Product Description
Top Quality Early Japanese Pressing Of The First Eagles LP ~ Still In Top Condition! Includes 4-Page Insert With Lyrics In English & Japanese. Features “Take It Easy”, “Witchy Woman”, “Peaceful Easy Feeling” & More!
Condition – Vinyl: NEAR MINT!
Condition – Cover: EXCELLENT! Light ring wear.
Japanese vinyl pressings are highly sought after by audiophiles and collectors, due to their premium sound quality and beautifully presented packaging. The sonic quality of Japanese records is regarded as the best in the world. No wonder all the original Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab records were pressed in Japan! The covers are printed on better quality heavy stock paper too. Near Mint condition Japanese pressings from the 1970s are becoming scarcer ~ and therefore more collectable and valuable every year.
Side 1:
Take It Easy
Witchy Woman
Chug All Night
Most Of Us Are Sad
Nightingale
Side 2:
Train Leaves Here This Morning
Take The Devil
Earlybird
Peaceful Easy Feeling
Tryin’
AMG –
Balance is the key element of the Eagles' self-titled debut album, a collection that contains elements of rock & roll, folk, & country, overlaid by vocal harmonies. If the group kicks up its heels on rockers like "Chug All Night," "Nightingale," & "Tryin'," it is equally convincing on ballads like "Most of Us Are Sad" & "Train Leaves Here This Morning." The album is also balanced among its members, who trade off on lead vocal chores & divide the songwriting such that Glenn Frey, Bernie Leadon, & Randy Meisner all get three writing or co-writing credits. "Take It Easy" & "Peaceful Easy Feeling" are mid-tempo folk-rock tunes sung by Frey that express the same sort of laid-back philosophy, while "Witchy Woman," a Henley vocal & co-composition, initiates the band's career-long examination of supernaturally evil females. These are the songs one remembers from Eagles, and they look forward to the eventual dominance of the band by Frey & Henley. But the complete album from which they come belongs as much to Leadon's country-steeped playing & singing and to Meisner's melodic rock & roll feel, which, on the release date, made it seem a more varied & consistent effort than it did later, when the singles had become overly familiar."