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GRAMMYs

Glenn Frey

Photo: Tommaso Boddi/WireImage.com

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Glenn Frey, 1948–2016

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Six-time GRAMMY-winning Eagles co-founder dies at age 67
Tim McPhate
GRAMMYs
Jan 18, 2016 - 5:41 pm

Glenn Frey, co-founder of six-time GRAMMY-winning band the Eagles, died Jan. 18 from a combination of complications of rheumatoid arthritis, acute ulcerative colitis and pneumonia. He was 67.

As one of the principal songwriters for the Eagles, Frey co-wrote many of the group's '70s classics, including "Best Of My Love," "One Of These Nights," "Take It To The Limit," and "Hotel California." Adding an extra dimension to the Eagles' breezy country-rock California sound, Frey also sang hits such as "Tequila Sunrise," "Lyin' Eyes," "New Kid In Town," and "Heartache Tonight."

Frey scored solo success in the '80s with a pair of gold albums, No Fun Aloud (1982) and The Allnighter (1984), and hits such as "The Heat Is On," "You Belong To The City" and "True Love." The Eagles reunited in 1994 for the hugely anticipated Hell Freezes Over Tour, which ultimately became the top-grossing tour in 1995. The group continued to be among the music industry's most successful touring acts, ranking No. 30 on Pollstar's top North American tours of 2015.

The Eagles released their most recent studio album, Long Road Out Of Eden, in 2007, with the tracks "How Long" earning a GRAMMY for Best Country Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocals for 2007 and "I Dreamed There Was No War" (written by Frey) winning Best Pop Instrumental Performance for 2008. The group has three recordings in the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame, including their 1976 album Hotel California and its Record Of The Year-winning title track.

"As a founding member of the Eagles, Glenn Frey was an integral part of one of the most storied bands in pop history," said Recording Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow. "Glenn's untimely passing is a huge loss for the music community, and we offer our condolences to his family, friends, colleagues, and fans."

Linda Ronstadt

Linda Ronstadt

Photo: Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns

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Linda Ronstadt's 'Heart Like A Wheel': 7 Facts heart-wheel-7-facts-about-linda-ronstadts-album-grammy-hall-fame

'Heart Like A Wheel': 7 Facts About Linda Ronstadt's Album | GRAMMY Hall Of Fame

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Investigate the album that led the mid-'70s into country rock, showcasing talent that went on to win many GRAMMY Awards and reshape American pop music
Philip Merrill
GRAMMYs
Mar 16, 2018 - 3:20 pm

"And it's only love, and it's only love/That can wreck a human being and turn him inside out" — "Heart Like A Wheel" by Anna McGarrigle

Linda Ronstadt's fifth studio album, Heart Like A Wheel (1974), was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame among other recordings receiving the special award in 2018. Like other seminal records on the list that swept into popular consciousness, this particular hit had an impact that changed the game and opened up a new musical period, especially for American pop and what came to be known as "country rock."

A great live performer and song stylist, surrounded by some of the world's greatest rock and country musicians, Ronstadt's voice carried a heartfelt urgency that could slide expressively from pure ringing tone to emotion so thick it threatened to saturate the microphone. At times on Heart Like A Wheel, Ronstadt's passion and authenticity soars in a belt out of her phrasings or even holler. Let's go for a spin around Linda Ronstadt's life in the '70s, and deeper into Heart Like A Wheel, with these seven fascinating facts.

1. The Eagles Take Flight

Commercial success versus artistic culture is barely a conflict if, at the time, success can't help but follow the artists creating the culture. This was the case with Linda Ronstadt's legendary backup band, the Eagles.

This phenomenon was especially apparent at the 18th GRAMMY Awards (1975) as the Eagles won their first GRAMMY the same year Ronstadt did, in Best Pop Vocal Performance By A Duo, Group Or Chorus for "Lyin' Eyes." With the Eagles' Glenn Frey and Don Henley both backing up Ronstadt on Heart Like A Wheel, they enjoyed side-by-side commercial success while making a cultural impact.

At Linda Ronstadt's Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame induction in 2014, her Parkinson's condition left her unable to attend. Frey's acceptance speech on her behalf summarized events that led to their musical partnership, beginning at The Troubadour in Los Angeles in 1970. "Linda and I, we became friends, and in the spring of 1971, she hired me and a singing drummer from Linden, Texas named Don Henley to play in her backup band. From the first rehearsal, I felt we were working on a style of music none of us had ever heard before," said Frey. "While touring with Linda that summer, Don and I told her that we wanted to start our own band, and she, more than anyone else, helped us put together the Eagles."

2. The Song That Put Country Rock On The Map

Described in the contemporary Rolling Stone album review as a "soulful wail," Ronstadt's vocals on "You're No Good" took American pop music to a place it hadn't quite been before. With a strong lyric to a rocking beat, it combined soul and country flair.

On the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated Feb. 15, 1975, "You're No Good" was No. 1. A triumph for her producer Peter Asher as well as Ronstadt, it led the album's ascent to double-platinum status. But the song wasn't always an obvious choice for a single. In fact, it had started as the song Ronstadt always used to close her live sets. Putting it on the album was recalled as an afterthought.

3. Romantic And Musical Partner, J.D. Souther

In that same speech, Frey said he loved Ronstadt "at first sight" but "a guitar-slinging, love-rustler from Amarillo, Texas, named John David Souther … beat me to the punch." A romantic figure, especially as a true country singer/songwriter, author Marc Eliot said Souther was considered for the Eagles but one of the other members objected. He performed with Frey as a duo on their 1969 self-titled album Longbranch Pennywhistle, and he produced Ronstadt's 1973 album Don't Cry Now and wrote "Faithless Love" for Heart Like A Wheel. Years later when Glen Campbell covered it as his lead single on Letter To Home, the classic brought J.D. Souther a GRAMMY nomination for 1984 for Best Country Song.

The Rolling Stone review described "Faithless Love" as "perhaps the strongest ballad he's written to date," and it praised Souther's singing harmony as well as Herb Pedersen's banjo. "I don't think I realized how world-class J.D. was because everybody that I knew was writing good songs," Ronstadt said in a recent interview. "I didn't know how good they were going to be." This GRAMMY Hall Of Fame induction provides lasting recognition of that level of excellence.

4. The Title Track's Folksinging Sisters

The album's title track was penned by Anna McGarrigle, who was part of Montreal's folk scene. The lyric quoted above, that love "can wreck a human being," was called out by Rolling Stone because it "distills the themes of the album [and] … underscores the essence of Ronstadt's vocal personality."

With her sister, the album Kate & Anna McGarrigle was released in 1976, and Ronstadt's enthusiasm with the sisters is evident in their many filmed appearances together. Kate McGarrigle had married Loudon Wainwright III in 1971 and they are the parents of Rufus Wainwright.

Also appearing on the title track was Maria Muldaur, whose hit "Midnight At The Oasis" had been nominated for Record Of The Year for 1974 at the 17th GRAMMY Awards. Muldaur was also an enthusiastic singer of other compositions by the McGarrigles.

5. Topping The Everly Brothers' On The Charts

It is a quality of great interpreters that they can take somebody else's hit and make theirs even bigger. The Everly Brothers' "When Will I Be Loved" went to No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1960 but Ronstadt took it to No. 2 in 1975, rearranging the verses for her version.

The winner of Record Of The Year at the 18th GRAMMY Awards, "Love Will Keep Us Together" by the Captain & Tennille, dominated the year and also kept Ronstadt's No. 2 version of "When Will I Be Loved" from hitting No. 1. The record was considered alongside "You're No Good" as Heart Like A Wheel's lead single.

6. Her First GRAMMY Win Goes Country

On the B-side of Ronstadt's No. 1 hit "You're No Good," a more dignified song by Hank Williams, "I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You)," showed the country side of her abilities, which won her Best Country Vocal Performance, Female at the 18th GRAMMY Awards. The woman singing angelic harmonies against Ronstadt on the album version is Emmylou Harris, who went on to win that same category at the 19th GRAMMY Awards for Elite Hotel. The two ladies joined with Dolly Parton at the 30th GRAMMY Awards to win Best Country Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal for their 1987 album Trio.

7. Powerhouses Behind The Scenes: James Taylor And Peter Asher

With so many legends around her during her ascent in music, Ronstadt was a magnet for the best. A close look at other GRAMMY winners associated with Heart Like A Wheel shows one name that already had one GRAMMY win and many more nominations going into the project, before her album turned so many people's careers for the better. James Taylor's lullaby "You Can Close Your Eyes" closes Heart Like A Wheel, and his star status was in a sense hovering over the album. Taylor won Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male at the 14th GRAMMY Awards for "You've Got A Friend," a huge success as a single, and its B-side was Taylor's lullaby.

It's also worth noting that Linda Ronstadt and James Taylor had also served as the background singers on Neil Young's "Heart of Gold" from Young's bestselling album of 1972, Harvest.

Heart Like A Wheel's producer Peter Asher had quit running A&R for the Beatles' Apple Records in order to manage Taylor just a few years earlier. By the mid-'70s, Taylor, with the help of Asher, was leading a powerful soft rock sound that grew mighty with Ronstadt and the Eagles' first wins and then spread, for example with Emmylou Harris' win the following year.

Other personnel on the album who went on to win GRAMMY Awards are singer Cissy Houston, mother of Whitney; instrumentalists John Boylan, Jimmie Fadden, Timothy B. Schmit, and John Starling; engineers Dennis Ferrante, Val Garay, and George Massenburg who also received the Technical GRAMMY Award in 1998. Two of Peter Asher's later wins were Producer Of The Year at the 20th and the 32nd GRAMMY Awards and he is credited with having a significant hand in crafting the California soft rock sound.

Reflecting on Linda Ronstadt's legacy and the tragic event of her voice being silenced by Parkinson's disease in 2013, The New Yorker wrote, "The sound of Ronstadt's voice — invincibility, bravery, emotion channeled into intelligence and art — is the sound of overcoming anything." For diehard fans and newcomers alike, Heart Like A Wheel remains some of her career's most compelling evidence of what makes Ronstadt so special.

"Space Oddity": 7 Facts About David Bowie's Cosmic Ballad | GRAMMY Hall Of Fame

Don Henley performs with the Eagles in 2017

Eagles' Don Henley

Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

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Eagles Announce 2018 U.S. Tour eagles-hit-road-announce-2018-north-american-tour

Eagles To Hit The Road, Announce 2018 North American Tour

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GRAMMY winners' new lineup featuring Vince Gill and Deacon Frey to crisscross North America beginning in March 2018
Tim McPhate
GRAMMYs
Nov 21, 2017 - 8:00 am

The Eagles are ready to get back on the road. The GRAMMY winners will launch a North American tour on March 14, 2018, at the United Center in Chicago.

The 14-date tour will hit select arenas and stadiums through the spring and summer before winding up July 28 in Philadelphia.

The Eagles' lineup will feature Don Henley, Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit along with newcomers Vince Gill and Deacon Frey, who is filling in for his late father, Glenn Frey. This quintet debuted at the bi-coastal Classic East and West festival this past summer, marking the band's first performances since honoring Glenn Frey at the 58th GRAMMY Awards. 

Who Are The Top GRAMMY Winners Of All Time?

"We've got some new blood. We all know the songs pretty good, but we just have to run the drill," Walsh told Rolling Stone in July. "It's like being an athlete and doing the reps to get into shape. The new guys [Deacon Frey and Vince Gill] have to get to the point where it's automatic or it's transparent."

Tour openers will include Jimmy Buffett And The Coral Reefer Band, James Taylor And His All-Star Band and Chris Stapleton, with each performing only at select dates. 

Tickets will go on sale via Ticketmaster on Dec. 1 and Dec. 2.

60th GRAMMY Nominations To Be Announced Nov. 28

Eagles perform at the 58th GRAMMYs in 2016

Eagles, with Jackson Browne

Photo: Lester Cohen/WireImage.com

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Eagles Announce New Tour Dates eagles-announce-new-tour-dates-deacon-frey-vince-gill

Eagles Announce New Tour Dates With Deacon Frey, Vince Gill

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The six-time GRAMMY winning band has made the surprise announcement of additional tour dates this coming fall
Brian Haack
GRAMMYs
Aug 15, 2017 - 12:49 pm

For anyone counting, Eagles drummer and founding member Don Henley is officially 0 for 2 on claiming his band will never tour again.

Following a pair of successful and critically acclaimed festival appearances at the Classic West and the Classic East this past July, six-time GRAMMY winners the Eagles have made the surprise announcement that they have scheduled four additional tour dates this fall.

The two festival appearances were the band's first performances in the wake of the tragic passing of guitarist and lead vocalist Glenn Frey at the age of 67 in early 2016. 

Taking the late, iconic lead singer's place on both vocals and guitar for the upcoming dates will be his son Deacon Frey, alongside 21-time GRAMMY winning Country singer/songwriter Vince Gill.

Following a heartfelt in memoriam tribute to the elder Frey at the 58th GRAMMY Awards alongside Jackson Browne, Henley had been quoted in March of 2016 as saying the band would not be touring again, calling the GRAMMY tribute a "fitting farewell."  Yet there still seemed to be a need to sayfarewell to the fans themselves who'd followed the band during its now 46+ year run, an opportunity the band had at the east and west editions of the Classic festival.

However, with a band this great, it's well-nigh impossible to say no when the fans demand an encore, and demand they have. Thus longtime followers of the group may remember back to 1982, when Henley was first asked if the band would ever play together again following their 1980 disbanding, to which he simply responded "When Hell freezes over."

Ashley Campbell Pens Letter To Father Glen Campbell

Eagles' Glenn Frey plays guitar

Glenn Frey

Photo: Tommaso Boddi/WireImage.com

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2016 GRAMMYs: Eagles to pay tribute to Glenn Frey remembering-glenn-frey-eagles-pay-tribute-grammys

Remembering Glenn Frey: Eagles to pay tribute on GRAMMYs

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Don Henley, Bernie Leadon, Timothy B. Schmit, and Joe Walsh to join with Jackson Browne for a one-of-a-kind tribute to the late Eagles co-founder
THE GRAMMYs
GRAMMYs
May 15, 2017 - 2:36 am

Eagles members — eight-time GRAMMY winner and current nominee Don Henley, GRAMMY winner Bernie Leadon, three-time GRAMMY winner Timothy B. Schmit, and five-time GRAMMY winner Joe Walsh — will take part in a one-time-only special tribute to six-time GRAMMY winner Glenn Frey on the 58th Annual GRAMMY Awards. The late musician's bandmates will come together with close friend and collaborator Jackson Browne to perform a classic hit from the Eagles' legendary songbook.

"Glenn Frey's untimely passing was a huge loss for the entire creative community," said Neil Portnow, President/CEO of The Recording Academy. "For more than 45 years, the Eagles have played a significant role in shaping our musical landscape. We are honored to welcome the band, along with Jackson Browne, to the GRAMMY stage in tribute to Glenn's tremendous legacy."

Henley is currently nominated, with Stan Lynch, for Best American Roots Song for "The Cost Of Living" from his Cass County album.

As a co-founder of the Eagles, Frey's six GRAMMY wins included Record Of The Year for 1977 for "Hotel California," and, most recently, Best Pop Instrumental Performance for 2008 for "I Dreamed There Was No War." Three Eagles recordings, including 1976's Hotel California, have been inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame.

Previously announced 58th GRAMMY performers include Adele; Travis Barker; James Bay; Justin Bieber; Luke Bryan; Gary Clark Jr.; Andra Day; Diplo; Ellie Goulding; the "Hamilton" Broadway cast; Alice Cooper, Johnny Depp and Joe Perry of the Hollywood Vampires; Sam Hunt; Tori Kelly; Lady Gaga; Kendrick Lamar; John Legend; Little Big Town; Demi Lovato; Pitbull; Bonnie Raitt; Rihanna; Lionel Richie; Skrillex; Chris Stapleton; Robin Thicke; Meghan Trainor; Carrie Underwood; and The Weeknd.

The 58th Annual GRAMMY Awards are produced by AEG Ehrlich Ventures for The Recording Academy. Ehrlich is executive producer, Louis J. Horvitz is director, and David Wild and Ehrlich are the writers. Two-time GRAMMY winner LL Cool J will host Music's Biggest Night for the fifth consecutive year.

Taking place at Staples Center in Los Angeles, the 58th Annual GRAMMY Awards will be broadcast live in HDTV and 5.1 surround sound on CBS on Monday, Feb. 15 at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT.

For updates and breaking news, visit The Recording Academy's social networks on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

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Some of the content on this site expresses viewpoints and opinions that are not those of the Recording Academy and its Affiliates. Responsibility for the accuracy of information provided in stories not written by or specifically prepared for the Academy and its Affiliates lies with the story's original source or writer. Content on this site does not reflect an endorsement or recommendation of any artist or music by the Recording Academy and its Affiliates.