Ronstadt’s rocking return
Years after giving up singing, Linda Ronstadt is back on the charts with Live In Hollywood.
THE recent release of the first official live recording of Linda Ronstadt’s career, coming more than a decade after Parkinson’s disease forced her to abandon singing, is surprising on at least two fronts.
For starters, this celebrated perfectionist is not a fan of live albums in general, much less any with her voice front and centre.
“In the studio, you can do it right,” Ronstadt, 72, said in a rare interview from her Bay Area home shortly before the recent release of Live In Hollywood, a session that was captured in 1980 at Television Center Studios for an HBO special that aired the same year.
“I also start to sing better after I’ve been on stage for a while.”
Whatever qualifiers Ronstadt feels compelled to share, the album has been a quick hit with music fans. It quickly shot to No. 1 on Amazon.com’s CD sales ranking and entered Billboard’s 200 Albums national sales chart at No. 7.
It documents a performance near the end of her reign as the Queen of Rock of the 1970s, when she was regularly placing hits in the upper reaches of the pop charts.
Live In Hollywood includes her distinctive interpretations of Chuck Berry’s Back In The USA ,Roy Orbison’s Blue Bayou, J.D. Souther’s
Faithless Love, Warren Zevon’s
Poor Poor Pitiful Me, Clint Ballard’s You’re No Good ,and Desperado, that last song written by former members of her backing band who went on to form the Eagles.
Those are among the dozen tracks Ronstadt chose from among the 20 numbers in the original HBO performance.
“A lot of people I know did live records,” she said, noting that the preponderance of live recordings released commercially in the 1960s and ‘70s did little to make her warm up to the idea herself. “Then, they’d go in and rerecord their vocals. Then, it’s not live, so what’s the point?”
Beyond that, for the most part, any recordings she authorised at her concerts were done strictly for educational purposes.
“We recorded some shows, but only on cassette tape, from a (mixing) board mix,” said Ronstadt. “The first thing I would do is listen back to anything that was wrong and see what we could fix.”
Otherwise, she said, “I don’t listen to my old stuff. It makes me realise how stupid I was onstage.”
Part of Ronstadt’s tempered assessment of the project has to do with some unpleasant memories of the recording environment.
“All I remembered about doing the video is that we were all really hot and sweaty,” she said. “It was something like 103 degrees onstage. It was too hot to sing, really.
“I don’t know how they got everyone in that studio audience in there. We just showed up and did what we were told.”
Her present-day manager, John Boylan, who played guitar on some of her old studio recordings, oversaw the updating of the 39-year-old audio tracks. He was adamant that there was no sweetening or technical tweaking of her vocals, other than bringing them up slightly in the mix.
What audiences today hear on Live In Hollywood is exactly what Ronstadt sang into her microphone. “It was very minor burnishing of the sound to bring it up to 21st century standards,” Boylan said in a separate interview. “The reason it sounds as good as it does now is because it sounded so good then.
Oddly, the restoration and release of the new album almost didn’t happen.
Boylan said officials at Warner Music Group, the parent company of her label at the time, Asylum, were unable to find the master tapes. One day he struck up a conversation with another father at an ice rink where their sons’ hockey teams were practicing. The man turned out to be an audio engineer for Warner, who, in an extraordinary instance of serendipity, helped lead Boylan to the master tapes.
For Boylan, it’s the hand of fate at work on behalf of a singer he admired long before he signed on as her manager.
“I hope it reaffirms for everyone the idea that she was one of the iconic voices of my generation,” he said. “I hope it makes people remember how great she was live. People forget because her voice is gone, and you can’t see her in concert anymore.” – Tribune News Service