Loggins to take Center stage
James Meier
Kenny Loggins considered retiring a few years ago.
“I told my young son, Luke, that I wasn’t going to sing anymore,
that I wasn’t going to leave anymore, that I was going to stay at
home and play,” the 54-year-old musician said Monday. “Luke then told
my wife, ‘Mommy, if he doesn’t sing, daddy’s going to die.’”
Though that may have been extreme, Loggins took it to heart. He
continues to tour and even plans to put out a new album in mid-2003.
On Dec. 7, the Grammy and Emmy Award-winning singer-songwriter
will make a pit stop during his five-week tour to play an evening
show at the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa.
Jerry Mandel, the Center’s president, said Loggins fits perfectly
into the Center’s formula.
“Kenny’s a real icon of pop music ... We always want to bring
popular artists here,” Mandel said, noting that the Center tried to
recruit Loggins before but scheduling conflicts arose. “We do so much
here, so we don’t always have the perfect schedule.”
Loggins’ career has spanned more than 30 years. It began to take
root as a teenager.
“When I started performing, I was a junior in high school,” he
said during a call from his hotel room in Tampa, Fla., where he was
playing a concert in nearby Clearwater. “Even when I made some money
on the weekends, I always thought I’d have to get a job at some
point.”
Luckily for Loggins, who didn’t have a backup career in mind, the
music gig worked out. By 1968, he “hit the road with the Electric
Prunes,” and it stuck. Four years later, he was singing with Jim
Messina.
The Loggins and Messina duo lasted fewer than five years, but the
two created hits like “Your Mama Don’t Dance” and “Danny’s Song.”
Loggins proved just a couple of years later that he could make it
on his own, and his second and third albums, respectively, spawned
hits “Whenever I Call You Friend” and “This Is It,” which earned him
a Grammy for Best Pop Vocal.
Several of Loggins’ most popular songs, which are still his
calling cards today, came off 1980s’ soundtracks, starting with “I’m
Alright” from the movie “Caddyshack.”
Loggins said he came into soundtrack work by “luck.” A friend of
his called him up and told him “Caddyshack” executive producer Jon
Peters was looking for someone to write and sing original songs for
the film. He then saw the movie, loved it and wrote the opening song,
“I’m Alright.”
For “Footloose,” the song for which he is best known and that most
energizes him on stage, Loggins actually read the screenplay and then
wrote the song before filming began, he said. The song earned him his
first Academy Award nomination. He would later be nominated for “For
The First Time” from the film “One Fine Day.”
“‘Danger Zone’ was another moment of luck,” Loggins said of the
song from “Top Gun.” “Toto was supposed to sing ‘Danger Zone,’ but
they were a few days late on it. I was in the studio singing ‘Playing
With The Boys’ for the film. They needed [‘Danger Zone’] finished,
and I was there.”
In 1994, Loggins released an album geared toward children that
adults could still enjoy. “Return to Pooh Corner” featured a song of
the same name that was actually born more than 25 years earlier in
“House at Pooh Corner.” There were two reasons he wrote the song as a
teenager.
“One was that Winnie the Pooh books were some of the first I read
as a kid,” he recalled. “I wrote it the last few weeks of high
school. I was kind of saying good-bye to my childhood.”
But once Loggins had his own child, though long before 1994, he
“realized you never lose your childhood.” So the song returned.
Today, his eldest son, Crosby, is also a musician and actually opens
for him on the road.
Loggins’ new album in 2003 will boast a combination of his three
styles -- “jazzy, rocky and bluesy,” he said. The songs will focus on
life from his current perspective.
“I think the door is open now to being an artist that can express
the emotional reality of people my age,” he said. “There are not a
lot of artists left that are willing or able to, lyrically, talk
about the things we’re going through at this age -- 40 on up.”
For those who won’t be able to catch Loggins at the Center at 8
p.m. Saturday, “Essentials,” an album of about 30 of his greatest
hits, came out Nov. 19.
“It’s a deserted island collection -- what Kenny Loggins songs you
would take to a deserted island,” he said. “God forbid you only take
music.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.