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  • American Songwriter

    The Best Song Joe Walsh Said He Wrote Post-James Gang and Before Joining the Eagles

    By Tina Benitez-Eves,

    2024-09-05

    Shortly after recording Thirds, his third and final album with James Gang, Joe Walsh left the band with one final hit, “Walk Away,” which earned him the title of “guitar, vocals, and train wreck,” in the liner notes for his unruly guitar work toward the end of the track. At the time Walsh was also well into his solo career and had moved to Colorado from Celevand by the early 1970s.

    Still working with the James Gang’s co-producer (and future Eagles producer) Bill Szymczyk on his solo releases, including debut Barnstorm and his second album The Smoker You Drink, the Player You Get, Walsh needed lyrics for a song that was only an instrumental at that point for the latter release, “Rocky Mountain Way.”

    “I couldn’t think of any words and everybody was patiently waiting for me to come up with something,” shared Walsh. “One day I was in my backyard in Boulder [Colorado] mowing the lawn and I was thinking, ‘Boy, I sure hope leaving the James Gang was a good idea,’ because I hadn’t really surfaced as a solo act yet. I was almost there, but not quite. And then I looked up, and there were the Rocky Mountains.”

    [RELATED: 5 Songs Joe Walsh is Proud He Wrote Before Joining the Eagles]

    Rocky Mountains

    Walsh added, “It was summer but you could still see snow on the back range. It just hit me how beautiful it all was, 5,000 feet up. And that was it. The words came: ‘Spent the last year Rocky Mountain way / Couldn’t get much higher.’ And the second verse is about my old management—telling us this, telling us that, time to change the batter. I got all of that at once. And I ran inside to write it down before I forgot it.”

    Spent the last year

    Rocky Mountain Way

    Couldn’t get much higher

    Out to pasture

    Think it’s safe to say

    Time to open fire

    And we don’t need the ladies

    Crying ’cause the story’s sad

    ‘Cause the Rocky Mountain Way

    Is better than the way we had

    Well, he’s tellin’ us this

    And he’s tellin’ us that

    Changes it every day

    Says it doesn’t matter

    Bases are loaded and Casey’s at-bat

    Playin’ it play by play

    Time to change the batter

    Unfortunately, while Walsh was swept up with writing “Rocky Mountain Way,” he forgot to shut down his lawnmower, which moved into his neighbor’s yard, destroying her rose bushes. Regardless of the mishap, “Rocky Mountain Way” made it to No. 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 for Walsh.

    “Those lyrics wound up costing me, I don’t know, maybe 1,500 bucks, but it was well worth it,” said Walsh. “The neighbor, though, she was pissed. I said to her, ‘You don’t understand. I got the words. But she just looked at me.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1YPZJd_0vLzjKa100
    Don Henley, Joe Walsh, Randy Meisner, Glenn Frey and Don Felder of the rock band “Eagles” pose for a portrait in 1977. (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

    Getting Into the Eagles

    When Walsh was well into his solo career, the Eagles wanted a heavier guitarist to take the band to the next level and were already on the outs with Bernie Leadon. Walsh’s song “Rock Mountain Way” left a bit impression on the band, particularly Glenn Frey.

    At first, Walsh was invited to perform “Rocky Mountain Way” during the band’s encore section before asking him to join the Eagles permanently.

    “For our encores, we’d put Joe Walsh in a road box…there would be Joe with his Les Paul, and we would play ‘Rocky Mountain Way,’” said Frey. “As we’re playing, I keep thinking to myself, ‘Joe Walsh over Bernie Leadon?’”

    Photo: Joe Walsh of the rock band ‘Eagles’ performs onstage with an acoustic guitar at the Omni Theatre on June 20, 1977 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

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    Comments / 13
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    Thin Lizzy
    30d ago
    So What was and still is a tremendous record.
    toilet paper man
    09-08
    Don Henley is a scumbag
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