Best of My Love

Best of My Love

August 13, 2021 —– Chart #104

Welcome to Friday and today’s Chart of the Day. Going back to one of my favorite bands today with a beauty from 1974. “Best of My Love” is a song written by Don Henley, Glenn Frey, and J. D. Souther. It was originally recorded by the Eagles (with Henley singing lead vocals), and included on their 1974 album On the Border. The song was released as the third single from the album, and it became the band’s first Billboard Hot 100 number 1 single in March 1975. The song also topped the easy listening (adult contemporary) chart for one week a month earlier. Billboard ranked it as the number 12 song for 1975.

In 2009, J.D. Souther said of the writing of “Best of My Love”: “Glenn found the tune; the tune I think came from a Fred Neil record… We were working on that album (On the Border) and came to London. The three of us were writing it and were on deadline to get it finished. I don’t know where we got the inspiration.” Glenn Frey recalled: “I was playing acoustic guitar one afternoon in Laurel Canyon, and I was trying to figure out a tuning that Joni Mitchell had shown me a couple of days earlier. I got lost and ended up with the guitar tuning for what would later turn out to be ‘The Best of My Love.'” According to Henley, much of the lyrics were written while in a booth in Dan Tana’s Restaurant close to the Troubadour. The maître d’ of Dan Tana, Guido, was thanked in the liner notes of the album. The lyrics were inspired in part by Henley’s break up with his then girlfriend Suzannah Martin.

“Best of My Love” was recorded at Olympic Studios in London. The Eagles had begun working on On the Border with producer Glyn Johns who had helmed their Eagles debut album and the follow-up Desperado album. Despite the success of their debut album the Eagles (Frey specifically) were unhappy over Johns’ preference for country rock and toning down their own rock aspirations, and their dissatisfaction with Johns was reinforced by the similarly honed Desperado album which was a comparative failure and Johns’ no-drug policy during the recording. After six weeks in London—which yielded “Best of My Love” and one other usable track, “You Never Cry Like a Lover”—the Eagles discontinued working with Johns, then spending eight weeks touring in Europe and the USA and completing the recording of On the Border at the Record Plant in their hometown of Los Angeles with Bill Szymczyk producing. “Best of My Love” was remixed by Szymczyk.

Frey was reluctant to release “Best of My Love” as a single and held off its release for some time. The release of the Eagles’ “Best of My Love” as a single has been attributed to the track’s airplay at WKMI-AM in Kalamazoo MI, where radio DJ Jim Higgs – also station music & program director – began playing the track off its parent album On the Border soon after that album’s release in the spring of 1974, favoring “Best of My Love” over the official single releases “Already Gone” and “James Dean”. Advised by Higgs of the strong positive response of WKMI’s listeners to “Best of My Love”, Asylum Records gave the track a limited single release of 1000 copies available only in the Kalamazoo area, with reaction to this test-release securing the full release of “Best of My Love” as a single on November 5, 1974.

However, when the single was finally released, Asylum Records had truncated the song so that it would be more radio-friendly, but had done so without the band’s knowledge or approval. It caused considerable anger in the band, and Henley demanded that the single be pulled from stores. The song however would become the most successful of their singles released so far, giving the band their first number 1 single. When the song was judged to have sold a million copies, the Eagles’ manager, Irving Azoff, sent to Asylum Records a gold record with a piece cut out, mounted on a plaque with a caption that said “The Golden Hacksaw Award”.

A live video, vintage 1977:    https://youtu.be/fmorrlACd0o 

Keep rockin’ my friends,

Stan

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