My Playlist: Jackson Browne

“…The Pretender, These Days, For Every Man, I’m Alive, Fountain of Sorrow, Running On Empty, For a Dancer, Before the Deluge. Now, I know the Eagles got in first; but let’s face it it – and I think Don Henley would agree with me – these are the songs they wish they had written. I wish I had written them myself, along with Like a Rolling Stone and Satisfaction…”

The above words were spoken by Bruce Springsteen in 2004 as part of his Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction speech for Jackson Browne. Springsteen also recalled when he first met Browne in New York City at The Bitter End, a storied Greenwich Village performance venue, he knew the singer-songwriter from California was “simply one of the best”. Coming from somebody who has written so many great songs himself and during that same speech also admitted to be “a little competitive”, I think these remarks speak volumes.

The first Jackson Browne record I listened to in its entirety was what I still consider a true ’70s gem: Running On Empty. If I recall it correctly, my brother-in-law had it on vinyl, and I initially copied it on music cassette. I was spending countless hours at the time taping music from records, CDs and certain radio programs. I still have hundreds of tapes floating around. While it’s safe to assume the quality of most is less than stellar at this time, I just cannot throw them out!

Back to Browne with whom I happen to share one fun fact: We were both born in Heidelberg, Germany, though close to 18 years apart. Browne’s dad was stationed in Germany, working for American military newspaper Stars and Stripes. Two of his three siblings were born there as well. In 1951 when Browne was three years old, his family relocated to Los Angeles.

During his teenage years, Browne started performing folk songs at local L.A. venues like The Ash Grove and The Troubador Club. After graduating from high school in 1966, he joined country rockers Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, which would later record some of his songs. After a few months, Browne left and moved to New York City where he became a staff writer for Elektra Records’ publishing company Nina Music.

In 1967, Browne met and became romantically involved with singer Nico of The Velvet Underground. He became a significant contributor to her debut solo album Chelsea Girl. After they broke up in 1968, Browne returned to Los Angeles where he met Glenn Frey soon thereafter. Before he started recording his own songs, Browne’s music was recorded by other artists such as Tom Rush, Gregg Allman, Eagles, Linda Ronstadt and of course the aforementioned Nico and Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.

In 1971, Browne finally managed to get a deal with Asylum Records, and in January 1972, he released his eponymous debut album. Thirteen additional studio records have since appeared, as well as seven compilation and live albums and more than 40 singles. And this brings us to the most fun part of the post: Some of Browne’s music he has released during his close to 50-year recording career.

I’d like to kick things off with Song for Adam from Brown’s above noted eponymous debut album. The mournful memory of Adam Saylor, a friend of Browne who died in 1968 – possibly by suicide – was covered by various other artists, including Gregg Allman, who included a moving rendition with Browne singing harmony vocals on his final studio album Southern Blood from September 2017.

By the time Browne recorded Take It Easy for his sophomore album For Everyman, which appeared in October 1973, the Eagles had released the tune as their first single in May 1972. It gave them their first hit peaking at no. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 and one of their signature songs. Originally, Browne began writing the tune for his eponymous debut album. But he got stuck with it, so played it to his friend Glenn Frey, who ended up finishing it. When Browne finally recorded the song, he also released it as a single, but it didn’t chart – perhaps it sounds pretty similar to the Eagles‘ version.

Fountain of Sorrow is a great track from Browne’s third studio Late for the Sky. Released in September 1974, it was his first top 20 record in the U.S., climbing to no. 14 on the Billboard 200. Like Take It Easy, the tune also appeared separately as a single but did not chart either.

In November 1976, Browne released The Pretender, his fourth studio album. It was his first major album chart success, climbing to no. 5 on the Billboard 200, and marking his first record to chart in the U.K., where it reached no. 26. Here’s the title track, which also became the second single. It did moderately well, reaching no. 58 on the Billboard Hot 100 – love that tune!

Next is the album that started my Jackson Browne journey: The amazing Running on Empty from December 1977. Frankly, I could list each tune on that record, so let’s go with one that is a less obvious choice: The Road, written by American singer-songwriter Danny O’Keefe. Themed around life on the road as a touring musician, Running on Empty was an unusual record featuring live recordings on stage and in other locations associated with touring, such as hotel rooms, tour buses or backstage. The first 2:28 minutes of The Road were captured in a hotel room in Columbia, Md., while the remainder was recorded live at Garden State Arts Center in Holmdel, N.J., which nowadays is known as PNC Bank Arts Center and a venue where I’ve seen many great shows.

In June 1980, Browne released Hold Out, his sixth studio album. While the record received poor reviews from music critics, ironically, it became his only no. 1 album in the U.S. It also was Browne’s second record to chart in the U.K. Here’s Of Missing Persons, a beautiful tribute to Little Feat co-founder Lowell George, a collaborator and longtime friend of Browne’s who had passed away the year before. The tune was specifically written for George’s then six-year-old daughter Inara George who since became a music artist as well.

For many years, Jackson Browne has been a political activist, e.g., speaking up against the use of nuclear power and supporting environmental causes. But it wasn’t until the ’80s that political themes starting to play a more dominant role in Browne’s lyrics. The album that comes to my mind first in that context is Lives in the Balance, which came out in February 1986. Here’s the catchy opener For America. It also became the lead single and reached no. 30 on the Billboard Hot 100.

For the next tune, I’m jumping to the ’90s, specifically to February 1996 and Browne’s 11th studio album Looking East. Like many of his previous records, it featured various notable guests, such as Bonnie Raitt, David Crosby, Ry Cooder and Mike Campbell. Here is Baby How Long, for which Cooder provided a great slide guitar part and Raitt sang harmony vocals, together with Australian singer Renée Geyer.

Let’s do two more from the current millennium. First up: The title track from The Naked Ride Home, Browne’s 12th studio album from September 2002, which my streaming music provider served up as a listening suggestion that in turn triggered the idea to do this post.

The final song I’d like to highlight is from Browne’s most recent 14th studio album Standing in the Breach, which was released in October 2014. Here is the nice opener The Birds of St. Marks. Originally, Browne wrote that tune in 1967 after his breakup with Nico and return from New York to California. While first released on his 2005 live album Solo Acoustic, Vol. 1., it wasn’t until this 2014 studio album that Browne properly recorded the tune. “This is a song I always heard as a Byrds song, and that was even part of the writing of the song,” Brown told Rolling Stone in an August 2014 interview. Standing in the Breach became a remarkable late-stage career chart success, reaching no. 15 on the Billboard 200 and no. 31 in the U.K.

Earlier this year, in the wake of testing positive for COVID-19 (though luckily with relatively light symptoms), Browne released A Little Soon to Say, a song from his next studio album scheduled for October 9, which I featured in this previous Best of What’s New installment. To date Browne has sold more than 18 million albums in the U.S. alone. Apart from the above mentioned Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction, Browne has also been inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in June 2007. He is ranked at no. 37 in Rolling Stone’s 2015 list of 100 Greatest Songwriters of All Time.

Sources: Wikipedia; Rolling Stone; YouTube

22 thoughts on “My Playlist: Jackson Browne”

  1. I love a lot of Browne’s 1970s stuff, and he made some interesting songs in the 1980s too. His band on Your Bright Blues is amazing – Jim Gordon, Chuck Rainey, Lowell George, Roy Bittan, and Bill Payne.

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  2. I was supposed to see him with James Taylor a few weeks ago. Argh! I watched the recent two part Laurel Canyon doc on EPIX, and there’s some nice footage of him (and Bonnie, and Lowell, and, and…).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ah, man, hopefully they’ll reschedule for next year!

      I was fortunate to see Browne in 2018. It required about 2 hours of driving (one way) to Bethlehem, Pa., but it was definitely worth it!

      I’ve yet to see James Taylor. What I cannot forgive myself to this day is that I somehow missed his 2010 tour with Carole King. I like her even more than Taylor!

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  3. Lindley is just downright great.
    I have always liked Jackson Browne. He has some really good solid songs…excellent songwriter. Gregg Allman and him I believe shared an apartment I believe in the late sixties. Gregg said he learned a lot about the art of songwriting from Jackson.

    Jackson sometimes gets looked over. Running On Empty…what a great concept for an album! A live album of new material. That is taking a chance playing new music to a crowd but it worked.

    Not his best song…but for some reason my favorite song by him is the pop Somebody’s Baby.

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    1. I didn’t know about Gregg and Jackson sharing an apartment. But when Gregg’s final album “Southern Blood” was released, I recall reading he really appreciated singer-songwriters like Jackson.

      They definitely must have been good friends. The fact Gregg decided to cover “Song for Adam” and asked Jackson to guest on harmony vocals speaks volumes.

      BTW, I realize “Southern Blood” may not be the first album that comes to mind when thinking of Gregg, but in my humble opinion, it’s a true gem. Recorded by an artist to reflect as his life was drawing to a close, it’s pretty powerful. In case you haven’t had a chance to listen to it, I can highly recommend it.

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      1. I have only listened to some of it but I sure will. I’m a huge Gregg fan. What a blues voice that man had. I would like to hear it.

        Since it was during that time period…Allman could have known the man maybe or was there when Jackson wrote it. He said they were really close for a long time.

        I’ve really thought about going to Macon Georgia just to visit the Big House…where the Allman Brothers lived…it is a museum now.

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      2. I’ve been to Graceland twice. Once in the 80s and once in the 90s.
        Interesting story…We got lost coming back home…pre tom tom…and we went through this county called McNairy county. We saw a regular house that was a museum…it was Bufford Pusser’s house from Walking Tall. It was a lot of fun. I even got a stick lol.

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      3. I imagine while undoubtedly made for tourists, Graceland must be an interesting place to visit. I certainly hope to do it myself sometime!

        As for Bufford Pusser, you may be somewhat in disbelief that I had to google him and the movie. I’m not sure to what extent “Walking Tall” was known in Germany. Plus, admittedly, I’m not exactly a movie expert!

        In fact, if anything, I probably knew about about Hollywood pictures as a teenager growing up in Germany. At the time, I was watching TV much more frequently than I do nowadays.

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      4. You know I was wondering if I should have explained…I’m sorry. He was more popular in the south anyway. He was a real sheriff…carried a big stick and used it in that crooked county.

        I didn’t know you were born over there. I was reading comments and saw that. I was going to ask you if you were in the military and that was the reason you lived there…Nope you were born there!

        Graceland is nice but…the neighborhood is sketchy so stay at a hotel away from Graceland…not really near it…. They also have a great zoo.

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      5. No need to apologize!

        And, yes, I was born in Heidelberg and grew up close to Bonn in the country side.

        My dad was a civil servant. At the time, the federal government was still in Bonn.

        I first came to the U.S. in 1980 for a 6-week summer vacation. I returned as a grad student in 1993 after I had finished grad school in Germany.

        1993 as a 27-year-old after I had finished grad school in Germany. I left again in 1994 for a job abroad.

        I returned for good in 1997 to marry my girlfriend who I had met while studying here – wasn’t exactly planned that way!😀

        As for Graceland, I’m gonna stay at Heartbreak Hotel!😆

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      6. That is quite an adventure you have had. We are the same age…I think you have one year on me and that is it. I was born in 67.

        The best things Christian are not planned usually. Thanks for telling me.
        I hope I wasn’t being too nosey.

        LOL…Everyone needs to visit Graceland at least once…as Paul Simon has said.

        You will never forget it. The shame of it is I live within 2-3 hours from Muscle Shoals and never have went down there…I need to.

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  4. While I appreciate Jackson’s songwriting skills and will listen to some of his stuff on the radio, I confess I’ve never been a really big fan. Overall, not a genre that gets me going. True enough about Gregg and him being tight. Gregg was known for his version of “These Days” that some think is better than Browne’s. Fun fact – Glenn Frye used to live in an apartment above Jackson and well, here’s the story:

    https://stevenpressfield.com/2013/02/jackson-brownes-piano-coming-through-the-floor/

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      1. I’d always read about Laurel Canyon and had somewhat romanticized it. And now all of a sudden we have “Echo” and “Laurel” and the Crosby doc, all of which tell that story. I was always envious and wished i was old enough and had enough talent to be part of a scene like that. Alas.

        Interestingly, Eric Clapton shows up in some pictures with David Crosby and Joni Mitchell and looks very much like an uncomfortable fish out of water. Not really his scene.

        BTW, Laurel Canyon, incredibly, was a cheap place to live back then. Now only people with deep pockets can afford to live there.

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  5. Jesus, completely forgot to mention the ‘Laurel Canyon’ two-part series on Epix that someone brought up. Just finished watching it the other night. Even better than ‘Echo in the Canyon.’ Jackson is a key figure. No mention of Buford Pusser, alas.

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    1. This Laurel Canyon series surely sounds intriguing. I did catch the movie at the time and really dug it.

      I rarely watch any TV these days and shamefully don’t even know whether Epix is part of our current lineup!

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