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Album Description: Also available with JACKSON BROWNE (SATURATE BEFORE USING) on 1 cassette.Personnel: Jackson Browne (vocals, guitar); Danny Kortchmar (guitar); David Lindley (lap steel guitar, fiddle); Craid Doerge (keyboards); Leland Sklar (bass); Russ Kunkel (drums); Doug Haywood, Rose... read more

Also available with JACKSON BROWNE (SATURATE BEFORE USING) on 1 cassette.
Personnel: Jackson Browne (vocals, guitar); Danny Kortchmar (guitar); David Lindley (lap steel guitar, fiddle); Craid Doerge (keyboards); Leland Sklar (bass); Russ Kunkel (drums); Doug Haywood, Rosemary Butler (background vocals).
Recorded live in 1977.
Personnel: Jackson Browne (vocals, guitar, piano); Danny Kortchmar (guitar); David Lindley (lap steel guitar, fiddle); Craig Doerge (keyboards); Russ Kunkel (drums); Doug Haywood, Rosemary Butler (background vocals).
Liner Note Authors: Anthony DeCurtis; Cameron Crowe.
An audacious concept album about life on the road, this is a mix of in concert performances and informal sessions taped in various hotel rooms (see "Shaky Town," although it's hard to believe that Browne, by then a major star, was actually staying at a Holiday Inn). It's very '70s--the overall aura of cocaine-fueled decadence is almost palpable--but it works far better than you'd expect, and the songs are consistently memorable, even if Browne didn't write them all.
High points include a stunning half hotel/half concert version of Danny O'Keefe's "The Road," still the best song ever written about the life of a travelling musician, and the closing medley of the roadie anthem "The Load-Out" and Maurice Williams and the Zodiac's doo-wop classic "Stay." The hard rocking title tune features typically lyrical yet stinging slide guitar from long time associate David Lindley.
An audacious concept album about life on the road, RUNNING ON EMPTY is a mix of in-concert performances and informal sessions taped in various hotel rooms (see "Shaky Town," although it's hard to believe that Browne, by then a major star, was actually staying at a Holiday Inn). It's very 1970s--the overall aura of cocaine-fueled decadence is almost palpable--but it works far better than you'd expect, and the songs are consistently memorable and sung with restrained conviction, even if Browne didn't write them all.
High points include a stunning half-hotel/half-concert version of Danny O'Keefe's "The Road," still the best song ever written about the life of a travelling musician, and the closing medley of the roadie anthem "The Load-Out" and Maurice Williams & the Zodiacs' doo-wop classic "Stay." The hard-rocking title tune features typically lyrical yet stinging slide guitar from long-time associate David Lindley. minimize
 
 

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