The Eagles - Desperado

The Eagles: Desperado

Album #172- April 1973

Episode date - May 4, 2022

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    As the only album of the band’s career to not reach the top 40, The Eagles must look back on this record as a failure. From where I’m sitting, “Desperado” is their only true artistic success.

    It wasn’t custom-built to blow the doors off of the pop charts a la “Hotel California,” it wasn’t painstakingly constructed piece by piece like “The Long Run,” and it avoided awkward overtures to disco like “One of These Nights.” Back when the Eagles were a young, up and coming band, I liked them, but things got weird quickly. The band’s debut served as a mainstream but slightly awkward introduction to west coast country rock.

    “Desperado” was the Eagles’ second album and it showed incredible artistic growth, but by their third album (“On the Border”), artistry seemed to get thrown under the bus. From there, the band’s popularity exploded, which pretty much severed all ties to their comparatively humble past. The highly stylized, airbrushed photograph on the back cover of “One of These Nights” told me all I needed to know about where the band was headed. Their last two albums remain staples of classic rock, but they can induce nausea in me, mostly from the sheer redundancy of hearing those hits again and again and again and again. Please, no more.

    “Desperado” is from a more innocent time, and it has a cohesiveness that every other Eagles album lacks. If you happen to share my prejudice, then you need to consciously avoid thinking about the callous monster that the band became. “Desperado” sounds like the fruitful product of four guys working together to create a seamless, timeless album. Producer Glyn Johns was instrumental in keeping the songs focused, avoiding the excess production techniques that drowned much of the band’s later work.

    More than any other Eagles album, “Desperado” is worth hearing from start to finish, but you’re not likely to hear it played on the radio. It is a ‘concept’ album that takes place in the late 19th century American west, about being young and lured in by that era’s personal freedom and lawless culture. It plays like a cowboy movie with a strong existential streak. Bernie Leadon and Randy Meisner, both gone in two more albums’ time, provide excellent material that sits well with the more recognizable melodies of Glenn Frey and Don Henley. It is a band at work, before they devolved into a pair of dictators keeping underlings in their place. The Eagles would go on to become extraordinarily rich and famous, but in the deal they lost more than they gained. Ironically, all of their triple-platinum albums now sound like dated timepieces, but this one, the black sheep of the bunch, still sounds fresh. As Randy Meisner forewarns, “It’s a certain kind of fool that likes to hear the sound of his own name.”

    Featured Tracks:

    Doolin-Dalton

    Twenty-One

    Out of Control

    Tequila Sunrise

    Desperado

    Certain Kind of Fool

    Doolin-Dalton (Instrumental)

    Outlaw Man

    Saturday Night

    Bitter Creek

    Doolin-Dalton/Desperado (Reprise)

    April 1973 - Billboard Charted #41

    Related Shows

    The Move - Move

    The Move: Move

    Album #91 - March 1968

      0:00
      0:00
      Dr. John - Gris-Gris

      Dr. John: Gris-Gris

      Album #90 - December 1968

        0:00
        0:00
        The Velvet Underground: White Light, White Heat

        The Velvet Underground: White Light, White Heat

        Album #89 - January 1968

          0:00
          0:00
          Van Dyke Parks: Song Cycle

          Van Dyke Parks: Song Cycle

          Album #88 - December 1967

            0:00
            0:00
            Traffic: Heaven is in Your Mind

            Traffic: Heaven is in Your Mind

            Album #87 -December 1967

              0:00
              0:00
              Leonard Cohen: Songs of Leonard Cohen

              Leonard Cohen: Songs of Leonard Cohen

              Album #86 - December 1967

                0:00
                0:00
                The Who: The Who Sell Out

                The Who: The Who Sell Out

                Album #85 - December 1967

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  13th Floor Elevators: Easter Everywhere

                  13th Floor Elevators: Easter Everywhere

                  Album #84 - November 1967

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    Love: Forever Changes

                    Love: Forever Changes

                    Album #83 - November 1967

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      Nico - Chelsea Girl

                      Nico: Chelsea Girl

                      Album #82 - October 1967

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        Antonio Carlos Jobim: Wave

                        Antonio Carlos Jobim: Wave

                        Album #81 - October 1967

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          Buffalo Springfield: Again

                          Buffalo Springfield: Again

                          Album #80 - October 1967

                            0:00
                            0:00