on Take It Easy (which he wrote with Jackson Browne), Peaceful Easy Feeling, Tequila Sunrise and Already Gone. He played guitar, keyboards and sang lead and harmony, but what he mostly did, from the earliest days of the Eagles, was put the band through their paces, insisting his assembly of gifted LA players approached their pioneering brand of country rock as if they were a crew of hard-working city professionals, not a bunch of cowboys. If country boy Henley, with his aching voice and poetic dreaminess, was the soul of the Eagles, Glenn Frey was its brains, the architect of their urban groove, a Detroit native who brought the values of the motor city to the hippy ethic of the troubadours of Laurel Canyon.
Frey was a room-mate of Jackson Browne, backing musician for Linda Ronstadt and a friend of Joni Mitchell, but he was also a fan of James Brown and Motown. During the Eagles' hiatus, between 1980 and 1994, Frey had a few solo hits, and it is here, in tracks like The Heat Is On and You Belong to The City, that you can really his urban soul roots.
The Eagles played country music like they meant business. It was no accident that they took over the pop world in the Seventies, and rode on like conquering heroes for decades to come. They weren’t always the darlings of the music press, but listeners know perfection when they hear it, and there is a very good reason that the Eagles Greatest Hits 1971-1975 was the best-selling album of the Seventies. It remains among the best-selling albums ever made, with more than 40 million copies sold – and that was before they shifted 30 million copies of Hotel California and over 12 million copies of Greatest Hits Volume Two.
When the Eagles first went their separate ways, they were repeatedly asked when they would get back together, to which Don Henley famously replied: “When hell freezes over.” It was Frey who provided the cool head and calm spirit to soothe those troubled waters, making the Eagles the first of the great reunions. I saw them many times in the second half of their career, and for that, I am genuinely grateful.
I met Glenn a couple of times. He was friendly but all business, easy to respect but hard to warm to. Everything I saw of him confirmed my conviction that he was the driving force in the Eagles, a gifted writer and arranger but also a tough taskmaster.
But Henley saw other sides of his long-serving partner, and spoke to me about Frey with genuine affection. “We were like the odd couple. He would make a mess and I would clean up after him. We had a routine, every day we’d get up, shake off the hangover and start writing songs. I think it was a good balance. Glenn was very spontaneous and uninhibited - he would just sit down with the guitar and start throwing it out there. I was more reserved and introverted, and he certainly encouraged me as a writer and lyricist. Glenn’s always been a team leader. He’s a big sports fan, so he applied a lot of coaching principles to running this band. He recognises people’s strengths and gets them to do what they do best.”
It is a tough time to be a rock and roll fan. In the wake of the death of David Bowie, I wrote about the twilight of the rock gods and the ways in which the passing of our idols represents the end of a generation. But we remain thankful for the music, the soundtrack to so many lives. I hope hell has frozen over and there was no place for him down there. I hope the Hotel California has left its doors open. It is, of course, the end for the Eagles now, because there can be no Eagles without Glenn Frey. To quote their outlaw cowboy song, Doolin’ Dalton: “Four men ride in… three ride out.” But we’ll hear him on the breeze, humming in the airwaves, already gone.
The way we experience grief sure can be strange. I was actually beginning to feel better the last couple of days and had started to read some of these tributes to Glenn. I read the article above that UTW posted and was really enjoying it until I got here ...
"To quote their outlaw cowboy song, Doolin’ Dalton: “Four men ride in… three ride out".”
That just hit me like a ton of bricks, and I lost it. :weep:Now, it's 'pick me up' time again.
I had already had that line running through my head numerous times. Unfortunately it still has not had the desired effect.
The part about 'humming through the airwaves' makes me think of this:
'All I do is miss you & the way we used to be
All I do is keep the beat & the bad company
All I do is kiss you through the bars of a rhyme'....
The following line belongs to me & I won't quote it.
The article about NKIT confirms my passion for it & my belief that yes, it is often overlooked & underrated, & I hope it never will be again.
That Telegraph article was interesting; thank you, UtW. I don't think I've ever heard Glenn's voice described as mournful before.
Thank you very much for posting that. I'm not really a Springsteen fan, indeed I didn't even own any of his music. I say 'didn't' as I decided to download the mp3 of the concert and have since added Bruce's Take It Easy cover to my music library, very nice it is too. I figured as it was free it was worth downloading even if I never listen to any of the other songs.
I was not around in the 1970s, but my parents, who did live through the decade and through the Eagles and David Bowie would agree with you and your family member about their relative importance - they admire Bowie but would probably consider the Eagles to have been a bigger part of the soundtrack of their lives.
Some more wonderful tributes to Glenn too. I loved the Hard Rock Café marquee. I also thought the article about New Kid In Town was first class and was glad to see it get recognised. Apart from the fact that my username here is taken from the song's chorus, I have loved it since I first heard it and it has if anything become even more of a favourite over time (I have to thank FP and Toni in particular for some wonderful posts about what makes it such a great song). It is so cleverly structured and outstanding in just all of the important aspects (lyrics, music, vocals and melody). The only thing that I felt should have been mentioned is that wonderful moment when the music gets darker/heavier with the 'where you been lately' line. That is a stand out moment even in a song that's full of them, as it marks a clear shift in the song's mood and story.
I'd read the Telegraph article a few days ago, it's a pretty good piece I think even if there's relatively little I hadn't heard before.
Billy Joel paid tribute:
http://www.billyjoel.com/news/billy-...-tampa-concert
Does anyone else think it's a shame that the only song being played in tribute is Take It Easy? Joel has a song called The River Of Dreams - which is apparently what he was playing when he broke into TIE. It would have been more poignant if he had played Glenn's own song with this title.
Yes! TIE is a nice tribute, but there is so much more to Glenn Frey's music.
There's a video I saw where a long man played and sang Peaceful Easy Feeling. He sounded pretty good.
Those are wonderful articles for sure!! Getting teary eyed again!!
Fastlane posted this, and I feel like it should be shared here.
Quote:
Bob Lefsetz has posted his third batch of letters about Glenn. This batch is again filled with poignant tributes. There are two, though, that I wanted to pull out and post here because they really get to the heart of the man Glenn was to his friends.
Hi Bob,
It's my first time writing you, although I read and absorb all of your work. Thank you for being so thought provoking. There are times I want to jump on a plane and fly out to LA and kick your ass and other times when I want to give you a high-five, or in the case of your Glenn Frey piece, a man-hug.
Pardon in advance my, what I am sure will be, rambling. I'm doing this more for the cathartic aspect than anything else. Feel free to paraphrase and publish what you'd like, or just read and hopefully enjoy by yourself without publishing. Like I said, this will be cathartic and I need that right now.
I do indie promotion for Top 40 and Hot AC and have been doing so since the mid-80's. I have never promoted an Eagles single, although I have worked several solo records by Glenn, Henley and Timothy.
I first met Glenn at a TJ Martell golf tourney in LA in 1992 around the time that MCA released his "Strange Weather" album. We hit it off immediately and I asked him if he'd consider coming to Chicago to play in the Martell golf event that I was chairing in conjunction with the old Hitmakers conventions. He said "I'll do almost anything if it involves golf, but I'll only fly to Chicago if you come to lunch with me and my wife Cindy." I said "Anytime" and he said, "Right now." We jumped in his minivan and went to Dr. Hogly Woglys BBQ, somewhere in the LA Valley. The three of us and their infant daughter, Taylor.
We became fast friends. Like super-fast. So fast that it was kind of a "why me?" moment in my life that I'll never forget.
I was honest with Glenn when I told him that I wasn't a huge Eagles fan. In what I would learn would be Glenn's great sense of humor, he replied, "Me either" and laughed that unforgettable laugh/cough of his. But I had seen (The) Eagles in concert twice and certainly respected them...and of course both times were on dates with babes that wanted to see the shows more than me. But what really hit me immediately was how fucking cool Glenn was. Here I am sitting in a dingy BBQ joint and this guy just wreaked of cool. Even driving a minivan. He defined cool.
Although I had Glenn's contact info I felt it would be more appropriate to ask Bruce Tennenbaum and Mark Gorlick at MCA to help facilitate Glenn's participation in the Chicago Martell event. I can still remember Tennenbaum..."Are you fickin' crazy? He's an Eagle. There's no way he's gonna fly to Chicago." I asked Bruce to at least make the effort. He called me back the next day and in disbelief said that Glenn was looking forward to being our celebrity host. And he did it two years in a row!
Timing was everything, as far as my luck was concerned. Glenn was touring in support of the "Strange Weather" album and I took advantage of our friendship and visited radio almost everywhere the tour played...and of course had PD's ecstatic about meeting Glenn and getting a picture with him. Often he'd say, "I'm gonna make you look good tonight Cooper," and he'd dedicate my favorite song on the new album to "My buddy Cooper and his radio pals here tonight." The song was "River of Dreams." Never a hit. But a song I loved as my friendship with Glenn continued to grow and I learned what had inspired him to write it.
Glenn was in Chicago doing a corporate gig for GD Searle (big pharma company) on a polar-cold Saturday night in late '93 or early '94 when he told me, "Hell's freezing over on Monday." What? He said there would be a press conference and that the Eagles were getting back together. He told me it was going to be a drug and alcohol free tour in respect to Walsh and said, in his own inimitable way, "Cooper. I have no idea how long this tour will go or when and where it'll end. But whenever it does, I want to walk off the stage and see you standing in the wings with a bottle of 1976 Chateau Lafitte Rothschild in one hand a big fat doobie in the other." I complied.
"It's gonna be huge! Irving's got a 727 that seats 210-people that’s being reconfigured to seat 51. And we're gonna have police escorts to and from every venue. If you think we've been having fun the last couple of years, wait 'til you fly on EAGLE ONE." The first time I did, I was blown away! Wide-eyed and amazed at the precision of the police motorcade, motorcycles blocking entrances to the interstate and then passing our van, sirens wailing, leapfrogging with each other to get to an entrance ramp a few miles up and block it for us. And when we got to the airport, Glenn turned to me and said, "Cooper. Watch what we do when we pull up to the jet." The line of vans made three complete circles around the big 727 before pulling up under the tail where we boarded the plane. I asked Glenn why they did that, and his response..."Because we can." Typical cool!
I couldn't be at the last show of Hell Freezes Over, but on the next to last show in Little Rock I did when Glenn had asked me to do. It blew his mind! "You didn't," he said with the biggest smile you can imagine. He then asked Cindy to make sure there were wineglasses in their compartment the next night for their flight back to LA. Whether or not he ever fired up that joint on the plane, I may never know. But I do know that he loved that bottle of wine.
I have dozens of stories about how cool Glenn was. Dozens! But as Andrew Kastner wrote to you yesterday, Glenn's generosity was unequaled by anyone that I've known. It went far beyond gifts, expensive wine and dinners, always footing the tab for golf, etc. Not even watching him give every single employee in a big Emeril-owned restaurant in New Orleans a fifty and wishing them a merry Christmas surprised me. Every worker from the servers to the dishwashers to the valet parker...and we didn't even drive to the restaurant! That was Glenn. He was charitable beyond his generosity. He asked me several times over the years which charity meant a lot to me at given points in time and he'd make a donation, in my honor, to that charity...as long as it benefitted kids. He was a mensch!
Glenn loved to visit Chicago and when he was here, Gibson's, a well-known, see-and-be-seen, celebrity hangout was where you could find him along with his sidekicks I'd affectionately refer to Tom & Jerry (Nixon & Vaccarino). He loved their steaks. During Eagles tours he would intentionally base the band in Chicago for up to a week at a time and they'd fly out to shows in the Midwest, usually about an hour's flight away. I'd rarely dine at Gibson's unless Glenn was in town. Dining there without him will be strange, to say the least.
Up until just the past year and a half or so, Glenn rarely texted me. He had on old flip-phone and I guess it was cumbersome. But when he finally caught up with technology, it was always great to hear from him. He'd end each text session with me with "Pax, Elvis" (sometimes even "Elvoid").
When my mom passed away in August '14, Elvis texted me, "Heard about your mom. Lost mine last Sept 9. It's a tough one. On tour but will get to Chicago in the next week or two so we can grab dinner and toast to the fine ladies that brought us into this world. Pax, Elvis" A week later he texted me to pick a restaurant for dinner..."Just the two of us. Maybe not Gibson's. Too loud. Somewhere we can talk. Elvoid."
As always, Glenn controlled the conversation and had me laughing. When the conversation shifted to my mom's passing, I realized that while Glenn had come to Chicago to help comfort me, he was also trying to comfort himself, since the one-year anniversary of his mom's passing was just a few weeks away. I saw a side of Glenn that I had never seen. Vulnerability. It was telling. My rock star friend and I alternated attention drawing laughs, but also needed to have our napkins replaced so we could wipe our tears away. He gave me great advice on how to help me help my dad deal with losing his wife. It was truly the most precious couple of hours I had ever spent with him. And he still wreaked of cool all the while.
I sent Glenn an "inside joke" via text about an unnamed rocker back in early October. His reply was typical Elvis.."Goofball in any medium. Definitely a red state guy." I replied with the pre-pubescent "LOL" and told him I'd be in NY in November to see Hamilton and asked if he and Cindy wanted to join for the play or an early dinner. His reply cut right through me. He said he'd been in LA for two months and that he was "very sick" and described his illness. He said it was not life threatening, but demanded, "Tell no one" and even said "I repeat, tell no one." I texted him on his birthday a month later and never heard back. I knew it was more serious than he had thought.
I know how many millions of lives Glenn touched through his music. But he touched mine in a way that only a certain kind of man could. While we would only see each other occasionally, our genuine friendship never waned. My life has been enriched because my friendship with Glenn Frey. And not because he was so fucking cool. Because he was truly a great man.
Rick Cooper
_________________________________________________
Hi Bob!
I was so very fortunate to be a friend of Glenn Frey's back in the Aspen days.
He was a man of passion, fierce determination, HUMOR and the ability to communicate in a most authentic way.
We shared time skiing, "playing" golf, and sharing our musical passion that still inspire me to this day.
I was at Glenn's home the evening that he first had his wonderful wife Cindy over for a dinner. He asked me to come out to the house to hang with him and meet Cindy as he was so very nervous to meet her. Cindy may not even know this but, this is also a view into the Glenn's incredible humility. He was so excited that this new beautiful energy had come into his life and did NOT want any form of celebrity to diminish the potential to present himself as "just a real guy that happens to do what I do." Not an ounce of ego in sight, just truth.
I was also present the night that "Hell Froze Over" in a small club in Aspen. As he introduced the "mystery band members" late in the evening, you could hear the incredible pride and passion in his voice to be with his Brothers again. As Mr Henley walked out on that tiny stage and took his seat behind the drums, the place came apart. As the first few notes of Desperado took form, everyone could feel the magnitude and importance of what was taking place. Hope reborn. Passion in flight once again. Come on man!! THAT was what it was all about to Glenn. The absolute synergy between everyone on that stage AND in the crowd. He was the enzyme that created the action potential all around him. That IS what the great ones do.
He had such great pride in his family, friends and his music that it was infectious to be with him and feel that wave form radiate from him and only hope that some of it would carry through in our own lives
Thank you Glenn for sharing your time and truth with me and the rest of this planet! I also thank Cindy for showing Glenn that LOVE IS REAL!!
With Humility and GREAT Respect,
Dr Michael Bathke
Thanks, AG95, I hadn't seen those additional posts. What an extraordinary man he was! Of course we knew that already.
Glenn's family recall his visits to the Lehigh Valley. There are some child hood shots of Glenn in this video. http://m.wfmz.com/glenn-freys-family...alley/37519798
That's a cool video. Nice to see Glenn as a young kid and to hear stories and memories from his family.
Wish I was more computer savvy...those are beautiful pictures...:heart:
Here's a video that Entertainment Tonight put together.
https://youtu.be/IFrgnGMCX28
Glenn was an adorable little kid!
Thanks for posting the Rick Cooper letter, AG - that was one of the most moving things I've read about him.
I love that video from Entertainment Tonight and it made me smile soo much seeing his beautiful spirit and face!!
Glenn was very precious as a child as well!!! Love him soo!!
Loving all of these heartfelt posts! And realizing even more so that Glenn was such an amazing, talented, funny, gifted, family man! :heart:
I posted this in the other thread, plus the press thread, but I'm going to post the article here. (It's too bad that the "family" photo used doesn't have Taylor in it)
http://m.nydailynews.com/entertainme...icle-1.2503748
Quote:
To Eagles fans the world over, Glenn Frey was the superstar who led one of the most successful bands in rock history. To me he was a fellow dad, whose son went to the same afterschool program as mine on the Upper West Side.
I somehow got wind of the fact that he was father of one of the kids there, but I didn't expect I'd be seeing Frey at pickup. I assumed that a mega-millionaire rock star would send a nanny in a town car to do that, but to my surprise he showed up with some regularity, and I got used to seeing the guy who wrote "Take It Easy" and "Tequila Sunrise" in the lobby.
He lived downtown and I live in Brooklyn, so we rode the downtown train together with our sons and another fellow dad on a few occasions. I recall thinking as we packed on to a particularly jammed rush-hour A train that his royalty checks no doubt offered the means to sidestep such indignities, but, as a regular subway rider who embraced New York at the street level, he wedged into the crowd without complaint.
http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopo...glenn-frey.jpg
I also recall thinking that Frey's fellow straphangers -- none of whom ever recognized him -- would no doubt have been surprised that the chatty guy talking basketball in their midst was the front man for the best-selling American band in history.
http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopo...ter-honors.jpg
I had only the most passing acquaintance with him, but I got a steady kick out of seeing the 70's LA rock icon as a devoted dad ferrying his son home, and saying goodbye in the parking lot as our kids later shipped off to summer camp, chatting about how much we were going to miss them. And not only was he unfailingly friendly to me (dubbing me "Big Daddy"), but he was extra nice to my quirky and super-inquisitive son, fielding his many Eagles-related queries with patience and good humor.
So next time I hear "Hotel California," instead of thinking of a hard-partying rock star I'll recall Frey as an amiable guy, a New Yorker and a dedicated dad -- and I'm going to miss seeing him at the camp bus this summer.
That's a good one. Note that he was still assigning nicknames!
Aww, that's sweet.
Sorry if this is OT (and/or too nosy), but how long had Glenn been living in NYC? I wonder why they moved there. The quality of life would be a big step down from Hawaii or Aspen, IMO.
And now I'm back in tears again, but this is one cool tribute video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnFmwOLETlg
Thanks. Just one more question, then I'll hush: that little girl on the right in the Frey family photo isn't Taylor?
As far as we know that was Deacon's girlfriend.
No need to hush NMB! Your questions are valid.
No, it isn't. This article claims to have gotten a photo of Taylor from her Facebook page. Given the few photos of a young Taylor that I have seen, I believe that it is her. (scroll down a little bit to see the photo of Taylor)
http://heavy.com/entertainment/2016/...-son-daughter/
What a beautiful girl! Such luminous eyes.
I thought they'd made the move when Glenn started 'teaching' at NYU (where Taylor graduated from)...
http://www.cleveland.com/music/index..._a_new_gi.html