| For The Record... |
| Born on August 13, 1951, in Peoria, IL; died of prostate cancer on December 16, 2007, in Deer Isle, ME; son of a band leader father and an opera singer mother; married, wife's name Jean. Education: Attended University of Illinois. Began performing original songs in coffee houses while student at University of Illinois, late 1960s; moved to Los Angeles and signed with Columbia Records, 1971; performed as back-up singer with Van Morrison tour; released first LP, Home Free, 1972; signed with Epic Records and manager Irving Azoff after being dropped by Columbia; released first LP with Epic, Souvenirs, 1974; collaborated with jazz-pop flutist Tim Weisberg on Twin Sons of Different Mothers and No Resemblance Whatsoever albums; appeared on soundtrack to 1980 film Urban Cowboy; achieved superstar status with album The Innocent Age and single "Leader of the Band," 1981; with Chris Hillman, released bluegrass album Exiles, 1987; continued releasing albums on Full Moon label; released First Christmas Morning, 1999; released Full Circle, 2003. Awards: Rock Music Awards, Best New Male Vocalist, 1974, 1975. Addresses: Web site—http://www.danfogelberg.com. |
Singer, songwriter
One of numerous singer/songwriters to emerge from the introversion-oriented years of the early 1970s, Dan Fogelberg became a success with melodic rock songs that often explored the bittersweet aspects of love and relationships. Fogelberg was by no means a great critical success, but his sound was pleasing to a generation of rock fans whose musical tastes had tempered since the dissonant, heavily electric acid rock days of the late 1960s. After the singer's death in 2007, the New York Times observed that Fogelberg hits like "Leader of the Band" "helped define the soft-rock era."
Fogelberg's smooth sound was the result of a tried-and-true approach that helped launch the careers of similar artists such as James Taylor, Paul Simon, Jackson Browne, Joni Mitchell, and Carole King. Though Fogelberg was not as commercially successful as those performers, his following remained strong, despite a growing impatience on the part of some rock critics who were waiting for an evolution in Fogelberg's musical development. "Fogelberg is an incurable romantic, and after one or two songs you're ready for someone to find a cure," wrote Mark Peel in a review of the 1987 album Exiles in Stereo Review. "It wouldn't be so bad if he had something new or interesting to say about love, but all he does is recycle the tired excuses and rationalizations couples use on one another when they're too lazy to ‘think.’" Perhaps taking those criticisms to heart, Fogelberg ventured into bluegrass, environmentally-themed songs, and even traditional Christmas music in later releases.
Born on August 13, 1951, Fogelberg grew up in Peoria, Illinois. Fogelberg, the son of a band leader father and an opera student mother, was "constantly surrounded by good music, whether I liked it or not," he told Rolling Stone. He played the piano as a child and later began composing songs on the guitar. Fogelberg entered the University of Illinois as an art student, but after two years he became such a hit on the Midwest coffee house circuit that he was urged to head West in search of a recording contract. His first backer was the powerful Columbia Records executive Irving Azoff, a graduate of the University of Illinois who heard Fogelberg play at a fraternity party and was impressed. In Los Angeles, Fogelberg tried to find work as a session musician and eventually caught the eye of singer Van Morrison, who made Fogelberg part of his touring band. Eventually he signed with Columbia and moved to Nashville to record his first album, Home Free (1972), a critically acclaimed effort that was nonetheless virtually ignored by the label, which eventually dropped Fogelberg from its roster.
But Fogelberg persevered in Nashville, working with such musicians as Roger McGuinn, Randy Newman, and Michael Stanley, and eventually things turned around for him. He was signed by the Epic label and came under the direct management of Azoff, who by then had established his reputation as manager for Joe Walsh and the Eagles. The Fogelberg/Azoff relation- ship culminated in the 1974 LP Souvenirs, which featured backing by Don Henley, Graham Nash, Glenn Frey, and Walsh (who also produced it). Souvenirs, helped along by the hit single "Part of the Plan," went gold and launched Fogelberg into stardom—a stardom that Fogelberg had expected and seemed to understand: "I planned every step of this," he told Rolling Stone. "I mean, this pop music isn't going to last forever. You gotta realize that there's a five-year period or so when your peak popularity is—you're lucky if it lasts that long."
Fogelberg certainly took advantage of his "peak popularity." He followed Souvenirs with the 1975 release Captured Angel and the 1976 album Nether Lands, both of which went gold. In 1978 he collaborated with flutist Tim Weisberg on the platinum-selling LP Twin Sons of Different Mothers. This was followed by Phoenix, a 1980 release that sold more than two million copies, and the double-LP The Innocent Age, another top ten record, and one that spawned the durable soft-rock anthem "Leader of the Band." The song was widely thought to have been written about Fogelberg's father. Despite his obvious appeal among record buyers, Fogelberg, reclusive by nature, never relished touring, preferring instead to remain secluded on the ranch he had purchased near Boulder, Colorado, the moment he could afford to move away from the L.A. music scene. Nevertheless the singer established himself as a solid touring act with a top-notch road band known as Fool's Gold, who themselves cut a pair of relatively successful albums. Later Fogelberg divided his time between Colorado and a home he purchased on Deer Isle off the Maine coast.
Fogelberg's prophecy that he would enjoy about five years of high-level popularity proved broadly correct, and he never recaptured his commercial momentum of the late 1970s and early 1980s. He remained a strong concert draw, however, and issued Greetings from the West (1991) and another live album, Live: Something Old New Borrowed … and Some Blues (2000). In his later studio releases, Fogelberg experimented with various styles and themes. The Wild Places and River of Souls stressed environmental themes in their lyrics. In 1995 Fogelberg reunited with Weisberg for No Resemblance Whatsoever, which featured high-tech soft jazz instrumentation. Fogelberg contemplated issuing an album of classical music, and in 1999 his holiday release First Christmas Morning drew on music from the European tradition as well as popular carols and Fogelberg's own compositions. He returned to mine his original vein of folk-rock songwriting with 2003's Full Circle.
Fogelberg made plans to go on tour to support that release, but those plans were cut short by a diagnosis of prostate cancer that soon forced the singer to retire from performing and recording. One of his last recordings was "Sometimes a Song," recorded in 2005 as a valentine for the singer's wife, Jean; it was released as a single, with profits benefiting prostate cancer research. On his Web site, Fogelberg urged readers to undergo cancer screening. Before his death, he completed a final album, Love in Time, including "Sometimes a Song" and materials assembled from earlier compositions; it was slated for release in late 2009. Fogelberg died at his home on Deer Isle on December 16, 2007.
Selected discography
Solo albums
Home Free, Columbia, 1972.
Souvenirs, Epic, 1974.
Captured Angel, Epic, 1975.
Nether Lands, Epic, 1977.
Phoenix, Epic, 1980.
The Innocent Age, Epic, 1981.
Greatest Hits, Epic, 1981.
Windows and Walls, Epic, 1984.
High Country Snows, Epic, 1985.
(With Chris Hillman) Exiles, Epic, 1987.
The Wild Places, Epic, 1990.
Dan Fogelberg Live: Greetings from the West, Full Moon, 1991.
River of Souls, 1993.
First Christmas Morning, Chicago, 1999.
Live: Something Old New Borrowed … and Some Blues, Chicago, 2000.
Full Circle, Morning Sky, 2003.
With Tim Weisberg
Twin Sons of Different Mothers, Epic, 1978.
No Resemblance Whatsoever, Giant, 1995.
Love in Time, 2009.
Sources
Books
Clifford, Mike, The Harmony Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock, Harmony Books, 1986.
Pareles, Jon, and Patricia Romanowski, The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock, Rolling Stone Press, 1983.
Periodicals
Billboard, March 15, 2008, p. 38.
Entertainment Weekly, October 13, 1995, p. 77.
Guardian (London, England), January 11, 2008, p. 42.
New York Times, December 17, 2007, p. A29.
Rolling Stone, August 25, 1977.
Sing Out!, Spring 2008, p. 170.
Stereo Review, October 1987.
Variety, December 24, 2007, p. 32.
Virginian Pilot (Norfolk, VA), December 23, 2007, p. B11.
Online
"Dan Fogelberg," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (May 1, 2009).
"News," Dan Fogelberg Official Web site, http://www.danfogelberg.com (May 1, 2009).
"A Tribute: Dan Fogelberg's Legacy," Ellsworth American (Ellsworth, ME), http://www.ellsworthmaine.com/site/index.php/2007121911859/Latest/A-Tribute-Dan-Fogelbergs-Legacy.html (May, 1, 2009).






