Browne, Jackson
Jackson Browne
Singer, songwriter, guitarist, pianist
Like Bob Dylan, whose music inspired many during the sixties, Jackson Browne is a song poet, and one of the most prolific of the 1970s. His early music dealt with themes of love and innocence; later songs with humanitarian and political concerns, often interspersed with a recurring, ominous apocalyptic theme. Though much of his early success was attributed to his gift as a composer, Browne was later to score major hits as a performer as well. Said David Spiwack in Crawdaddy, Browne’s songs “consistently express moods and emotions many of us have felt but couldn’t conjure up the words to describe.”
Born in Heidelberg, West Germany, on October 9, 1948 (some sources say 1950), Browne was raised in Los Angeles, California, where he studied various musical instruments in his early years. By his late teens he was a proficient guitarist and pianist and an active member in the early efforts of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Too shy to perform his own work at first, Browne gained a reputation as a songwriter, his work showcased by performers such as the Byrds, Linda Ronstadt, and folksinger Tom Rush. His solo career began to take off late in 1969 when he opened for Linda Ronstadt at a Los Angeles club.
The following year Browne shed his stage-shyness and gained experience and publicity touring as Laura Nyro’s opening act, and in 1972 his spare, self-titled debut album arrived, featuring the successful singles “Doctor My Eyes” and “Rock Me on the Water.” According to Melody Maker, the album established Brown “not just as a versatile songwriter but as an artist of major stature.” His second album, For Everyman, boasted a fuller instrumental and vocal sound and included Browne’s version of “Take It Easy,” an enormous Eagles hit he had co-penned with Eagle Glenn Frey.
Late for the Sky, released in 1974, was perhaps Browne’s most poignant and penetrating album. As a composer, he was recognized for the raw, honest emotion displayed in what were otherwise unremarkable, even repetitous melodies. Nevertheless, according to Rolling Stone, the album was Browne’s “most mature, conceptually unified work to date.” It was also his first certified gold album. Following suit was Browne’s next effort, The Pretender.In progress at the time of his wife’s suicide, the album displays the composer’s sense of loss, revealing and reconciling him with his grief in intense and disturbing vocals on such songs as “Sleep’s Dark and Silent Gate” as well as both the title track and the hit “Here Come Those Tears Again.”
Browne’s next project was a clear departure from anything he’d done previously. Running on Empty featured all new material, much of which was written by or with others. Recorded entirely “on the road”—on stage, in
For the Record…
Full name, Clyde Jackson Browne; born October 9, 1948, in Heidelberg, West Germany; son of Clyde Jack (a printer, musician, and teacher) and Beatrice Amanda (a teacher; maiden name, Dahl) Browne; married Phyllis Major, December 1975 (died, March 25, 1976); married Lynne Sweeney, January 17, 1981 (divorced); children (first marriage) Ethan Zane; (second marriage) Ryan Daniel.
Member of Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, 1966; solo performer, 1966—; staff writer at Nina Music (music publishing branch of Elektra Records), 1966–69; recording debut as guitarist on Chelsea Girl, by Nico, 1967; opening act for Laura Nyro, 1970; solo recording debut, 1972; producer of recordings, including Warren Zevon’s Warren Zevon (1976) and Excitable Boy (1977), and co-producer of David Lindley’s El Rayo X (1981). Co-founder of Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE), 1979.
Awards: Gold record awards for Late for the Sky, 1974, and The Pretender, 1976; platinum record award for Running on Empty, 1977.
Addresses: Office —c/o Creative Artists Agency, 1888 Century Park East, Suite 1400, Los Angeles, CA 90067.
dressing rooms, on the tour bus— Running on Empty was Browne’s best-selling album to date and was named favorite album of 1978 in the Second Annual Rock Radio Awards. Browne himself was named favorite male singer as well as favorite singer/songwriter. Said Steve Siméis in Stereo Review, Running on Empty contains “the work of an artist newly matured and unafraid to take risks.”
Simel’s claim was strengthened when Browne took a deliberate stand against nuclear power in 1979 and co-founded Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE). Browne also helped back and organize the impressive NO NUKES five-day benefit concert, album package, and film to aid the antinuclear cause, a project that took him out of the studio for a year. His next solo project was the 1980 album Hold Out, which continued on the rock and roll track he’d laid on Running on Empty, with simpler melodies and lyrics bringing Browne mixed reviews. Rolling Stone noted that “the music represents a real advance” yet complained that “lyrically, Hold Out is probably the weakest record [Browne has] ever made.” Despite the varying critiques, the album yielded several hits, including “Boulevard” and “That Girl Could Sing.”
If Hold Out was indeed weak, the same could not be said of Browne’s seventh album, Lawyers in Love (1983), which met with critical acclaim. Again, Browne passed over highly personal, autobiographical material in favor of broader views of comtemporary life. In his Time review of the album, Jay Cocks summed it up well, saying, “Browne’s music pulses with a feeling of renewal and new possibilities … he is writing some of the best songs west of the Rockies.”
Embracing the political arena, Browne moved farther from his poetic origins in 1986 with Lives in the Balance, concentrating on terser melodies and concise phrasing. Like Hold Out, the album received mixed reviews, hailed as both bold and tepid. “For America” came under fire from one critic for having “a chorus guaranteed to make you wince,” yet another called it “a prayer and a love song, which damns ‘a generation’s blank stare.’” Having spent much of the preceding two years visiting Nicaragua, Browne focused, not surprisingly, primarily on Latin America and its conflicts with the U.S. Government, exemplified by the songs “Lives in the Balance” and “Soldier of Plenty.” According to Rolling Stone, Browne’s “new-found ability to link the personal to the political breathes life into these songs and prevents them from becoming too didactic.” The music itself is considered “terse and memorable,” with even love songs like “In the Shape of a Heart” seeming more mature than ever before.
Browne is issue-conscious again on the World in Motion album. Instead of politics, though, Browne aims at “universal truths bound together by a highly personal focus.” He sings of moral and legal violations (“How Long” and “The Word Justice”), of pride and hope (“I Am a Patriot”), of revenge (in the chilling Hispanic ballad “My Personal Revenge”), and of enduring love and the potential for change (“Anything Can Happen”). As difficult as it is to successfully deliver “good-conscience pop,” Browne maintains his ground. If, as in “Anything Can Happen,” love is possible in this world, amid strife and pain, Browne reasons, then anything can be accomplished. Rolling Stone said it succinctly in commenting that World in Motion (and perhaps Browne overall) “gets your attention by getting under your skin.”
Selected discography
Jackson Browne, Asylum, 1972.
For Everyman, Asyium, 1973.
Late for the Sky, Asylum, 1974.
The Pretender, Asylum, 1976.
Running on Empty, Asylum, 1977.
Hold Out, Asylum, 1980.
Lawyers in Love, Asylum, 1983.
Lives in the Balance, Asylum, 1986.
World in Motion, Elektra, 1989.
Sources
Crawdaddy, January, 1975.
down beat, July, 1985.
High Fidelity, November, 1983; July, 1986.
Los Angeles Times, February 22, 1986.
Melody Maker, March 25, 1972.
Musician, May, 1986; June, 1986.
New York Times, July 31, 1983; August 4, 1983.
People, October 5, 1981; September 12, 1983; April 7, 1986.
Rolling Stone, March 2, 1972; November 7, 1974; December 16, 1976; January 27, 1977; March 9, 1978; October 19, 1978; November 5, 1979; August 7, 1980; September 4, 1980; July 22, 1982; September 15, 1983; September 29, 1983; April 10, 1986; Aprif 24, .1986; July 3, 1986; November 5-December 10, 1987; January 14, 1978; January 29, 1987; July 13–27, 1989.
Stereo Review, June, 1986.
Time, September 12, 1983; March 10, 1986.
—Meg Mac Donald
Browne, Jackson
Jackson Browne
Singer, songwriter, guitarist, pianist
Like Bob Dylan, whose music inspired many during the sixties, Jackson Browne is a song poet, and one of the most prolific of the 1970s. His early music dealt with themes of love and innocence; later songs with humanitarian and political concerns, often interspersed with a recurring, ominous apocalyptic theme. Though much of his early success was attributed to his gift as a composer, Browne was later to score major hits as a performer as well. David Spiwack of Crawdaddy wrote that Browne's songs "consistently express moods and emotions many of us have felt but couldn't conjure up the words to describe."
Born in Heidelberg, West Germany, on October 9, 1948 (some sources say 1950), Browne was raised in Los Angeles, California, where he studied various musical instruments in his early years. By his late teens he was a proficient guitarist and pianist and an active member in the early efforts of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Too shy to perform his own work at first, Browne gained a reputation as a songwriter, his work showcased by performers such as the Byrds, Linda Ronstadt, and folksinger Tom Rush. His solo career began to take off late in 1969 when he opened for Linda Ronstadt at a Los Angeles club.
The following year Browne shed his stage-shyness and gained experience and publicity touring as Laura Nyro's opening act, and in 1972 his spare, self-titled debut album arrived, featuring the successful singles "Doctor My Eyes" and "Rock Me on the Water." According to Melody Maker, the album established Browne "not just as a versatile songwriter but as an artist of major stature." His second album, For Everyman, boasted a fuller instrumental and vocal sound and included Browne's version of "Take It Easy," an enormous Eagles hit he had co-penned with Eagle Glenn Frey.
Displayed Honest Emotion in Lyrics
Late for the Sky, released in 1974, was perhaps Browne's most poignant and penetrating album. As a composer, he was recognized for the raw, honest emotion displayed in what were otherwise unremarkable, even repetitous melodies. Nevertheless, according to Rolling Stone, the album was Browne's "most mature, conceptually unified work to date." It was also his first certified gold album. Following suit was Browne's next effort, The Pretender. In progress at the time of his wife's suicide, the album displays the composer's sense of loss, revealing and reconciling him with his grief in intense and disturbing vocals on such songs as "Sleep's Dark and Silent Gate" as well as both the title track and the hit "Here Come Those Tears Again."
Browne's next project was a clear departure from anything he'd done previously. Running on Empty featured all new material, much of which was written by or with others. Recorded entirely "on the road"—on stage, in dressing rooms, on the tour bus—Running on Empty was Browne's best-selling album to date and was named favorite album of 1978 in the Second Annual Rock Radio Awards. Browne himself was named favorite male singer as well as favorite singer/songwriter. Said Steve Simels in Stereo Review, Running on Empty contains "the work of an artist newly matured and unafraid to take risks."
Simel's claim was strengthened when Browne took a deliberate stand against nuclear power in 1979 and co-founded Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE). Browne also helped back and organize the impressive NO NUKES five-day benefit concert, album package, and film to aid the antinuclear cause, a project that took him out of the studio for a year. His next solo project was the 1980 album Hold Out, which continued on the rock and roll track he'd laid on Running on Empty, with simpler melodies and lyrics bringing Browne mixed reviews. Rolling Stone noted that "the music represents a real advance" yet complained that "lyrically, Hold Out is probably the weakest record [Browne has] ever made." Despite the varying critiques, the album yielded several hits, including "Boulevard" and "That Girl Could Sing."
If Hold Out was indeed weak, the same could not be said of Browne's seventh album, Lawyers in Love (1983), which met with critical acclaim. Again, Browne passed over highly personal, autobiographical material in favor of broader views of comtemporary life. In his Time review of the album, Jay Cocks summed it up well, saying, "Browne's music pulses with a feeling of renewal and new possibilities … he is writing some of the best songs west of the Rockies."
Political Activism Took Priority
Embracing the political arena, Browne moved farther from his poetic origins in 1986 with Lives in the Balance, concentrating on terser melodies and concise phrasing. Like Hold Out, the album received mixed reviews, hailed as both bold and tepid. "For America" came under fire from one critic for having "a chorus guaranteed to make you wince," yet another called it "a prayer and a love song, which damns 'a generation's blank stare.'" Having spent much of the preceding two years visiting Nicaragua, Browne focused, not surprisingly, primarily on Latin America and its conflicts with the United States government, exemplified by the songs "Lives in the Balance" and "Soldier of Plenty." According to Rolling Stone, Browne's "new-found ability to link the personal to the political breathes life into these songs and prevents them from becoming too didactic." The music itself is considered "terse and memorable," with even love songs like "In the Shape of a Heart" seeming more mature than ever before.
For the Record …
Born Clyde Jackson Browne on October 9, 1948, in Heidelberg, West Germany; son of Clyde Jack (a printer, musician, and teacher) and Beatrice Amanda (a teacher; maiden name, Dahl) Browne; married Phyllis Major, 1975 (died on March 25, 1976); married Lynne Sweeney, January 17, 1981 (divorced); children (first marriage) Ethan Zane; (second marriage) Ryan Daniel.
Member of Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, 1966; solo performer, 1966–; staff writer at Nina Music (music publishing branch of Elektra Records), 1966-69; recording debut as guitarist on Chelsea Girl, by Nico, 1967; opening act for Laura Nyro, 1970; solo recording debut, 1972; producer of recordings, including Warren Zevon's Warren Zevon (1976) and Excitable Boy (1977), and co-producer of David Lindley's El Rayo X (1981); co-founder of Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE), 1979; Amnesty International Conspiracy of Hope concert series, 1986; left long-time label, Elektra, 2004.
Awards: Second Annual Rock Radio Awards, Favorite Male Singer, Favorite Singer/Songwriter, Favorite Album for Running on Empty, 1978; John Steinbeck Award, 2002; Founders Award, American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, 2004; honorary doctorate, Occidental College, 2004; inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 2004.
Addresses: Office—Creative Artists Agency, 1888 Century Park East, Ste. 1400, Los Angeles, CA 90067. Website—Jackson Browne Official Website: http://www.jacksonbrowne.com/.
Browne was issue-conscious again on the World in Motion album. Instead of politics, though, Browne aimed at "universal truths bound together by a highly personal focus." He sang of moral and legal violations ("How Long" and "The Word Justice"), of pride and hope ("I Am a Patriot"), of revenge (in the chilling Hispanic ballad "My Personal Revenge"), and of enduring love and the potential for change ("Anything Can Happen"). As difficult as it can be to successfully deliver "good-conscience pop," Browne maintained his ground. If, as in "Anything Can Happen," love is possible in this world, amid strife and pain, Browne reasons, then anything can be accomplished. Rolling Stone said it succinctly in commenting that World in Motion "gets your attention by getting under your skin." Browne continued to probe matters close to the bone in his 1993 album I'm Alive. Possibly in reaction to the demise of his relationship with actress Daryl Hannah, the album focused on the personal rather than the political. Without any notable singles, I'm Alive still managed to go gold and was well-received by critics and fans alike. He followed it up in 1996 with Looking East, an album that produced several songwriting collaborations with members of Browne's band.
Successful Collaborations
In 1999, Browne recorded a duet with singer/guitarist Bonnie Raitt. "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine," from the Pete Seeger tribute album Where Have All the Flowers Gone, Volume 1 was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration. For the second volume of the tribute series, he sang with legendary folk singer Joan Baez on "Guantanamera."
In 2002, he received the John Steinbeck Award for being an artist who exemplifies the values that Steinbeck represented. That same year he released the album The Naked Ride Home. The album combined the personal and the political in a mix that showcased Browne's maturity as a songwriter and singer. The album debuted at number 36 on Billboard 's Top 200 and was Browne's last record on the Elektra label.
In 2004, Browne ended his long association with Elektra and struck out to find a new label. Although he had no record label, Browne found a place among the luminaries of rock history when he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Around the same time The Very Best of Jackson Browne was released. The two-CD collection showcased Browne's thirty-plus years of record-making. With a successful collection reintroducing Browne's pivotal early works as well as later hits and a permanent spot in the Hall of Fame, Browne was steadfastly holding his own as one of rock and roll's greatest singer-songwriters.
Selected discography
Jackson Browne, Asylum, 1972.
For Everyman, Asylum, 1973.
Late for the Sky, Asylum, 1974.
The Pretender, Asylum, 1976.
Running on Empty, Asylum, 1977.
Hold Out, Asylum, 1980.
Lawyers in Love, Asylum, 1983.
Lives in the Balance, Asylum, 1986.
World in Motion, Elektra, 1989.
I'm Alive, Elektra, 1993.
Looking East, Elektra, 1996.
The Naked Ride Home, Elektra, 2002.
The Very Best of Jackson Browne, Rhino, 2004.
Sources
Crawdaddy, January 1975.
Down Beat, July 1985.
High Fidelity, November 1983; July 1986.
Los Angeles Times, February 22, 1986.
Melody Maker, March 25, 1972.
Musician, May 1986; June 1986.
New York Times, July 31, 1983; August 4, 1983.
People, October 5, 1981; September 12, 1983; April 7, 1986.
Rolling Stone, March 2, 1972; November 7, 1974; December 16, 1976; January 27, 1977; January 14, 1978; March 9, 1978; October 19, 1978; November 5, 1979; August 7, 1980; September 4, 1980; July 22, 1982; September 15, 1983; September 29, 1983; April 10, 1986; April 24, 1986; July 3, 1986; November 5-December 10, 1987; January 29, 1987; July 13-27, 1989.
Stereo Review, June 1986.
Time, September 12, 1983; March 10, 1986.
—Meg Mac Donald andEve M. B. Hermann
Browne, Jackson
Browne, Jackson
Browne, Jackson, perhaps the most stimulating and profound male song-poet of the 1970s, established the singer-songwriter genre with subtle, honest songs with romantic, spiritual, or apocalyptic themes; b. Heidelberg, Germany, Oct. 9, 1948.
Exhibiting a feel for both folk and rock music, his compelling sound featured multi-instrumentalist David Lindley, who introduced unusual stringed instruments, including the lap steelguitar, into rock music. A political activist since the late 1970s, Browne possesses a social awareness that came to the forefront in his music with 1986’s Lives in the Balance, addressing the then-current crisis in Nicaragua.
Born in Germany but raised in Los Angeles, Jackson Browne first sang at “hoots” in Orange County in 1966. He wrote his first song in high school and was signed to a songwriting contract by Elektra Records in September 1966, then released. Browne played folk clubs around N.Y. during winter 1967, often accompanying Nico (of Velvet Underground fame) and Tim Buckley. Returning to Los Angeles, he served a brief tenure with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Folk singer Tom Rush became the first major artist to showcase Browne’s songs, recording “Shadow Dream Song” in 1967 and “These Days” in 1968. Browne’s first performing success came in the fall of 1969, when he opened for Linda Ronstadt at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles. He completed his first concert tour in 1970, opening for Laura Nyro.
By 1971 Jackson Browne had initiated his own recording career with the invaluable assistance of multi-instrumentalist David Lindley (formerly with Kaleidoscope). “Doctor My Eyes” became a smash hit from his debut album, which also contained “Jamaica Say You Will” and “Rock Me on the Water.” During spring 1972 Browne toured with songstress Joni Mitchell, and later that year his song “Take It Easy” (cowritten with Glenn Frey) launched the Eagles on their spectacularly successful career. Coming nearly two years later, his second album included the minor hit “Redneck Friend” as well as his own versions of “Take It Easy” and “These Days.” By 1974 Browne was touring as a headline act with a band formed around David Lindley. Browne’s Late for the Sky album, though yielding no hit single, was his most poignant and penetrating work to date, featuring visions of death, apocalypse, and resigned hope; it contained most notably “Fountain of Sorrow,” “The Late Show,” “For a Dancer,” and “Before the Deluge.”
Another two years elapsed before the release of The Pretender. Although displaying a degree of melodic and rhythmic repetition, the album again included a number of honest and moving songs, from the hit “Here Comes Those Tears Again” to “The Fuse” to the title song. Browne’s next, the live Running on Empty, displayed a wide range of moods and material. This album yielded a near-smash hit with the anthemic title song and a major hit with a remake of Maurice Williams’s 1960 “Stay”
A leader of the antinuclear movement, Jackson Browne helped found MUSE (Musicians United for Safe Energy) in 1979 and was one of the major backers of the No Nukes concert, movie, and album. His 1980 album Hold Out included the major hits “Boulevard” and “That Girl Could Sing” and introduced Browne to the arena-rock crowd. Browne was involved in the production of Warren Zevon’s first two albums and coproduced David Lindley’s album El Rayo X from 1981, the year they parted company. In September 1981 Browne was one of the demonstrators arrested at California’s Diablo Canyon nuclear-power plant.
In 1982 Browne scored a major hit with “Somebody’s Baby” from the Sean Perm film Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and the following year he hit with “Tender Is the Night” and the satirical “Lawyers in Love” from his next album of the same title. In 1984 and 1985 he visited Central America to learn more about the turmoil engulfing the region. Browne subsequently became involved with Little Steven (Van Zandt of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band) in Artists United Against Apartheid, while managing a pop hit with “You’re a Friend of Mine,” recorded with Clarence demons. The politically charged Lives in the Balance focused largely on his social concerns, whether foreign or domestic, and yielded two hits, “For America” and “In the Shape of a Heart.”
Browne toured in 1986 and 1988, releasing another collection of socially conscious songs in 1989 on the album World in Motion, including “The Word Justice,” “Anything Can Happen,” and Little Steven’s “I Am a Patriot.” Following his breakup with actress Darryl Hannah in 1992, Browne recorded I’m Alive, an album pervaded with songs of lost love. By this time he was unable to equal his earlier chart success, although his core audience continued to buy his albums and attend his concerts.
Discography
J.B.(1972); For Everyman (1973); Late for the Sky (1974); The Pretender (1976); Running on Empty (1977); Hold Out (1980); Lawyers in Love (1983); Lives in the Balance (1986); World in Motion (1989); I’m Alive (1993).
Bibliography
Crowe, Cameron. “A Child’s Garden of J. B.” Rolling Stone, no. 161 (May 23, 1974), pp 38-40.
—Brock Helander