If James Taylor epitomized the definition and the original,
late-'60s incarnation of the term singer/songwriter, Dan
Fogelberg exemplified the late-'70s equivalent of that term at
its most highly developed and successful, with a string of
platinum-selling albums and singles into the early '80s and a
long career since, interrupted only by a health crisis in more
recent years.
He came out
of a musical family, born Daniel Grayling Fogelberg on August
13, 1951, in Peoria, IL, where his father was an established
musician, teacher, and bandleader. His first instrument was the
piano, which he took to well enough, and music mattered to him
more than the sports that were the preoccupation of most of the
boys around him. At age ten, he was saving and listening to any
old records he could find. And if there's a "God-shaped space"
in everyone, Fogelberg's was filled with music, something his
family might've guessed if they'd seen how much he loved the
music in church but was bored by the sermons. His other great
passions were drawing and painting. His personal musical turning
point came in the early '60s, before he'd reached his teens.
A gift of an old Hawaiian guitar from his grandfather introduced
him to the instrument that would soon supplant the piano, and at
age 12, he heard the Beatles for the first time, which not only
led him to a revelation about how electric guitars could sound,
but also made him notice for the first time the act of
songwriting as something central to what musicians did. It was
also at that point that he began picking up on the music of Carl
Perkins, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and Buddy Holly, all of
whom were, of course, in the Beatles' repertory.
He started writing songs soon after, and by the time he was 13,
he was in a band called the Clan, playing school events with a
repertory that mostly consisted of Beatles songs.
Of all the members, he was the one who stayed with music, and his taste
and interests evolved with the music around him.
By the time he was in his mid-teens, he was listening to the
Byrds and Buffalo Springfield, and was finding inspiration in
the sounds and songs of Gene Clark, Stephen Stills, Chris
Hillman, Neil Young, and Richie Furay, among others. His second
band, the Coachmen, who'd started out doing Paul Revere & the
Raiders-style dance-oriented R&B, evolved into a more
progressive folk-rock outfit, even embracing some of
Springfield's more ambitious repertory.
Yet, somehow, for all of that devotion to music, he didn't plunge
directly into the field. Had he been living in California, in
Los Angeles or San Francisco, it might've been different, but in
the absence of a highly receptive audience, or a surrounding
coterie of serious musician friends, or much encouragement
anywhere in Peoria to pursue music, he ended up embracing other
goals. After finishing high school, it was on to the University
of Illinois at Champaign as a drama major, in hopes of an acting
career, and then a switch to painting.
This
was all going on amid the political agonies of the Vietnam War,
which was still going on full-tilt at the time, and Fogelberg
wasn't isolated from the tensions over the war as they
manifested themselves. He fell back into music through one of
the relatively few public centers for what passed for a
counterculture in central Illinois, a club called The Red
Herring, owned by a friend named Peter Berkow.
The latter invited Fogelberg to play, and soon he was building a
local audience with his sound and his songs, and it was from
that beginning that Fogelberg came to the attention of a
University of Illinois alumnus named Irving Azoff, who at the
time was managing REO Speedwagon and was thinking that it was
time for him to move up to the next level in the music business.
One performance by Fogelberg, accompanied by his solo acoustic
guitar at an otherwise drunken fraternity event in front of a
singularly oblivious audience, sold Azoff on his prospects and
the idea that his own future might well be quite favorable if
tied to Fogelberg. He moved to Los Angeles and Azoff began the
task of getting him signed. In the interim, he played some
sessions and even rated a support gig on tour with Van Morrison,
in a series of shows that also included Dan Hicks & His Hot
Licks. His demo tape was good enough to get serious attention
from Jerry Moss at A&M Records and David Geffen at the newly
established Asylum Records, but it was the legendary Clive
Davis, then still at Columbia Records, who got Fogelberg under
contract.
Fogelberg's debut album, Home Free (1972), recorded in
Nashville, with Norbert Putnam producing, was an embarrassment
of riches, musically speaking. It was a sublimely beautiful
melding of country-rock with the personal level of a
singer/songwriter, reminiscent at times of Gene Clark's solo
work, and also encompassing sounds derived from the likes of
Stephen Stills, David Crosby, Graham Nash, and Neil Young, yet
never sounding too much like the joint work of those three (or
four) and always sounding like Fogelberg. But it was a lot like
several other brilliant debut albums to come out of the Columbia
Records orbit during Davis' tenure, including Child Is Father to
the Man by the original Blood, Sweat & Tears and Greetings from
Asbury Park by Bruce Springsteen, in that it never generated a
hit single to help drive sales. Everyone who heard the album
loved it, but without a single to generate AM radio play, very
few people heard it; in Davis' view, fine as it was, Home Free
was a little too country-ish for mainstream radio, and fell
between the cracks between pop/rock and country playlists. A few
years later, after the success of acts such as the Eagles, such
distinctions would matter less, but in 1972, the music
marketplace was that segregated stylistically. Fogelberg kept
working, mostly as a session musician, turning up on Buffy
Saint-Marie's MCA debut LP, Buffy, and on Jackson Browne's Late
for the Sky, among other early- to mid-'70s albums.
He also
managed to continue with Columbia with help from his manager.
Azoff's own Full Moon label had a production and distribution
deal with Columbia, through its Epic Records imprint, and it was
by way of Epic/Full Moon that he got a second chance. This time
out, however, Fogelberg would record in Los Angeles with
guitarist/producer Joe Walsh. Fogelberg quickly discovered that
he had a sympathetic and enthusiastic partner in Walsh, and
everything literally fell into place, even Graham Nash's
presence (at Walsh's request) singing harmonies on the resulting
album, Souvenirs, which featured a range of renowned Los
Angeles-based musicians. The results were more than golden —
they ended up double platinum, as "Part of the Plan" reached the
Top 20 in 1974 and Souvenirs rode those charts for six months
and sold steadily for years after.
The album had mostly the same mix of elements as its
predecessor, but this time it was widely heard and accepted.
The country-flavored rock of "Part of the Plan," the reflective
singer/songwriter work of "Song from Half Mountain," the
bluegrass-flavored "Morning Sky," and the heavier "As the Raven
Flies" (which recalled Neil Young's "Ohio") — all seemed to fit
together perfectly.
Now
Fogelberg was a star, leading an Illinois-spawned band called
Fool's Gold and touring almost constantly for the next two
years.
In the midst of it all, he completed a third album, Captured
Angel (1975) — which he produced himself this time — which
showed him extending his sound in more ambitious directions, and
in surprising circumstances.
It was during 1975 that he'd returned home to spend time with his
father, who had been hospitalized, and afterward, while staying
in Peoria, cut what were supposed to be demos of the songs he
wanted to use on his new album, with Fogelberg playing every
instrument and doing all the vocals.
Instead, when Azoff and Davis heard the demos, they insisted
that this was the album, and that he could never recapture the
feel he'd gotten on songs like "Comes and Goes" working with
other musicians. He eventually came to an agreement with the
label that the percussion parts would be redone by Russ Kunkel,
and the final version of Captured Angel included Norbert Putnam
on bass on certain tracks, and Al Perkins on pedal steel guitar
and David Lindley on fiddle, plus some string arrangements by
Glen Spreen, but otherwise it was truly a Fogelberg solo effort.
That album only solidified his fame, as well as making him a
special favorite of college students (especially coeds) across
the country, and a tour with the Eagles in 1975 — who, by then,
were being managed by
Azoff — only enhanced his profile.
Fogelberg moved to Colorado in the mid-'70s, and his initial
time there resulted in the songs that became the basis for his
next album, Nether Lands (1977).
Ironically,
the songs came at the end of an extended dry spell as a
songwriter, the first of his adult life. He found himself unable
to compose for months, and then, suddenly, he started writing
again, but in a much more ornate, elaborately conceived,
classically influenced idiom.
The songs were bolder both lyrically and musically — the title
track, in particular, was notable for employing the services of
composer/arranger Dominic Frontiere in orchestrating it.
The album was
a hit, and he was still riding that initial wave of recognition
and the concertizing that went with it, even if he was now
taking the audience in some unexpected directions. Fogelberg
decided at this point to step back a bit — get off that wave —
and do something purely for his own satisfaction musically.
In 1978, he began work on a record that was to be more of a
personal indulgence than anything else, the non-commercial side
of Dan Fogelberg, sort of his equivalent to those instrumental
albums that Frank Sinatra had issued as a conductor a couple of
times in his career, or Neil Young's later Everybody's Rockin'.
He teamed up on what became a duo album with jazz flutist Tim
Weisberg for the album Twin Sons of Different Mothers (1978) —
but instead of being a curio or a footnote in his output, it
ended up charting high and generating a huge hit single in the
guise of "The Power of Gold" (which, ironically, had been added
to the LP at the last minute).
The album ended up in the Top 20 and was embraced by
critics and the public alike.
For the next few years, Fogelberg was literally riding a
creative and commercial whirlwind, peaking with his 1980 album
Phoenix, which was propelled to platinum status with help from
the number two single "Longer." The year before, he also
fulfilled a longtime career goal by playing Carnegie Hall in New
York, to a sellout audience that included his parents.
Fogelberg's
career in the 1980s began with an unexpected turn — concept
albums were common enough by then, but most record labels also
tended to strongly discourage the recording of double LPs, owing
to the expense and the difficulties in selling and marketing
them. But midway through finishing his next album, and with the
single "Same Old Lang Syne" already in release and record stores
and buyers poised for a new LP, he suddenly decided to expand
the planned record, writing new songs and effectively doubling
its length, as well as delaying it well into 1981, the better
part of a year beyond what the label or his manager had planned
on.
The result was his boldest production to date, The Innocent Age
(1981), a massive project featuring some VIP collaborators
(including Joni Mitchell and Emmylou Harris), from which four
hit singles, the earlier "Same Old Lang Syne" plus "Run for the
Roses," "Hard to Say," and "Leader of the Band" (the latter a
tribute to his father), were ultimately extracted.
That album
marked his commercial peak, and seemed to end a phenomenally
popular and productive phase of his career.
As though to mark the transition, the following year Epic
released its first hits compilation on Fogelberg, a ten-song LP
on which four of the slots were filled by the singles off of The
Innocent Age.
It was
three years before his next new album, during which time
Fogelberg's musical sensibilities evolved in new and more
specialized directions. He turned toward more personal and
experimental forms of music, none of which proved remotely as
popular with the public or with critics as his 1970s work.
Additionally, as was the case with many artists of the 1970s and
earlier, the playing field was fundamentally altered in the
1980s. MTV and music videos as promotional devices became
central to getting exposure and airplay, and recording artists
now needed a distinct visual style as well as a sound to make it
to the front rank; additionally, a new generation of music
critics, most of whom were bent on showing contempt for most of
the favored artists of the previous decade or two, were now
speaking in the press.
His 1984 album Windows and Walls did reach the fans, and even
generated a hit in "Language of Love," but got a hostile
reception from the critics of the period. And his turn toward
bluegrass music, helped in part by his contact with Chris
Hillman, who'd also turned back toward his bluegrass roots at
the time (and recorded Fogelberg's "Morning Sky" as the title
track of his latest album), didn't make him any more accessible
to the mainline music critics of the day. The resulting album,
High Country Snows (1985), was a good seller and showed off
Fogelberg's roots brilliantly, but did nothing to enhance his
pop credibility, which had waned considerably over the previous
three years.
Fogelberg withdrew somewhat in the years that followed, playing
anonymously in bars around Colorado as part of an outfit called
Frankie & the Aliens, formed by Joe Vitale.
He seemed to
be headed back to his teenage roots, and in the process
redefined himself musically.
When he re-emerged with The Wild Places and the
worldbeat-flavored River of Souls in the early '90s, he was
writing what amounted to topical songs about the environment, a
subject with which he'd become much concerned since moving
permanently to Colorado.
By that time,
he'd established a fully equipped home studio that provided him
with the independence that he craved, and he was beholden to the
record label merely as a conduit for his work.
Epic, for its part, kept releasing Fogelberg's music, including
a superb 1991 live album called Greetings from the West, and his
earlier albums made perennially popular CD releases. Home Free
was also extensively remixed by Norbert Putnam for its CD
re-release in 1988 (those desiring to hear the original mix can
find it on BGO's U.K. double-CD reissue of Home Free/Souvenirs).
Indeed, all of Fogelberg's compact discs reflected an
unusual degree of care in their production, especially for
Columbia catalog reissues of the era, when the label was often
just slapping down the digital masters and batting them out
without an eye toward quality.
In 1995, he and Tim Weisberg did another collaboration together,
No Resemblance Whatsoever, which seemed to pick up right where
their 1978 album had left off without skipping a beat. In 1997,
Columbia honored Fogelberg with a four-CD career retrospective
compilation entitled Portrait: The Music of Dan Fogelberg from
1972-1997, looking back over his previous 25 years of work.
Fogelberg closed out the old century with First Christmas
Morning, which saw him plunge several centuries into the past in
pursuing traditional holiday music, evoking sounds that, in the
context of work from a pop/rock artist, had previously only been
heard from Jan Akkerman on his Tabernakel album and the work of
the Amazing Blondel, nearly 30 years before. Finally, in 2003,
Fogelberg went back to the acoustic singer/songwriter sound of
his early career with the appropriately titled Full Circle
album.
This seemed
like the possible opening of a promising new phase to his work
and career. Those prospects were dashed in mid-2004, however,
when Fogelberg was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer, to
which he finally succumbed in late 2007.
Words from allmusic.com. Read more about Dan Fogelberg at the official website.

Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg & Tim Weisberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg & Tim Weisberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -
Dan
Fogelberg -