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Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 782.42166092
EAN num: 9780470289068
ISBN number: 0470289066
Label: Wiley
Manufacturer: Wiley
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 352
Printing Date: April 21, 2008
Publishing house: Wiley
Sale Popularity Level: 1140
Studio: Wiley
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
The Eagles are the bestselling, and arguably the tightest-lipped, American group ever. Now band member and guitarist Don Felder finally breaks the Eagles’ years of public silence to take fans behind the scenes. He shares every part of the band’s wild ride, from the pressure-packed recording studios and trashed hotel rooms to the tension-filled courtrooms, and from the joy of writing powerful new songs to the magic of performing in huge arenas packed with roaring fans.
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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I am a huge Eagles fan and I just couldn't put the book down. A must read for any Eagles fan!
Rated by buyers
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I always love an insider look at rock bands, but Don Felder is such a whiny baby that I had to work hard to keep my lunch down while reading his tome. There is no doubt that Felder is a great guitarist, but no one will ever accuse him of being a great thinker. Don Henley and Glenn Frey ARE the Eagles and apparently Felder was the last one to figure this out. Sorry, bub, other than writing the music to "Hotel California," you were always a sideman, no matter what agreements were made in the very beginning of Eagles, Ltd. You should have just accepted that Henley and Frey were the Lennon and McCartney of your outfit or gotten out if it was as bad as you described and saved us all 300 pages of bellyaching and whining.
Rated by buyers
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"Heaven and Hell:My Life in the Eagles" is a must read for any fan. I have been a long time fan of the Eagles and have read alot about how the band couldn't get along, but to I am astonish to read that they had differences since the very start. I liked the book from beginning to end. Felder tells us about his heart warming and sometimes unsettling life with his parents, wife, and children; as well the good and bad times of being a member of the Eagles. I found it interesting that he knew and was hanging out with so many well known and legendary musicians before they made it famous. I just couldn't put this book down. After finishing the book I just wanted to give him a hug.
Rated by buyers
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I think Felder did a great job of putting his ego in the background and telling the story straight. Don and Glenn pushed the band from an equal partnership of five Eagles to the two Gods plus their hired hands Tim and Joe. Felder fought and lost. Yes he resents the heck out of them but at the same time is not so blinded by his anger (perhaps due to help from an able ghostwriter) as to present an unrealistically one-sided tale.
The book is clearly cathartic for someone who lost his marriage, his career and decades-long friendships to his fight against Henley and Frey. Anyone who's loved and lost -- or made major life mistakes -- can relate to the story of survival and determination.
It serves as a reminder that the Eagles are more like all the other reunion bands -- with a few originals and several interlopers -- rather than the myth of continuity presented by their PR machine. Of the best-selling rock album of all time -- their Greatest Hits -- only 2 of the original 5 contributors remain. That all seven were present for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is one of the few legitimate codas to the long soap opera of Eagles Ltd.
Rated by buyers
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Don Felder, composer of HOTEL CALIFORNIA, has written a book yanked from the belly of the beast.
Five musicians gather as equals, form a great country-rock band, and then discover not all of them are created equal.
Felder, the ethereal mood-guitar artist, nicknamed "Fingers" by "The Gods", strikes back at them with a thorough biographical view of their inter-relationships, fights, orgies, threats, business-dealings, grudges and knifings that somehow came together for a short time under the cold eyes of Glen Frey and Don Henley, the control-freaks who ran and ran into the ground the flight of The Eagles.
And Felder does not pull any punches, so if Henley and Frey are your heroes, be prepared for a huge jolt of reality.
Also, be prepared to listen to The Eagles in a new way. Some songs used to seem vague; now they can be deciphered.
At times, Felder's account of his own drug abuse and marriage failure seems a bit maudlin, over-dramatic. Too much posed fainting and remembered sighs.
But you can accept all this because he survived the trauma and escaped from the Hotel California with most of his brain intact.
Wait a minute. I just gotta stop here and listen, once again, to his soulful riffs on "I Can't Tell You Why."
by Larry Rochelle, author of BOURBON AND BLISS, the dark side of New Orleans.
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