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Thread: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

  1. #21
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    So more a tribute to his songwriting then, fair enough, but once again his solo career barely features.

    ETA: The Daily Double article states that The Sad Café & Smuggler's Blues were played.

  2. #22
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    Yes, I've just updated my list. When you said that about his solo songs, I remembered seeing Smuggler's Blues. As it was in part a celebration of "Americana", maybe they left out the more R&B songs.

    I like that Danny Grenier is standing pretty much where he stood in any Glenn solo performance I've seen a clip of.

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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    It sounds like the concert was great!!! So wish we could've seen it.

  4. #24
    Stuck on the Border Outlawman13's Avatar
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    I wish I could've been there!!

    You came along and changed my life Glenn!!

  5. #25
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    Hi all ---

    I was fortunate enough to get tickets for the event, and thought I'd pass along my review. Apologies for the lack of detail (which many of you are so great with your reviews).

    To begin, there was a strict "No Phones, No Camera's, No Video's or else you're gone" policy. When I heard that as I got my wristband, I started to think maybe we'd get a couple unannounced guests

    As it turned out, the people listed in the articles were the only ones who performed -- there were no special guests.

    If Irving or anyone from the band did in fact attend, they stayed extremely out of site. For those who have never been to the Troubadour, their "green room" is upstairs with a window overlooking the stage. Its very easy for those of us on the floor (300 or so?) to peer in. There is a VIP reserved section that's also up there, but it was reserved for Mid Tenn St Univ and the Americana Music Assoc. Not saying any of them weren't there... but it would really really tough to not be noticed in a small venue like that.

    Due to the "no phone" thing, I wasn't able to make any notes about setlist, but what was written here is pretty much right, with the exception of Desperado (done AMAZINGLY by Venice) and another Frey solo song that I can't remember the name, for the life of me.

    The Show opened with Venice doing TITTL. In fact, they did about 2/3 of the songs during the night with various people singing the lead. Lee Ann Womack did ICTYW and BOML. This trio from Nashville named Escondido did Hollywood Waltz... and the female singer was FANTASTIC. Another highlight was a guy named John Paul White doing Most of Us Are Sad and New Kid in Town. Jack Temchin did TOYL and (an out of key, imo) Already Gone. He and Henry Diltz told a couple of funny stories, although I've heard most before. The others artists were all younger, yet quite good. Then to the end of the night, Bonnie Raitt comes out and did slide guitar and sang a verse on HT (Although she had tech issues and we couldn't hear her until the the 2nd half of the song). She also sang a verse on Lyin Eyes (1st encore). Everyone came out for Take it Easy... and it was over after 2 and a half hours.

    Now, some random notes --

    - The "no phones" thing, while frustrating cause I wanted to grab a pic or two, happened to be kinda refreshing. It was kinda nice, everyone just into the music

    - I'd say half of the room knew one person or another on stage

    - The organizers spoke about their foundation and a Program at Mid Tenn St. for 10 minutes or so. I get that they do a grammy thing every year and need to promote, but when they decided to call it a "Tribute", then that sort of stuff should have been minimized even more than it was. Just my opinion

    - Someone here wrote it earlier -- the majority of songs seemed to be Don Henley sung. Kinda thought they should have been songs that Frey sung, mostly. Ole 55, James Dean, Outlaw Man, solo stuff... hell, even Teenage Jail!

    -- As I said earlier, no other guests. Guessing bigger, more known people will be at the Glenn Celebration that Irving is planning. I wish more was made about these songs being played at the Troub, but only Jack or Henry mentioned it

    All in all, an enjoyable evening. Earth shattering... no. But definitely a good time.

    Steve
    Last edited by steve_e_dee; 02-15-2016 at 02:02 PM.

  6. #26
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    Thanks for the writeup Steve. There are a few clips on the Venice website (or there were last night). My impression is it was a bit rough-and-ready - friends getting together for a sing-song rather than the polished performance we're used to with Eagles songs. Which makes for a good evening but is not the kind of thing they'd want captured for all time.

    I'll add the two songs to my list. This is living vicariously.

    ETA: Looking at the updated song list, the majority of the songs were sung by Glenn, and that's without counting "Take It To the Limit" and "Desperado" which he sang on occasions.
    Last edited by UndertheWire; 02-15-2016 at 06:01 AM.

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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    http://www.billboard.com/articles/ne...rey-troubadour

    I've replace the setlist in my earlier post with the one from Billboard.

  8. #28
    Moderator Ive always been a dreamer's Avatar
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    Thanks so much for your review Steve. I'm glad you were able to get into the show and enjoyed reading your comments.

    And UTW - I'm going to post the entire text of the Billboard writeup that you linked to above.

    (BTW - I just love the story Jack Tempchin tells about how Glenn had a hundred candles burning for inspiration when they wrote The One You Love.)

    Bonnie Raitt, Lee Ann Womack and Others Salute Glenn Frey at Troubadour Tribute


    2/14/2016 by Chris Willman
    Billboard.com


    The loss of Glenn Frey is a heartache worth at least two nights. In advance of Monday’s Grammy telecast salute to the Eagles' co-frontman, the Americana Music Association presented its own tribute to the singer Saturday night at the Troubadour, the “Sad Café” where the original Eagles first found one another roughly 45 years ago.

    “This was the place where the s--- happened, night after night,” said photographer Henry Diltz, who reminisced about the band’s fateful name change from the Beefeaters to Eagles, along with some desert- and peyote-fueled tales of shooting the group’s first two album covers. Diltz was one of three contemporaries of Frey’s on stage for the tribute, the others being Bonnie Raitt and “Peaceful Easy Feeling” songwriter Jack Tempchin. (Other members of the Frey extended family included manager Irving Azoff, who looked on from the balconies of the one-time country-rock clubhouse.)

    Mostly, though, the love came from next-generation singer/songwriters -- or next generation after that -- including Brandi Carlile, Lee Ann Womack, Jack Ingram, frequent Jack White collaborator Ruby Amanfu, and ex-Civil Wars member John Paul White, who noted he was born the year one of his selections (“Most of Us Are Sad”) came out.

    Raitt was, not surprisingly, the MVP of the night, dueting with Carlile on “Peaceful Easy Feeling,” contributing a slide guitar solo on “Heartache Tonight,” and taking verses in the show-closing ensemble numbers. The next best thing to hearing Raitt covering the entire Eagles catalog would have been hearing her do a few solo numbers, but her collaborative efforts (as she played well with others) were the next best thing to that.

    Song choices in the two-and-a-half-hour show included tunes originally sung by other members of the Eagles, with a nod toward the fact that Frey’s name appeared with a co-writing credit on the vast majority of the group’s material, and he was a key instigator behind songs that he generously allowed Don "Golden Throat" Henley and others to take the lead on, like “One of These Nights.” White pointed out that “Most of Us Are Sad” had been a rare Frey solo composition written before the Eagles formed, even though Randy Meisner was handed the vocal reins on the 1972 debut album.

    White fared perhaps best in effortlessly recapturing Frey’s deceptively relaxed vocal tones, also taking on what remains arguably the Eagles’ best ballad, the seemingly thousand-verse “New Kid in Town.” (The Eagles: now there was a band that knew something about civil wars.) Amanfu didn’t seem to have quite the same sense of Eagles history, failing to note that “Sad Café” was written specifically about the Troubadour, but she had her own personal take on the band’s original ‘70s-era swan song -- “I’m still in a generation that is inside the sad café, trying to change the world” -- with an interpretation that was one of the night’s particularly tender highlights.

    Country star Womack admitted she was “very nervous -- I’m gonna do my best,” and showed it a little during an initial version of “I Can’t Tell You Why,” a melody that probably no one except Timothy B. Schmit should ever tackle. She regained her form during “Best of My Love,” generously acknowledging JD Souther’s principal writing contribution. Fellow Texan Ingram put a ramshackle spin on the rueful “Wasted Time” and rowdy “Life in the Fast Lane,” joined for the latter by a house band that included the core lineup of the group Venice and a few veterans of the Eagles’ group and solo tours.

    Although that house band provided most of the backup, an early evening highlight had the Cedric Burnside Project joined by Shannon McNally for improbably fiery renditions of a couple of numbers from Frey’s solo career. “Smuggler’s Blues” played as an actual gutbucket blues… who could have guessed?

    Filling the sentimental favorite role was Tempchin, the very un-rock-star-like guy who was the lone writer on the rock classic “Already Gone,” and had a rare chance to sing it in front of a roaring band. “It’s been a long time since I played here as the harmonica player in Longbranch Pennywhistle,” Tempchin said, recalling the pre-Eagles band fronted by Frey and Souther. Preceding his solo acoustic version of “The One I Love,” Frey’s first post-Eagles top 20 hit, Tempchin recalled the night it was written.

    “We knew each other for 10 years before we ever tried to write a song together,” Tempchin said. “The Eagles went on a bit of vacation… He had rented a house in the Hollywood hills, and he had a hundred candles burning in there... I said, ‘Glenn, what’s with the hundred candles? After we write, do you have a date or something?’ He said, ‘No, man, that’s (for) the muse. See, she’s up there, and there’s a lot of guys tonight trying to write a song, and we want to make sure she comes down and visits us.

    At one point, Jackson Browne was rumored to take part in the Americana salute, which came together over the last 15 days, but he ended up being drafted to join the surviving Eagles for Monday night’s tribute on the Grammys, which will also include Lady Gaga’s salute to David Bowie.

    Setlist:
    Take It to the Limit — Venice
    Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed — Cedric Burnside Project and Shannon McNally
    Smuggler’s Blues — Cedric Burnside Project and Shannon McNally
    Desperado — Venice
    I Can’t Tell You Why — Lee Ann Womack
    One of These Nights — Nicki Bluhm
    After the Thrill is Gone — Jessie Baylin
    Hollywood Waltz — Escondido
    Wasted Time — Jack Ingram
    Sad Café — Ruby Amanfu
    Tequila Sunrise — Sam Outlaw
    Best of My Love — Lee Ann Womack
    Most of Us are Sad — John Paul White
    New Kid in Town — John Paul White
    Life in the Fast Lane — Jack Ingram
    The One You Love — Jack Tempchin
    Already Gone — Jack Tempchin
    Peaceful Easy Feeling — Brandi Carlile and Bonnie Raitt
    Heartache Tonight — Nicki Bluhm and Bonnie Raitt
    Lyin’ Eyes — ensemble
    Take It Easy — ensemble

    "People don't run out of dreams: People just run out of time ..."
    Glenn Frey 11/06/1948 - 01/18/2016

  9. #29
    Stuck on the Border Prettymaid's Avatar
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    "No man, that's for the muse!" Lol
    ~ Cathy ~

    And I dream I'm on vacation 'Cause I like the way that sounds,
    It's a perfect occupation for me.

  10. #30
    Stuck on the Border Outlawman13's Avatar
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    Default Re: Glenn Frey Tribute at the Troubadour ---

    Thank you for that amazing review Steve! So awesome that you went to that! And that article is pretty impressive too! LOL I love what Glenn said as well!! That's for the muse!

    You came along and changed my life Glenn!!

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