Don Henley: Predicting the Future
It’s never easy, being a prophet in one’s own time.
After prescient Eagles vocalist/drummer Don Henley scathingly indicted his own excessive West Coast lifestyle with his band’s Grammy-winning 1977 smash Hotel California—and his definitive girl-comes-to-Hollywood-and-loses-it masterstroke “The Last Resort,” which took him over a year to studiously compose—he began prognosticating in earnest on his first solo set in 1982, I Can’t Stand Still. Its kickoff single “Dirty Laundry,” in fact, was lightyears ahead of its time, as it skewered the then-just-emerging 24/7 news coverage with a throbbing Hammond organ backbeat and “You get the bubble-headed bleach blonde who comes on at five/ She can tell you ‘bout the plane crash with a gleam in her eye/ It’s interesting when people die, give us dirty laundry/ Can we film the operation?/ Is the head dead yet?/ You know the boys in the news room got a running bet/ Get the widow on the set, we need dirty laundry.” And that was just his opening salvo.
Over three more sporadic efforts—Building the Perfect Beast in ’84, The End of the Innocence from ’89 and Inside Job in 2000—this latter-day Nostradamus foresaw the bleakest of futures, in treatises like the illiteracy-illuminating “Johnny Can’t Read”; a Kardashian-presaging “All She Wants to Dance” (“Crazy people walking ‘round with blood in their eyes…Wild-eyed pistol wavers who ain’t afraid to die/ And all she wants to do is dance…she can’t feel the heat coming off the street”); the pre-Enron corporate-greed damnation “The End of the Innocence”; his elegy to the American farmer, “A Month of Sundays”; and perhaps his more broad-sweeping summary on the above topics, “I Will Not Go Quietly.” And it wasn’t his closing argument: Henley returns this week with Cass County, a rootsy collaboration with stellar country artists that features his dire viewpoints on climate change (the loping pedal-steel lament “Praying For Rain” and “Even the old folks can’t recall when it’s ever been this hot and dry/ Dust devils whirling on the first day of July”) and today’s consumer-centered society (”No, Thank You” and its “We’ve got space-age machinery, stone-age emotions/ Today a man had better watch his back”). Indeed, the man has not gone quietly into that good night. Not by a long shot.
Does Henley, at 68, feel proud that his predictions have not only come true, but accelerated in ways no one could have possibly imagined? Phoning late one recent night from his home in Dallas, he lets out a long, resigned sigh before responding. “No,” he says. “No, I just feel sad. I’m sorry that I’m right. ‘Dirty Laundry’ was 1982, and we now live in what has been called ‘the disposable present’—news and theater are the same thing now.” He still watches televised coverage, he adds. “But I have to take breaks. You can’t watch it every day—you’d hurl yourself off a building, you know? And the clown car that is American politics now, it’s just shameful and disheartening. I have to have some optimism—I have children, you know. But it’s hard to be optimistic in times like these. So I don’t watch the news very much. I try to bury myself in novels and poetry and things like that. The news is just too depressing.”
Instead, Henley found himself tuning into a broadcast of the Ken Burns documentary The Civil War the other day. “And it’s so profound and thought-provoking,” he says. “”And it just reminds me of how history repeats itself, and how divided we are as a country these days, and how shallow everything is, and just how dire the situation has become. It’s a paradox.” Mankind should be respecting its environment, behaving as a sensitive steward of Mother Earth. “But that’s not happening—we’re more like a cancer on the face of this living organism,” he asserts. “My family on both sides were farmers, back in the old days. But that’s long gone—big agribusiness has put family farms out of business, and Dow and Monsanto are trying to control all the seed stock. So you can’t make a living farming anymore.” He pauses. “You know, George Orwell was pretty much on the money. With Big Brother, certainly, and just the future he envisioned. It’s not pretty. But still, we’ve got to make some music. We’ve got to carry on.”
Thus, Cass County, co-produced (and often co-written) with The Heartbreakers’ Stan Lynch, and named for the rural, mainly agricultural Texas borough where Henley grew up. There are 16 songs on it, one for every year that has elapsed since he’s been away. It opens with a cover of Tift Merritt’s mandolin-twangy “Bramble Rose,” which colors Henley’s patented gravelly rumble with the sugary tone of Miranda Lambert and the marbled murmur—and forlorn harmonica—of Mick Jagger. And it sets the perambulating pace for the Nashville-tracked collection, which boasts cameos from Merle Haggard (a chiming “The Cost o Living”) and Dolly Parton (the lonesome Louvin Brothers cover “When I Stop Dreaming”). It closes with a chugging “Where I Am Now,” a mission statement of sorts. “Because that’s pretty much the way I feel—I like being this old,” he confesses. “You can be crotchety, and you just don’t put up with as much shit because you don’t have to. So it’s not a country album. It doesn’t have a category. It’s a Don Henley album, goddamn it! There’s some country-flavored stuff on there, certainly—some traditional country stuff and some Eagle-y kind of stuff, and some blues and Americana. But I love to quote Buddy Rich: he said, ‘There’s two kinds of music—good and bad.’ And I agree with him.”