Eagles - The Long Run [Asylum Records 5E-508] (24 September 1979)

Released: 24 September 1979
Country: US
Label: Asylum Records
Catalog: 5E-508
Genre: Country Rock

Item# SR-AS5E508
Ratings: C=VG+; LP=VG+
Note: Record Club Edition

T R A C K L I S T:
01 The Long Run
02 I Can't Tell You Why
03 In The City
04 The Disco Strangler
05 King Of Hollywood
06 Heartache Tonight
07 Those Shoes
08 Teenage Jail
09 The Greeks Don't Want No Freaks
10 The Sad Cafe




The Long Run
Eagles


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Album Review

William Ruhlmann [allmusic.com]

Three years in the making (which was considered an eternity in the '70s), the Eagles' follow-up to the massively successful, critically acclaimed Hotel California was a major disappointment, even though it sold several million copies and threw off three hit singles. Those singles, in fact, provide some insight into the record. ''Heartache Tonight'' was an old-fashioned rock & roll song sung by Glenn Frey, while ''I Can't Tell You Why'' was a delicate ballad by Timothy B. Schmit, the band's newest member. Only ''The Long Run,'' a conventional pop/rock tune with a Stax Records R&B flavor, bore the stamp and vocal signature of Don Henley, who had largely taken the reins of the band on Hotel California. Henley also dominated The Long Run, getting co-writing credits on nine of the ten songs, singing five lead vocals, and sharing another two with Frey. This time around, however, Henley's contributions were for the most part painfully slight. Only ''The Long Run'' and the regret-filled closing song, ''The Sad Cafe,'' showed any of his usual craftsmanship. The album was dominated by second-rank songs like ''The Disco Strangler,'' ''King of Hollywood,'' and ''Teenage Jail'' that sounded like they couldn't have taken three hours much less three years to come up with. (Joe Walsh's ''In the City'' was up to his usual standard, but it may not even have been an Eagles recording, having appeared months earlier on the soundtrack to The Warriors, where it was credited as a Walsh solo track.) Amazingly, The Long Run reportedly was planned as a double album before being truncated to a single disc. If these were the keepers, what could the rejects have sounded like?