My First Time Hearing "Linda Ronstadt – Tracks Of My Tears"| REACTION/REVIEW



Linda Ronstadt – Tracks Of My Tears | REACTION/REVIEW

BizMatik Reviews and Reacts to Linda Ronstadt – Tracks Of My Tears

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34 thoughts on “My First Time Hearing "Linda Ronstadt – Tracks Of My Tears"| REACTION/REVIEW”

  1. Biz, please listen to Lose Again, I wish I could get someone to react to this great song, Linda is definitely a top notch singer, I’ve seen her live twice and one of the best female singers from this generation

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  2. An interesting thing about this version is that the back up musicians' tracks are exactly the same as the version that was on the "Prisoner in Disguise" album but Linda's vocals are different in a few places. Not better or worse, just different. I wonder if they recorded a new vocal track, just for this video or if they just used an alternate vocal track from the same session and shot the video to make it look like they were filming an actual session. Or did they actually film an actual session (unusual because videos weren't a thing back then) and the take that they filmed wasn't the take that made the album's final cut?

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  3. The Eagles formed three years prior to when she recorded this song, but the styling she lays down on it leaves me wondering how it might have sounded with The Eagles backing her up instead. Fortunately, for that there's "Rock Me on the Water", her cover of the Jackson Browne classic, with Glenn Frey on guitar and Don Henley on drums and maybe both on backing vocals. Recording studios were multitrack analog in 1975. The transition to digital recording began in the nineties.

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  4. I saw her at The Lions Share, a small club in San Anselmo, north of San Francisco around this time, and our table was center stage with only enough room in between for the waitress to walk by. My heart was pounding, being that close to her. My friend Rory, who played guitar, went up and talked to the band during intermission, and was invited to fly down to LA with them for their next gig. So, we left him there, and when he got back, he said they stayed at the Eagles' house, who were out of town at the time. Jackson Brown also used the same house when he was in town.

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  5. Nope, analog. Tape recording in studio, was both a board performance and engineering art form. Gotta do Linda’s live cover of The Rolling Stones Classic, “Tumbling Dice.” (Provided you haven’t already) She had the voice of an angel and the power to throw it to the back of any concert hall she ever stepped into. 👈 Btw, checkout Smokey Robinson (and Huey Lewis w/ Gwyneth Paltrow’s sp? cover) doing “Cruisin.”

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  6. The great Smokey Robinson, powerhouse of Motown Records sold over a million copies this tune which he wrote and released in 1965. This was especially nice by Linda also. 🙂

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  7. Analog all the way! That's why the sound is so big and warm in the 70's. Written by Smokey Robinson. Try his "Tears Of A Clown" it has elements of this song in it, but it's up and movin' and 
    groovin' 🙂

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