Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Loggins is set to go out — with a twist

His farewell tour promises all the hits, but subtly altered

- By Thomas Cro■e Correspond­ent

If, at age 75, Kenny Loggins decided that touring would no longer be a part of his regular life, who could blame the man?

He's been at this music career for half a century, after all, writing hit songs since the early 1970s as half of Loggins and Messina, followed by a huge run of solo success in the 1980s, an electric period that included several monster soundtrack hits. And while the chart-toppers haven't been as frequent in more recent years, he's stayed busy in the past three decades as a songwriter, with work falling in the adult realm and in children's music.

So Loggins would be forgiven for spending time at home or traveling for pleasure, perhaps writing and recording music as time and energy allowed. Loggins may settle into some semblance of that life, but in 2023, he's venturing out one more time, doing what he is billing as his final extensive tour. He's bringing his fan base a set list of his biggest songs as well as some deeper cuts. All will be performed with a core band that's been with him for a good, long while, with a new member or two peppered into the group over the past few years. Even the biggest hits get a mild reworking in

Kenny Loggins says he has no regrets about insisting on acting as his own songwriter and producer in the '80s when labels were pressuring him to perform other people's material.

tone, pace, color and feel.

The combinatio­n of giving the fans what they want while satisfying his own interests in revisiting classics “is a balancing act,” Loggins suggested in a phone interview ahead of bringing This Is It! His Final Tour to YouTube Theater in Inglewood tonight and Yaamava' Theater in Highland on Sunday.

“For me, I want to pull in songs, deep cuts, that have some emotional meaning for me, something that I connect to and want to convey with that song,” he said. “I'm pulling in `Keep the Fire' or `It's About Time,' a song co-written with Michael McDonald. Those have a lot of emotional connection

for me. So I pick the songs that I really relate to. Luckily, I have a life's worth of songs that come from the heart.”

Those include, of course, the megahits, songs that're still heard on throwback radio stations, on countless Spotify playlists and even at the more-than-occasional wedding. (Interestin­gly, Loggins says he's seen no small amount of plays of “Danger Zone” in wedding videos.)

The run of megahits is something he credits to the song “Whenever I Call You Friend,” the 1978 hit from his album “Nightwatch,” performed with Stevie Nicks. A Top 5 hit in the U.S., the song opened up a second career

KENNY LOGGINS' THIS IS IT! HIS FINAL TOUR

for him after the Loggins & Messina era. Two years later, “I'm Alright” was another Top 10 hit, compliment­s of the movie “Caddyshack.”

The film, he said, “was the beginning of my end run around disco. That album kept me alive and viable as an artist for maybe six or seven years. That was a good idea. One of the bad ideas is that during that period of time, I had hits with other people and the thought was that `as long as he doesn't write 'em or produce 'em, we can have hits with him.' Labels wanted to use outside producers, and my biggest hit, `Footloose,' was created by me. That gave me the chance to move forward as my own producer. There's a pressure to do outside material. I resisted that pressure to (do other people's material) and wished to write and perform and produce on my own. It can be a slippery slope to continue your own musical direction.

“I felt, at times, that I needed to have hits with other people's songs,” he said, “but I've always wanted a soul connection, a heart connection with my audience.”

To loop back to the beginning of a long, wide-ranging conversati­on, Loggins noted that being an establishe­d act has always been a challenge for artists.

“Absolutely in this culture, where we fixate so much on the new and the young, we forget artists that've been out there awhile and who know what they're doing,” he said. “We as a culture drop attention toward those people. Madison Avenue will tell you that if you put `new' on a box, it'll sell more. That's the nature of culture and part of the fun of rock 'n' roll. I'm not (complainin­g) about that; it's just the nature of things. Now that I'm in my 70s, I know that appreciati­on of doing something for 50 years. I'm really good at what I do.”

And to that, he's excited about the possibilit­y of young songwriter­s tackling his songs for a compilatio­n album that could see the light of day before long. On it, he'd hope to discuss the songs with each, possibly allowing them a shot at completing unfinished original tracks, or working with them to create new material from old cloth.

In addition to tours, all these many years on, those moments of creation are what “keep pulling at me.”

“As an artist,” he concluded, “I don't know how to keep still.”

 ?? COURTESY OF NICK SPANOS ?? When: 8 tonight
Where: YouTube Theater, Inglewood
Tickets: $39-$59at Ticketmast­er.com
Also: 8 p.m. Sunday, Yaamava' Theater, 777 San Manuel Blvd., Highland. $325-$500 at AXS.com, 21 or older only.
COURTESY OF NICK SPANOS When: 8 tonight Where: YouTube Theater, Inglewood Tickets: $39-$59at Ticketmast­er.com Also: 8 p.m. Sunday, Yaamava' Theater, 777 San Manuel Blvd., Highland. $325-$500 at AXS.com, 21 or older only.

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