The late Eddie Money had a tight, well-seasoned band by the time his second album, Life for the Taking, and second US tour rolled around. Here is Eddie Money raising the roof on the 1979 tour with “Everybody Rock’n’Roll the Place”. -Redbeard
Tag: Eddie Money
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Eddie Money- Everybody Rock’n’Roll the Place- 1979
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Eddie Money- Sound of Money (Best Of)
Just before Christmas 1989 Eddie Money joined me In the Studio to discuss his roller-coaster career and first “best of” compilation, The Sound of Money. Alternately hysterically funny and harrowing, in my classic rock interview Eddie Money shares the real backstories behind “Two Tickets to Paradise”, “Baby Hold On”, “Gimme Some Water”, and “Trinidad” from his first three albums; his life-threatening drug overdose and comeback with “Shakin’ “, “Think I’m in Love”, and the autobiographical “No Control”; relapse and rehab while recording “Take Me Home Tonight” and “I Wanna Go Back”; and as the Eighties closed and the Berlin Wall fell, redemption with the hits “Walk on Water” and “Peace in Our Time”.From the archive, the late Eddie Money was my featured guest In the Studio on the best of The Sound of Money. -Redbeard
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Eddie Money- Can’t Hold Back
It was just before Christmas 1989, and after almost being permanently paralyzed and unable ever to walk again only seven years earlier, rock’s Mr. No Control and Where’s the Party, Eddie Money, showed up for our In the Studio interview…with a cooing little baby girl. “Now I’m buying a house out in suburbia,” Eddie Money revealed. “I’m forty years old and I figured it’s time for me to start having some kids, ya know?…I went from a quarter ounce (of cocaine) a day to having babies!” Eddie chuckled.Over the years you may have forgotten just how deep a well of great songs Eddie Money’s 1986 collection Can’t Hold Back is, and how popular the subsequent response to it was. But the tragi-comic back story that it was even made at all, or that Eddie lived to enjoy its success, sounds like the over-active imagination of a pulp fiction writer. But in this In the Studio archive classic rock interview, the late Eddie Money ‘fesses up warts and all while sharing “Take Me Home Tonight”, “I Wanna Go Back”, “Endless Nights”, “One Chance”, and the blistering rocker “We Should Be Sleeping”. Eddie Money’s sojourn with his most popular album Can’t Hold Back took him from the top of the charts in 1986 with “Take Me Home Tonight” back to the hospital where his drug overdose six years earlier had paralyzed his leg. “The first time I heard ‘Take Me Home Tonight’ on the radio, I was doing the dishes in rehab,” Eddie tells us incredulously. “I said to myself, ‘What’s wrong with this picture?’ ”
(Eddie Money with Ronnie Spector)Can’t Hold Back yielded two more hits, “I Wanna Go Back” peaking at #14 and “Endless Nights” at #21, in addition to “Take Me Home Tonight” reaching #4, all the while the real-life Edward Mahoney torpedoed his marriage, his health, and almost cost him his singing career as well as his freedom. Eddie Money joined me here In the Studio for this often funny, yet at times harrowing, classic rock interview. We received word in September 2019 that Eddie Money passed away with stage four esophageal cancer. May God give him a real one-way ticket to heavenly Paradise that never expires. –Redbeard
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Texxas Jam ’78 Dallas Cotton Bowl 7-4-78
On July 4th weekend in 1978, almost 100,000 people crammed into the Cotton Bowl in Dallas on the hottest day of the decade for the first Texxas Jam ’78 to watch Van Halen, Heart, Ted Nugent, Aerosmith, Journey, Eddie Money, Walter Egan, Head East, & Frank Marino. It was one of the first stadium rock shows of this magnitude ever held in the South, and more importantly, it was the first of more than a decade of Texxas Jams to follow. To tell the story in an independent film documentary has been the long odyssey of producer/ actor Brian Hedenberg . Against all odds in the worst economy since the Great Depression, Hedenberg completed his dream and unveiled this thorough telling of the tale by the promoters who imagined it, bankrolleded it, and organized it; the bands who played the first Texxas Jam that day in 1978; and the fans who made rock history. Check out the video from Texxas Jam ’78 , truly a labor of love from Hedenberg. – Redbeard


