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Donald Henley (born July 22, 1947 in Gilmer, Texas) is an American rock
musician who is the drummer and one of the lead singers and songwriters of
the band The Eagles. He has since had a successful solo career and has
played a founding role in several causes.
Don Henley moved from Linden, Texas to Los Angeles in 1970 to record an
album with his early band, Shiloh. Shiloh was bankrolled by fellow Texan
Kenny Rogers, then flush with cash from his band "The First Edition.
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" Shortly thereafter, Henley met Glenn Frey through Amos Records in Los
Angeles. They both became members of Linda Ronstadt's backup band, which two
months later became its own act, The Eagles.
The first Eagles album was released in 1972 and contained the hit song "Take
It Easy," as well as Henley's first hit songwriting attempt, "Witchy Woman."
As the seventies progressed, Henley's raspy vocals replaced Glenn Frey's
twangy tenor as the focal point of the Eagles "sound." The band broke up in
1980 following a difficult tour and increased peronal tensions resulting
from the recording of the band's last studio album The Long Run. During the
Eagles' existence Henley co-wrote (usually with Frey) most of the band's
best-known songs, notably "Desperado" and "Hotel California".
Solo career
Following the breakup of the Eagles, Henley embarked on a productive solo
career, the most successful of any of the Eagles. His first solo release,
1982's I Can't Stand Still, was a moderate seller. The song "Dirty Laundry",
a denunciation of local television news, received the most airplay. Henley
and Stevie Nicks would co-write and duet on her Billboard Hot 100 #6 hit "Leather
and Lace" that same year.
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 #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. The music video for the song was a
striking, evocative, black-and-write, French New Wave-influenced masterpiece
directed by John Baptiste Mondino that won several MTV Video Music Awards
including Best Video of the Year. Henley also won the Grammy Award for Best
Male Rock Vocal Performance for the song. The album's "All She Wants To Do
Is Dance" (#9 on Hot 100), "Sunset Grill", and "Not Enough Love in the
World" also received considerable airplay.
Henley's next album, 1989's The End of the Innocence, was even more
successful. The title track, a collaboration with Bruce Hornsby, was a
melancholy, piano-driven tale of finding bits of happiness in a corrupt
world that reached #8 as a single. The hit follow-up, "The Heart of the
Matter", was an emotive chance remembrance of a lost love. Both of these
songs used the effective technique of varying the words in the chorus each
time it is sung, to advance the song's narrative. The album's "The Last
Worthless Evening" and "New York Minute" were among the other songs that
gained radio airplay. Henley again won the Best Male Rock Vocal Performance
Grammy for the album.
In concert tours Henley would play drums and sing simultaneously only on
certain Eagles songs; on his solo songs he would either play electric guitar
and sing or just sing. Occasionally Eagles songs would get drastic
rearrangements, such as "Hotel California" with four trombones.
A long period without a new recording followed, as Henley waited out a
dispute with his record company while also participating in a 1994 Eagles
reunion tour and live album. During the hiatus, Henley did the background
vocals for country star Trisha Yearwood's hit Walkaway Joe and dueted with
Patti Smythe on Sometimes Love Just Ain't Enough, both in 1992. Henley
finally released another solo studio recording, Inside Job, in 2000, to a
generally indifferent response, although the track "Taking You Home"
received airplay.
As of 2005, Henley continues to tour with The Eagles.
Causes
In 1990 Henley founded the Walden Woods Project to help protect Walden Pond
from development. The Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods was started in 1998
to provide for research and education regarding Henry David Thoreau.
Henley co-founded the non-profit Caddo Lake Institute in 1993 to underwrite
ecological education and research. As part of the Caddo Lake Coalition, CLI
helps protect the Texas wetland where Henley spent much of his childhood.
In 2000 Henley co-founded with Sheryl Crow the Recording Artists' Coalition,
a group founded to protect musicians' rights against common music industry
business practices. In this role he testified before the U.S. Senate
Committee on the Judiciary in 2001 and the U.S. Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science and Transportation in 2003.
Henley is not always an idealist. In a March 2001 interview on Charlie Rose,
he stated that "rock bands work best as a benevolent dictatorship," with the
principal songwriters in a band ("me and Glenn Frey") being the ones that
will hold the power. |
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DON HENLEY PICTURES |
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