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       Having acknowledged a certain creative desperation on The Pretender, 
        Jackson Browne lowered his sights (and raised his commercial appeal) considerably 
        with Running on Empty, which was more a concept album about the road than 
        an actual live album, even though its songs were sometimes recorded on-stage 
        (and sometimes on the bus or in the hotel). Unlike most live albums, though, 
        it consisted of previously unrecorded songs. Browne had less creative 
        participation on this album than on any he ever made, solely composing 
        only two songs, co-writing four others, and covering another four. And 
        he had less to say -- the title song and leadoff track neatly conjoined 
        his artistic and escapist themes. Figuratively and creatively, he was 
        out of gas, but like "the pretender," he still had to make a 
        living. The songs covered all aspects of touring, from Danny O'Keefe's 
        "The Road," which detailed romantic encounters, and "Rosie" 
        (co-written by Browne and his manager Donald Miller), in which a soundman 
        pays tribute to auto-eroticism, to, well, "Cocaine," to the 
        travails of being a roadie ("The Load-Out"). Audience noises, 
        humorous asides, loose playing -- they were all part of a rough-around-the-edges 
        musical evocation of the rock & roll touring life. It was not what 
        fans had come to expect from Browne, of course, but the disaffected were 
        more than outnumbered by the newly converted. (It didn't hurt that "Running 
        on Empty" and "The Load-Out"/"Stay" both became 
        Top 40 hits.) As a result, Browne's least ambitious, but perhaps most 
        accessible, album ironically became his biggest seller. But it is not 
        characteristic of his other work: for many, it will be the only Browne 
        album they will want to own, just as others always will regard it disdainfully 
        as "Jackson Browne lite." 
      (by William Ruhlmann, All 
        Music Guide) 
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