Eagles Online

Entries in 10/16/04 Bangkok, Thailand (4)

Tuesday
Oct192004

Bangkok Photo

 Thanks to Somak!

Monday
Oct182004

Eagles in Full Flight (The Nation)

Bangkok's Independent Newspaper

Thirty years on, the quintessential American rock band shows they’re in it for ‘The Long Run’ as they kick off the ‘Farewell I Tour’ with a real beauty in Bangkok

Between the “Peaceful Easy Feeling” laid down oh so quietly by original band members Don Henley and Glenn Frey to the spirit-jolting guitar raunch of later addition Joe Walsh, Friday night’s Asia-Oceania tour kick-off by the Eagles was a string of superlatives even longer than their 27-song hit parade.

The first night of a double-header at Impact Arena was three hours of high-tech, high-quality fun for a capacity, star-studded crowd that started roaring from the moment the lights went out a half-hour late - seconds after Thaksin Shinawatra and his entourage had grabbed their floor seats - and worked itself up to a deafening crescendo as Henley crooned the final, goosebump-lifting notes of “Desperado” to close the second encore and the show.

Evocatively lit and filmed DVD-style for the jumbo screens, with crane shots and all, it was a glorious night for the band, the crew, the fans and the standard-elevating BEC-Tero Entertainment.

The ecstasy wasn’t seamless, though. There’s no point trivially bemoaning the absence of “Best of My Love”, which the Eagles haven’t played for some time, but the evening’s pacing, for one thing, was bizarre.

Not only was the third tune, the theatrically arranged “Wasted Time”, oddly placed so early on - in an off-kilter, 10-song opening set punctuated with a 15-minute intermission - the stage remained dark for long pauses between each piece as the musicians regrouped, thus chopping up the momentum.

Impact’s acoustics were tested, even with the best sound equipment money can fly in. You could clearly hear every shimmering voice on near-whispered tunes like “Lyin’ Eyes” and “Tequila Sunrise”, but there was always a thudding phantom accompaniment.

And Henley seemed to be struggling throughout. The Eagles are all aged 57 or so, but Henley currently seems to have a bit of a Matthew Perry bloat going on and had little energy to spare beyond replicating his share of the hits note-perfect.

He abandoned his drums often, and not just to come out front for a vocal, and where Frey talked to the fans, played some guitar solos and danced a bit, Henley was barely there.

All that was forgiven, of course, by the time he closed the proceedings with a gut-wrenching “Desperado”, and to be sure, his own solo hits “Dirty Laundry” and the operatic “Sunset Grill” were among the night’s other highlights.

Not so “Hotel California”, which despite a lovely Mexican trumpet intro and terrific dual guitar work, received - perhaps inevitably - an anticlimactic rendering.

Following Frey’s dubious defence of the ticket prices the week before (“We’re a legend”) and the band’s ban on cameras, concerns that this would be an Egos, not an Eagles, concert proved unfounded, although their individual hits made up much of Friday’s show.

Henley also had his clever No 1 single “The Boys of Summer” and 1984 solo jump-up “All She Wants to Do is Dance”. Frey mined his own disco phase for “You Belong to the City”, which fortunately Joe Walsh stepped in to save at the end.

Ah, Joe Walsh. Wotta guy. Already a major solo artist before he joined the Eagles in 1975, he was a smart addition, always guaranteed to blast through the laid-back quasi-country with pure, high-volume guitar joy and vocals designed to please.

“In the City” let him state his intentions early on in Friday’s show, and after a jazz-inflected “Sunset Grill” lit the fuse later on, getting a few people on their feet, Walsh put on a hard hat and went to work, getting the rest of the crowd up with “Life’s Been Good”, a rollicking testament to fair destiny that even featured sing-along cue cards on the big screens.

Then Walsh reached all the way back to 1970, when he was still with the James Gang, for “Funk 49”, one of the surprise bests of the night. The black-clad back-up brass - Greg Smith, Bill Armstrong, Chris Mostert and Al Garth (formerly of Loggins & Messina) - were swaying in unison like breeze-licked trees and Walsh and drummer Scott Crago opened up a canyon of rock.

After that, Walsh’s “Rocky Mountain Way” - saved up among the encores - was pure gravy.

Though nothing’s been said thus far in this review about singer-bassist Timothy B Schmit, it was he who generated the evening’s first excitement, eliciting screams with his marvellous falsetto on “I Can’t Tell You Why”. He was utterly charming singing “Love Will Keep Us Alive”, with audience members chipping ion on the chorus.

And it was he who ensured the purity of the Eagles’ harmonies throughout the concert, from “Already Gone” to “Take It Easy”.

It was unfortunate, then, that he didn’t get to sing “Take It to the Limit”. He’d likely have done a better job than Frey who, after introducing it (“My wife calls it the ‘credit card song’) as a composition by Randy Meisner - whom Schmit replaced in 1977 - didn’t even try to hit Meisner’s high notes.

(Interestingly, Henley may have done a better job too - apparently he was singing the song on the American tour.)

Has The Nation apologised yet for its front-page caption last Thursday, when someone, clearly not a fan, said the fifth band member, Don Felder, wasn’t present for the Bangkok press conference? There was a good reason for that, of course: Felder left the Eagles three years ago.

No worries, though: his magical guitar phrases are being duplicated to a tee by Stuart Smith, who might as well join the band. As it was, Smith stayed a good few paces away from the fab four, but from stage right engaged in non-stop sonic sensationalism, not only faithfully rereading Felder (even with a double-neck guitar on “Hotel California”) but overtly marching onto axe-hero turf in his own right.

Rounding out the back-up ensemble were keyboardists Mike Thompson and Will Hollis, and together this (mostly) younger eight-man crew - the magnificent brass adding so much muscle and texture - provided the warbling thermals that kept the occasionally winded Eagles aloft - and soaring magnificently - 30 years on.

Friday
Sep102004

Take it easy, fans, the Eagles really are landing in Bangkok (Thailand Nation)

Published on Sep 7, 2004

American countryrock band The Eagles will perform two concerts in Thailand in the middle of October, delighting fans who were disappointed after rumours of an earlier concert turned out to be false.

Concert organisers BECTero said the band, famous for the timeless hit “Hotel California”, would appear at Impact Arena Muang Thong Thani on October 15 and 16.

The Los Angelesbased group agreed to add Bangkok to their world tour after reaching an agreement with BECTero at a cost of Bt12 million.

At a press conference yesterday to confirm the concert, BECTero said the band was definitely coming this time and fans would not be disappointed like before.

Tickets will go on sale from September 11 at Thaiticketmaster in Central Chidlom, Central Ladphrao, Central Pinklao, Central Bang Na and Big C in Ramkhamhaeng.

They will be priced at Bt8,500, Bt6,000, Bt4,000 and Bt2,000. The toppriced tickets are the most expensive for any concert performed at Impact Arena.

BECTero said The Eagles cost as much to bring over as F4, a Taiwanese group that has just performed two concerts here.

Winners of four Grammy Awards, The Eagles will start their “Farewell I” tour in Bangkok before leaving for Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan and Australia.

The band consists of Don Henley on drums and vocals, Glenn Frey on guitar and vocals, Timothy B Schmit on bass and vocals and Joe Walsh on guitar and vocals.

The group’s musical career came to peak in the 70’s and 80’s when albums “Eagles: Their Greatest Hits 19711975” and “Hotel California” became two of the bestselling albums in history.

Their popularity flourished when they released the albums “On the Border” and “One of These Nights”, which went platinum.

Hits like “One of These Nights”, “Lyin’ Eyes” and “Take It to the Limit” helped the band get inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.

Almost Eagles, a Thai tribute band, played three songs at the press conference as details of the concert were announced.

Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul

Saturday
Aug142004

Bangkok, Thailand

The Eagles will be appearing at the Impact Center on October 16th. If you will be going to the show or have questions about the show, hit the comments button below and add a message. After the show, you can post your review here.