Recent Articles

Recent Articles by Michael Roberts

National Features >

  • Broward-Palm Beach New Times

    Fear of the Queer

    Do black voters need to get over their homophobia?

    By Bob Norman

  • Riverfront Times

    Lip Service

    The American Mustache Institute works to make facial hair hip again.

    By Matt Kasper

  • Village Voice

    Insane Asylum

    Welcome to America, freedom fighters. Now go home.

    By Elizabeth Dwoskin

  • Seattle Weekly

    The Closer

    How a Seattle man made a killing off the misery of local homeowners.

    By Nina Shapiro

Clipped Wings

Guitarist Don Felder writes about his ouster from the Eagles.

By Michael Roberts

Published on August 06, 2008 at 1:01am

“I deliberately tried very hard not to make it a revenge book,” says guitarist Don Felder, author of Heaven and Hell: My Life in the Eagles (1974-2001), which he’ll read from and sign tonight. “I wasn’t out to hang anybody’s head from the highest pole in town. That wasn’t the intent.” Maybe not, but the two best-known Eagles, Don Henley and Glenn Frey, whom Felder holds responsible for expelling him from the group in 2001, don’t come across terribly well. Granted, Felder has high regard for their skills as songwriters and performers — especially Henley, whom he calls “a brilliant contemporary rock writer. He would have been a fabulous poet if he weren’t a musician. He was a literary major, and not only that — he’s gifted with a brilliant voice.” But in the years following 1994, Felder began to fear that he was being shortchanged financially, and his inquiries weren’t welcomed.

“Whether it was a question about the crew or the artwork or whatever we were doing, I kind of had a ball-gag shoved in my mouth and a check shoved in my hand,” he maintains. “They interpreted it as a challenge to their authority, which was not the intent at all for me to do. It was just simply trying to make certain I wasn’t getting screwed.”

After being dumped, Felder sued the band, settling out of court prior to Heaven and Hell’s release. Still, he insists that the book was more about personal catharsis than score-settling. “I hope I don’t sound too negative,” he says, “because I still have a lot of fond memories.”

Felder drops by the Highlands Ranch Tattered Cover, 9315 Dorchester Street, at 7:30 p.m. The event is free, but Felder will only autograph books, not memorabilia. Get details at 303-470-7050 or www.tatteredcover.com — and read a massive Felder Q&A at blogs.westword.com/latestword.
Tue., Aug. 12, 2008



Westword Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff
Backpage.com