Know the Song But Not the Writer: Peaceful Easy Feeling Edition

Around the early 1970s, Jack Tempchin was playing guitar and singing in coffee houses in San Diego when he got a gig in El Centro, California. It was his first time in the desert, and the sky inspired him to come up with the line “Peaceful Easy Feeling” for a song. He continued working on the song back in San Diego.

While attending a street fair, Tempchin saw a beautiful woman with tan skin and turquoise earrings. While he did not speak to her, he put her in the opening stanza of the song he was writing on his $13 Stella guitar: eagles

I like the way your sparkling earrings lay,
Against your skin, it’s so brown.
And I wanna sleep with you in the desert tonight
With a billion stars all around.

The Eagles

After finishing the last verse at a Der Weinerschnitzel fast food restaurant in San Diego, Tempchin was hanging around with a number of up-and-coming singer-songwriters. He was staying with Jackson Browne when Glenn Frey overheard Tempchin playing the song.

Frey liked the tune and told Tempchin that he had a band called “the Eagles” that had only been together eight days. Tempchin gave Frey permission for his band to work up the song and the rest is history.

A few months later, Frey played for Tempchin the band’s version of the song with Frey singing lead vocal.  Tempchin loved it.

The tune ended up on the Eagles’ first album, Eagles (1972), and it was released as a single in December 1972.  It went to #22 on the charts. Tempchin heard his song on the radio for the first time as it played on a small transistor radio on top of a refrigerator in the house of someone he met while taking a road trip.

Anyone who was around in the 1970s can probably sing along to the song, which was everywhere on the radio. The film The Big Lebowski (1998) even played off the song’s ubiquitousness when the Dude heard the song playing in a cab and complained about the Eagles. The cab driver then threw him out of the cab.

Tempchin After “Peaceful Easy Feeling”

As for Tempchin, he continues to write and perform. He co-wrote other songs for the Eagles, including “Already Gone.” And his songs have been covered by others, including “Slow Dancin’ (Swayin’ to the Music),” a 1979 hit for Johnny Rivers.

Tempchin tells more of the interesting story behind “Peaceful Easy Feeling” in a post on No Depression and on his website.  The site also features stories from fans about what the song means to them.

You have heard the original version by the Eagles, so now give a listen to the songwriter singing his song. You may hear Tempchin sing “Peaceful Easy Feeling” from his recent CD Live At Tales from the Tavern (2012) above or watch him sing the song in the video below.

Inspirations for the Song

It is interesting to think of the woman who inspired the opening of the song, never knowing it. Like everyone else, she must have heard the song many times, never knowing that it is her in those lines.

Tempchin has explained, “I guess I was trying to distill the beauty of every girl I saw into words on paper and then into a song.” So, maybe it is appropriate that there is no one person out there claiming the song.

Real people and relationships are messy, so it is only an idealized lover that eternally can inspire lines like: “‘Cause I get a peaceful easy feeling/ And I know you won’t let me down.”

And that is the story behind the song.

What is your favorite memory of hearing “Peaceful Easy Feeling”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    The Fourth Wall Breaks

    big lebowski cowboy
    A new video compiles scenes of movie characters breaking the fourth wall through such tactics as commenting to the camera or even just giving a knowing look. Video essayist Leigh Singer put together this supercut that highlights the various ways that movie directors and actors can convey humor and a knowing wink to the audience.

    Check out the Breaking the 4th Wall II: Break Harder montage below. At the Vimeo website, you may find the list of films that appear in the video, such as The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), A Hard Day’s Night (1964), and The Big Lebowski (1998).

    And yes, if you want more wall breaking, there was an earlier supercut of breaking the fourth wall from a few years ago. If you missed it, check out the first Breaking the 4th Wall Movie Supercut below (with list of movies available here).

    Bonus “fourth wall” trivia: According to Wikipedia, most attribute the idea of the “fourth wall” to the philosopher and writer Denis Diderot.

    What is your favorite moment of a movie breaking the fourth wall? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    “The Big Lebowski” in 60 Seconds

    Big Lebowski 60 Seconds
    1A4 Studio recently created a condensed animated version of The Big Lebowski (1998), boiled down to one minute. So, grab a White Russian and sit back and enjoy the next sixty seconds of your life.

    1A4 Studio previously made similar short films condensing other movies like The Matrix (1999), Back to the Future (1985), and Star Wars (1977). Here is Blade Runner (1982) in 60 seconds.

    What is your favorite second in the videos? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    The Dude Abides (Really)

    Big Lebowski A new documentary short follows Jeff Dowd, the inspiration for the Jeff Bridges character in The Big Lebowski. The short documentary The Dude (Director’s Cut) (2012) is directed by Jeff Feuerzeig — who directed one of my favorite recent documentaries, The Devil and Daniel Johnston. On the video’s website, Feuerzeig explains that he met Dowd, who works on film projects and has been executive producer for some films, way back in 1986.

    In the new film, Dowd recounts some of the stories that inspired the Coen Brothers. And the film follows Dowd to a Lebowski Fest, providing some insight into the Jeff “The Dude” Lebowski character. The film does not allow embedding, but you may watch the film on Vimeo.

    In writing this story, for the first time I made the connection between Jeff Dowd’s last name and its similarity to “Dude.” I have never heard there is a connection, but now it seems obvious to me. Other fans, i.e., Achievers, may know whether the connection is intentional. Anyway, check out the short film and see what you think.

    What do you think of The Dude (Director’s Cut)? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Kenny Rogers Just Dropped In

    Last week on American Idol, producer Jimmy Iovine selected one of the songs for each of the contestants, as did the judges. One of the oddest choices was the selection of the Kenny Rogers song “She Believes In Me” for Scotty McCreery. The song style was not odd, as it is a pop-country classic and that style fits McCreery like a glove. What did not work was the subject of the song and McCreery’s youth.

    Kenny Rogers & the First Edition In “She Believes In Me,” the singer laments how he has let down his wife or girlfriend and how he has failed to keep the promises he made when he was younger. The singer recalls, “I told her someday if she was my girl, I could change the world / With my little songs, I was wrong.” It seemed odd to hear the seventeen-year-old McCreery singing the lyrics. Did he promise his girl he would be a national success before he turned sixteen?

    Still, the American Idol country song choices were pretty safe for the top two Scotty McCreery and Lauren Alaina. The two largely have glided through by only singing country songs without being challenged to branch out for some variety. In past seasons, contestants were often forced to sing in other styes, which sometimes worked and sometimes did not. But this season, the judges and America seem content to allow the young contestants to remain in one genre.

    I would have liked to have seen Jimmy Iovene pick a more surprising Kenny Rogers song like “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In).” Although I grew up hearing the pop-country Kenny Rogers songs like “The Gambler,” “Lucille,” “Don’t Fall in Love With a Dreamer” and “Islands in the Stream” overplayed on the radio, I often forget that early in his career he recorded “Just Dropped In” with The First Edition when he was more of a hippy than a silver-bearded pop singer.

    You may recall the Kenny Rogers song from a dream sequence in the movie The Big Lebowski in 1998, but it first was a hit in 1967. “Just Dropped In” was written by one of Kenny Rogers’s former high school friends — Mickey Newbury, who also composed “An American Trilogy,” discussed in a previous post. “Just Dropped In” sounds unlike “Coward of the County” and the other pop songs Rogers recorded later in his career. Even his voice sounds different. And the lyrics deviate from the literalness of most of his hits:

    I pushed my soul in a deep dark hole and then I followed it in;
    I watched myself crawlin’ out as I was a-crawlin’ in;
    I got up so tight I couldn’t unwind;
    I saw so much I broke my mind;
    I just dropped in to see what condition my condition was in.

    According to Wikipedia, the song was a warning about using LSD. But a Dec. 23, 2000 Billboard article “The Story So Far” quotes Rogers explaining that Newbury did not intend the song to be taken completely seriously. “Mickey wrote a quasi-psychedelic song with elements of humor,” he explained. “It’s a tradition in country music to have your tongue in cheek, and that’s the case here.” (“The Story So Far,” at K-2)

    Maybe it would sound odd to have the 17-year-old Scotty McCreery singing the lyrics on American Idol, but it still would be a better song choice than “She Believes In Me.” And with Kenny Rogers on vocals and Glen Campbell playing the guitar on the original recording, you cannot say that country stars cannot handle “Just Dropped In.”

    Check out this psycedelic video from The Smother Brothers Hour. I would like to see this type of production on American Idol too. Groovy.

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