

Today we have the letter T to write something about. It is on the Asylum label, and was written by Jackson Browne, and Glenn Frey.

“Take It Easy”, by the Eagles, was released as a single, from the album, “Eagles”, in 1972. You remember the song from last week, “The Way”, by Fastball? I heard it on the speakers at the grocery store just yesterday. Not saying I can carry a tune at all, but I’ve sang it at home, in grocery stores, and restaurants…wherever I hear it playing. It helps that I know all the words without looking. I have to sing it, out loud, any time or place I hear it. It is a fun song, and easy to sing along to. One song I love to hear any time, morning, evening, day, or night, is this one you can see in the video below. We were asked what song would we like as a wake up tune in the mornings. Time for another look back at a song from the past. Thanks, Hugh, for another great prompt for this challenge! (Don't let there be a hole in the world tomorrow.)ĭon't let there be a hole in the world tomorrow (repeat three times)ĥ1 Weeks: 51 Songs From The Past: Week 25: Elbow – One Day Like This Oh, they tell me there's a place over yonderĬool water running through the burning sand.īut all this fighting over who will be anointed, They say that love is just a state of mind.īut all this fighting over who is anointed, They say that anger is just love disappointed. It is on The Eagles Recording Company II labelĭon't let there be a hole in the world tomorrow. It was released in 2003, from the album, “The Very Best Of”, and was written by Don Henley and Glenn Frey. “Hole in the World”, by the Eagles, was written in response to September 11, 2001. So that’s another ‘hole’ - a huge hole in somebody’s life – a child, a wife, a mother, a father, a brother, a sister.” The fighting was supposedly over in May, and yet one or two or three of our boys were – and still are – getting killed every day, which means somebody’s daddy is not coming home. Then, other things started happening that gave additional meanings to ‘Hole in the World,’ particularly after the war started. “Months went by, but I didn’t show it to anybody. “I sat down at the piano in my home studio and started putting some chords with the phrase ‘hole in the world,'” he said. Don Henley explained in the liner notes for The Very Best Of The Eagles compilation that he penned on the darkest day in American history: September 11, 2001.
