Hello
again, friends! It's time for the Dial to send another overlooked
classic track from years hence to your speakers. Tonight, we bring
you Mr. Glenn Frey, and “Love in the 21st
Century”.
I see beautiful women dressed in black, everyone a pretty face”
From 1992’s Strange Weather LP, “Love…” is Frey’s observations on the challenges of dating in the early ‘90s. He begins his quest for romance by going to a club, but finds that everybody is too superficial and interested solely in appearances rather than personality and compatibility. Though an argument could be made that Glenn's character may suffer from a touch of this as well, as he tells a woman he loves her after laying eyes on her “red lips” and “tight hips”.
Then he tries video dating, which generates a meeting with a young lady, and results in this back and forth between Glenn and his date…
“Do you like to party? (yeah, yeah, yeah) Do you want to settle down? (no, no, no)
Do you like my kind of music? (yeah, yeah, yeah) Do you wanna mess around? (Whoa!, Whoa!, Whoa!)”
And above all he finds the girl doesn’t even look the same as on her video!
Finally, he resorts to an adult phone service line, which of course proves unsatisfying as well. An uncredited female vocalist perfectly nails the kind of dialogue associated with these services. BTW, she answers to “Miss Kittie”, she is sooo lonely, and Glenn sounds like a big, strong man.
Throughout the song, Glenn observes that “something is wrong with this picture”, and he laments that it's a crying shame when a man can't find true love in this world anymore.
“Tell me do I look like a desperate man? Champagne and flowers in my hand.
I don't know her, she don't know me, she's my video date, she's my destiny”
Now, of course, video dating and phone sex lines were fresh, hot topics in the early '90s, but they’ve been supplanted in 2015 by social media, internet dating sites and texting, making the cultural milestones in the song feel nostalgic and outdated now. However, Glenn seems to look forward to our modern times with the line… “We're living in pictures, we want what we see, That's love in the 21st Century”. This certainly works for the era in which Facebook and Twitter is just as likely to generate a relationship than a singles night at a bar.
Despite a happy-go-lucky pop/rock vibe, and an opening guitar riff echoing CCR's 1969 classic “Fortunate Son”, “Love...” was Frey’s final single released to U.S. pop radio, and it barely left a mark, bubbling under the hot 100 at #12.
“It's the same sad story all over this world, every man looking for the perfect girl.
He sees her every day in a magazine, sees her every night on a TV screen.”
By now, I'm sure you are all aware that Glenn passed away on January 18, at the age of 67. His predominant legacy will be as a founding member and contributor to The Eagles. Glenn sang lead on such lasting classics as “Lyin’ Eyes”, “New Kid in Town”, and “Heartache Tonight”, and co-wrote with bandmate Don Henley not only these three songs, but also “One of These Nights”, “Take It To The Limit”, “The Long Run” and their signature song “Hotel California”.
However, his 80s material should not be discounted either. There’s the unquestionable power house mid 80s triumvirate of “The Heat Is On”, “Smugglers Blues” and “You Belong to The City”. All three are soundtrack extractions (“The Heat...” from Beverly Hills Cop, and the other two from Miami Vice), and possess an energy and atmosphere that truly evoke the middle years of the MTV decade. Other noteworthy solo singles include the beautiful and jazzy “The One You Love” (1982), the smooth and playful “Sexy Girl” (1984), and the 1991's friendship-celebrating Thelma & Louise theme “Part of Me, Part of You”.
This has certainly been an inauspicious winter in terms of losing musicians… Scott Weiland, Lemmy, Natalie Cole, David Bowie, and now Glenn. (and as I finish up this article – Jefferson Airplane’s Paul Kantner and Signe Anderson, both leaving us on the same day, January 28). We certainly hope this sad trend ends soon, as it definitely affects us deeply when someone who reached us through their music leaves this world.
Mr. Frey, you are truly a legend and a master of your craft, and nobody can take that away from you. You provided the soundtrack to so many of our lives, and we are grateful. Much love and respect, Glenn. We'll miss you.
“That's love in the 21st Century. You can get it by mail, you can get it by phone.
You can get it late at night when you're all alone. What does everybody want desperately?
Love in the 21st Century.”
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