IT’S EARLY — barely past sunrise — in Nils Lofgren’s area of Arizona, not far from Scottsdale. But the veteran multi-instrumentalist is awake and into his day, accompanied by Rose, the 95-pound mixed-breed Lofgren and his wife, Amy, rescued last year.
She and the couple’s 14-year-old Chihuahua, Outlaw Pete, meanwhile, are still asleep.
“I like getting up super early, sometimes in the dark,” Lofgren, 72, says. “When I’m on the road it’s different; I can’t sleep because of the performance adrenalin. But at home, when I’m able to get a little sleep, I’m an early riser.”
Lofgren isn’t one to waste any of that time, either. He’s been a recording artist since he was a teenager in the band Grin — which got its break thanks to the patronage of…
