" Pretty close." "It's good." "Not too bad." "It's gonna be about two minutes, so come on." "Do what you got to do." "We got to go." "I need a wrist band." "It's something that you can't do forever, you know?" "This is not a lifetime career that we can do, you know." "80 __ -it's not?" "All right, let's go." "Thank you, and good evening." "We're the Eagles from Los Angeles." "One, two, three, four." "People are always saying things to me like," ""You're just like a normal person."" "And I always say, "Of course."" "All right!" "We might be a little more world-wise, you know, than some of those kids, that's all." "We just maybe have less innocence than they do, but, I mean, I eat, I sleep, IfaHinlove," "I fall out of love, I work." "You know, I do pretty much the same thing." "We saw a poster of us when "On the Border" was made." "Everybody looked like little kids, you know, like, early 20s and stuff." "And everybody didn't have their wrinkles and their baggy eyes." "Sort of like a president when he first takes office." "And then, like four or five years later, you know, he just walks out, and his hair is gray, and his eyes are drooping, and he's just really, you know, real burned." "The first thing that happens is you get some kind of label, and then you got to live up to it, and then you just get caught in that, and I forget what the second thing is." "It's hard." "It's like living two lives." "You know, I have a family, three kids." "And it's just hard to live in between that line, you know, of being out on the road and being away for a month." "Maybe we wouldn't want to do this anymore, or maybe we can't do this anymore, or maybe nobody will give a shit if we do this anymore." "Thank you." "No, I insist." "You first." "Hi, there." "Lock it up." "A hearty bunch out there." "Oh, he's not even here." "Now..." "Hey, driver, lock 'em up for us tonight, okay?" "Out of sight." "You just don't know what those kids will do." "Doggone." "How about a beer?" " Is that what I heard?" "You got it, brother." "Don't hurt yourself, young America." "Would you like one?" "Yeah, I would like one." "I'm gonna drink tonight." "I think they feel like they're up there, you know, like they're on the stage." "'Cause we look like them." "We dress like them." "Part of it is that, and part of it's the records." "I think they just relate to the songs." "I think it's 50/50, I guess." "The thing is now is to try to see how long we can stay up here at the top of the mountain." "It's very narrow and windy up here." "We can probably continue doing what we're doing as long as the songs keep coming." "That's the only thing that frightens us is to not be able to do that anymore." "If nothing comes up, we would be in trouble." "So far, so good." "I think we can maintain this for a few more years." "I don't see why not." "Other people have -- the Rolling Stones and the Who and the Led -- and Led Zeppelin " "I almost said the Led Zeppelin -- have done it." "Chicago's done it." "Groups last longer than they used to, you know." "Shit don't float." "90% of the time, being in the Eagles was a fucking blast." "You know, I was living the dream." "We never in our wildest dreams figured on being this successful and lasting this long." "We were a bunch of guys out there touring the country." "We had a little private plane." "We had parties after the shows." "We had a good time." "We were starting to make some money." "We had three guitar players finally, you know, so we could rock a bit." "So, it was a good time, a good time for me, a good time for Don." "Everybody was really happy then." "It was going really fast, and probably too fast." "There was turmoil within the band." "We put a lot of pressure on ourselves." "As Glenn used to say, "We made it, and it ate us."" "It's hard to be in a group." "It's a bit like being in a marriage, if you quadruple it or quintuple it, in our case." "They asked Don when the Eagles broke up," ""What was that like for you?"" "And he said it was a horrible relief." "And I think that clocks it pretty well." "You're a real pro, Don, all the way." "Yeah, you are, too -- the way you handle people." "Except the people you pay, nobody gives a shit about it." "Fuck you." "I've been paying you for seven years, you fuckhead." "So much stuffjust happened." "You know, there's a philosopher who says," "As you live your life it appears to be anarchy and chaos and random events, non-related events smashing into each other and causing this situation,"" "and then -- then this happens, and it's overwhelming, and it just looks like, "What in the world is going on?"" "And later, when you look back at it, it looks like a finely-crafted novel, but at the time, it don't." "And a lot of the Eagles' story is like that." "I'm gonna fuckin' kill you." "I can't wait." "I can't wait." "We might as well start at the beginning." "I grew up in Detroit, Michigan." "My dad worked in a factory." "My mother baked pies at General Motors." "I started taking piano lessons when I was five years old." "That alone could get you beat up after school in suburban Detroit." "Detroit was Motown, and so they played all the Motown hits." "And that was the kind of stuff that we would listen to." "I stopped playing piano when I was 12." "It was too much." "I wanted to do other things, and I think the girl thing was starting to happen, as well." "Then the Beatles came along, and my Aunt took me down to see the Beatles at the Olympia." "It was crazy." "I remember having a girl that was standing on her seat in front of me fall backwards into my arms, delirious, going, "Paul, Paul."" "You know, and I thought, "Oh, my God."" "I have a very vivid memory of seeing the Beatles with my parents on our old Admiral TV set." "It was like a bolt of lightning." "It had a huge impact on me." "It was revolutionary." "And it was an impact that would last a lifetime, and I know that had a huge impact on Glenn, too, even though we didn't know each other at the time." "Linden, Texas, is my hometown." "It's a small town in Northeastern Texas." "When I was growing up, the population was about 2,500, 2,600." "It's primarily an agricultural area." "Some people worked at the steel mill." "It's just a typical small Texas town." "There's an old courthouse dating back to before the Civil War and one stoplight." "It's kind of like "The Last Picture Show," you know?" "It was a great place musically because it was kind of a cultural crossroads." "It's really located where the old South begins to meet the West." "Linden, Texas, was the birthplace of Scott Joplin and T-Bone Walker." "Both my parents loved music, so we had a lot of records in the house." "I was exposed to music of all kinds from an early age -- you know, country-and-western music," "Western swing music, gospel music, blues," "Johnny Cash, Hank Williams, and Patsy Cline." "There was a 50,000-watt radio station in New Orleans, and I heard things on that station that I didn't hear anywhere else." "So, I had a lot of radio coming in." "And when I would go to work with my dad, he would listen to a station in Shreveport, Louisiana " " KWKH." "And that station broadcast a radio show called the "Louisiana Hayride,"" "where Elvis Presley made his first radio broadcast in 1954." "The very first rock-'n'-roll record I bought was by Elvis Presley." "My playing the drums was sort of an organic process." "I began by beating on my school books with my fingers and with pencils." "I would beat out little cadences, and I used to drive my classmates crazy doing that, until, I think, one day, somebody said to me " "I think it was my friend Richard Bowden -- he said, "Why don't you just start playing the drums?"" "I managed to cobble together a drum kit from old drums that I found stashed in the back of the band hall in high school." "And then one day, my mom said, "Come on, get in the car."" "And she drove me to a town about an hour and a half away called Sulphur Springs, Texas, to McKay Music Company." "Much to my surprise, she bought me a set of red-sparkle Slingerland drums that I still have today." "So, I have to give my parents a lot of credit." "They bought me that drum kit even though they couldn't really afford it." "The first band I was in was a band with my high-school buddy Richard Bowden and another high-school friend, Jerry Surratt, and we played Dixieland jazz music." "Nobody sang." "We just played music." "I went to a high-school party, and there were four kids who were freshmen in high school who were playing." "I was a junior, and I had a couple beers that night and said, "Hey, you know, do you know Satisfaction'?" "'Cause I can sing it."" "So, I became the lead singer of the Subterraneans." "I played in the Subterraneans for a while, and then I played in another band called the Mushrooms." "The most important thing that happened to me when I was in Detroit was I met Bob Seger." "He took me under his wing." "He invited me to recording sessions that he was having, you know, so I could see how records were made." "I was his mentor." "He was just so young, and I liked him right away because he was so funny." "He had a great sense of humor, and, like me, I could see he was really ambitious." "He really wanted to be on the radio." "He cut a song called "Ramblin' Gamblin' Man."" "He let me play acoustic guitar on the basic track and sing background vocals." "You can really hear Glenn blurt out on the first chorus." "He comes out really loud." "Tremendous gusto." "Of course, that was a national hit for us, so that was really cool." "Bob was the first guy that wrote his own songs and recorded them that I had ever met." "He said, "You know, if you want to make it, you're gonna have to write your own songs."" "And I said, "Well, what if they're bad?"" "And he said, "Well, they're gonna be bad."" "He says, "You just keep writing and keep writing, and eventually, you'll write a good song."" "We were gonna have a band together." "He was gonna get rid of his other guys, and I was gonna be his bass player." "It didn't work out." "My mom found me smoking pot with a friend of mine in somebody's basement, and she called up Seger's manager, Punch Andrews, and said, "Just a minute, not so fast."" "In the years leading up to the Great Depression, my dad had to quit school after the eighth grade." "He had to go home and work in the fields with his brother and sister to help support the family." "His fondest wish -- in fact, his life's goal was that I would go to college." "Every Saturday night, he would bring home seven quarters, and we'd put them in a piggy bank, and when those quarters amounted to $100, he would take me to the bank and we would buy a savings bond," "a United States savings bond, and put that away for my college education." "So, between what my dad had saved and between what I was making doing gigs all over Texas and Arkansas and Louisiana on weekends," "I paid for 3 1/2 years of college." "They have a world-famous music department in which I did not excel." "I took one music course." "I think it was beginning theory, and I flunked." "I made an" "But I didn't really care because I was an English major." "Well, after the Mushrooms," "I got invited to join this band called the Four of Us." "Started getting into some of the California bands -- the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, the Beach Boys." "Always wanted to go to California." "And I got out there, my mind was blown." "The vegetation -- I'd never seen palm trees." "You know, it was just like a dream come true." "The first celebrity I saw was David Crosby." "And he had on that flat-brimmed hat that he wore on the second Byrds album, and he had a little leather cape on, and I just looked and I thought, "My God, there's David Crosby."" "Zoom, and we went right by." "And the first person I met was John David Souther." "We wanted to get high and play music." "There were two of us with guitars." "We were listening to a lot of that sort of interface between rock 'n' roll and country-and-western music that was happening in Southern California at the time with the Byrds and Dillard  Clark and the Burrito Brothers and Poco." "There was a lot of great music of that sort going around then." "Longbranch Pennywhistle here." "I suppose you wonder what that name meant, and John David and I " "It was a well-kept..." "funky women." "The songs weren't very good." "I don't think Glenn and I were very far along as songwriters then." "We were a funny little group, but we got gigs." "We, you know, managed to play in some of the folk clubs around L.A. -- the Golden Bear and the Ash Grove." "We had a chance meeting with Kenny Rogers in Dallas, Texas, one day." "He was coming through town with the First Edition." "They were very hot at the time." "I remember this like it was yesterday." "This little kid came up and said, "Mr. Rogers,"" "he said, "I'm Don Henley, and I'm with a group called Felicity, and we're doing a show tonight, and we'd love to have you come see us."" "And I said, "You know, I'm really sorry, but I don't do that." "I don't just go to clubs and watch groups."" "He said, "I really think you'd like us."" "And I thought, "Well, that's pretty cool," so I did." "Kenny is a Texas boy, and he was looking for groups to produce." "So, I brought them to L.A., and they literally lived at my house for about four months." "We changed their name to Shiloh." "It was so much fun to take them into the studio." "With Shiloh, we made one album, and it had a single called" ""Simple Little Down Home Rock and Roll Love Song for Rosie."" "Not exactly a short title." "We didn't know much about the business at that point." "We were pretty naive." "We kicked around in the L.A. clubs for a while, played the Whisky, played some of the clubs down in the South Bay area, and nothing really happened for us." "J.D. and I were looking for any place to play." "We had heard about this guy Jackson Browne." "He'd been playing the same clubs we had, but we never had seen him perform." "This is California." "Mr. Jackson Browne." "Ah, thank you, thank you." "Then there were a bunch of gigs that they had and some gigs that I had that they would show up at my gigs and me at their gigs, and we became really good friends." "This is " "And we'd start talking about," ""Where do you live, and what's going on?"" "And Jackson said, "You know, you should come down to Echo Park." "Rent's real cheap."" "Glenn got the apartment next to my apartment, and this apartment cost like $125 or something a month, you know." "And I needed to economize, so I moved into the basement underneath Glenn's place, which I could get into for $35 a month." "It only had one door." "It was really just kind of an illegal place, just a cubbyhole, and that's where Jackson lived, with J.D. and I above." "You know, that was it." "There was a stereo, a piano, a bed, a guitar, you know, a teapot." "We slept late in those days, except around 9:00 in the morning," "I'd hear Jackson Browne's teapot going off, this whistle in the distance." "And then I'd hear him playing piano." "I didn't really know how to write songs." "I knew I wanted to write songs, but I didn't know exactly -- you just wait around for inspiration, what was the deal?" "Well, I learned through Jackson's ceiling and my floor exactly how to write songs 'cause Jackson would get up, and he'd play the first verse and first chorus, and he'd play it 20 times until he had it just the way he wanted." "And then there'd be silence." "And then I'd hear the teapot go off again." "Then it'd be quiet for 10 or 20 minutes." "Then I'd hear him start to play again, and there was the second verse." "So, then he'd work on the second verse, and he'd play it 20 times." "And then he'd go back to the top of the song, and he'd play the first verse, the first chorus, and the second verse another 20 times until he was really comfortable with it and, you know," "change a word here or there, and I'm up there going," ""So, that's how you do it -- elbow grease, you know, time, thought, persistence."" "I wanted to kill him sometimes." "Jackson would play the same phrase, "Doctor, My Eyes" for six weeks." "The same thing with "The Pretender." I just wanted to murder him." "And it was during that period of time that I met Glenn Frey because we were on the same label called Amos records." "Some of the things that struck me when I first met Glenn were things we had in common." "Both of our dads made a living in the automotive industry." "Glenn and I loved old cars, especially cars from the '50s." "He had a '55 Chevy that he named Gladys." "And we drove around Los Angeles in Gladys." "Check out some of the new talent." "There's no better place in town to catch those new singers and songwriters than down at the Monday night Hoot Night," "Doug Weston's world-famous Troubadour, happening tonight." "The Troubadour club was the center of the musical universe." "It was a very seminal place." "It was the place to see and be seen." "Every Monday night they had an open stage." "It was called Hoot Night." "The Troubadour was the place to go if you were young and happening and trying to get involved in the music scene." "It was happening there." "I saw a lot of great acts at the Troubadour." "I witnessed Elton John's American debut performance in 1970." "Everybody who was anybody at the time played at the Troubadour." "Of course, Linda " "And she still has one of my favorite voices in the business, ever." "The Troubadour is really responsible for the entire music scene." "I mean, everything I got, really, was virtually through either performing there onstage or in the bar, you know?" "I was just started managing Linda then, and Linda was gonna be a star -- that voice as big as a house." "There wasn't anybody in the room that cared about anything but that voice." "One night, we're down at the Troubadour, and John Boylan comes to me -- he's managing Linda Ronstadt -- and he says, "I'm taking Linda on the road." "We need guys who can sing." "You want to play rhythm guitar and sing?"" "I offered him $250 a week, and he took it." "I went back to him, I said," ""Can you give me some of that money right now?"" "I think he gave me 50 bucks." "And then I found Don from this band called Shiloh." "I heard him playing at the Troubadour." "I was looking for a job." "Glenn introduced me to John Boylan." "I auditioned at this little house in Laurel Canyon." "I had listened to her album hundreds of times, so I knew the songs backwards and forwards, and I guess I passed the audition because I got the job." "I learned a lot from Linda." "It was a very formative experience for me." "And she could hang with the guys, you know." "She could drink tequila with the rest of us and hold her own." "It was really very ad hoc." "We had a station wagon, put the gear in the back." "We'd all get in it and drive to the college and play there." "As a cost-cutting measure, band members had to share rooms in those days, so Glenn and I were roommates." " What did you guys eat?" "I had a bowl of Rice Krispies." "Ladies and gentlemen, Linda Ronstadt." "It's funny." "I seem to get people at a critical stage in their development, and they sort of build their chops." "I mean, there's nothing that gets your chops up better than playing every single night." "Linda and John Boylan really like the way Henley and I play, really like the way we sing with her, and they start to get a vision of putting together a super group to back up Linda " "the best of the new country-rock musicians, and we were gonna be part of it." "I remember talking with Don, and Don said," ""Well, you know, I'd rather, like, just be in a band with you."" "And I said, "Well, yeah, me too." "You know, I'd rather just be in a band with you."" "So, we went to Linda and said," ""You know, we really appreciate everything you've done for us, and it means a lot, and we love playing with you, but we'd like to have our own band."" "Now, you know, I think a lot of people, you know, could get miffed by that, say, "Well, wait a second." "I brought you out here, you know." "I gave you a payir19j°b when you couldn't afford your own drinks at the Troubadour bar, and now you want to quit?"" "Linda was extremely gracious about the whole thing, as was John Boylan." "They weren't resentful or bitter at all." "They were great." "They were supportive, as a matter of fact." "They started talking about putting a band together, and we told them they should get Bernie Leadon." "I was in several bands in L.A. Early on, I met Linda." "Then I worked with Dillard  Clark " "Doug Dillard, banjo player, and Gene Clark from the Byrds." "And so, now I'm in an offshoot of the Byrds world, and then that turned into an invitation from the Burrito Brothers from Chris Hillman to come join them for their second album on AM." "And I was still in the Burritos, but they had lost Gram Parsons, and it had changed, and I wasn't that interested anymore." "Bernie was a very accomplished banjo player, and he could also play guitar in what we called the Bindi lick style." "It was pioneered by a fellow named Clarence White." "And then Glenn told me about this guy named Randy Meisner who had been in a band called Poco." "Randy could sing really high, and he also played bass." "So, Glenn just kind of asked me one day if I'd be interested in starting a group with him." "And he had Henley and Bernie." "That was the first Eagles." "So, the plan was that Glenn and I would try to recruit Bernie and Randy, and then we would all go to David Geffen and see if he would give us a recording contract." "In the '70s, Asylum Records was considered the L.A. sound " "Joni Mitchell, Crosby, Stills, Nash  Young, Jackson Browne." "David Geffen, who started Asylum, is our patron, you know." "A medici, medici of rock 'n' roll." "It's a very artist-oriented company, and whatever they want to do, we support them." "If we believe in them, we'll stick with them, whether they make it or not." "Jackson was our conduit to David Geffen." "He was the first guy to get signed by Geffen's new Asylum Records label." "So, we all walk in Geffen's office, and we basically said, "Here we are."" "Bernie Leadon just boldly says to Geffen," ""Well, do you want us or not?"" "They were dying to sign with me." "I think they were very ambitious, particularly Glenn." "Glenn wanted to have a hit band." "I loved the way Don sang." "You know, we all had hopes for it." "All of a sudden, we were signed to Geffen's new label." "They sent us back to the drawing board." "They said, "You guys need to go and rehearse some more."" "They said, "You know, you need to write some songs." "You're not really ready to record yet."" "So, they packed us off to Aspen, Colorado." "It could have been worse." "There were people who were way higher than any of us had ever been." "It was a Wild West wide-open town at that point." "We played at a club up there called the Gallery, which was located right at the foot of Aspen Mountain." "We didn't have a big catalog of our own tunes at that point." "We were just getting started." "We needed to learn how to play together as a band, and we did." "And then it was like, "Okay, we need to make a record." "Who are we gonna get to produce it?"" "We wanted to shoot as high as we could." "Glenn Frey came up with Glyn Johns as an idea." "Glyn Johns was a name that kept popping up on records we loved." "The first time I heard them was in Aspen." "I was not at all impressed, really." "I thought they were confused." "Glenn Frey wanted to be in a rock-'n'-roll band, and Bernie Leadon, on the other side, was one of the greatest acoustic players -- country players, if you like." "And there was a bit of a confusion." "I didn't see what all the fuss was about at all." "So I passed." "We're like, "God dang, what --"" "You know, it's not what we expected." "He had worked with Led Zeppelin, the Who, the Stones, so he was coming from that, and he said flat-out, "You're not that, man."" "it isn't always easy to spot what's hot about an artist if you go and see them play." "You can see them on a bad night." "You know, it's not necessarily the fairest way of doing it." "So, I thought, "Well, the best thing to do would be for me to see them in a rehearsal situation where we could converse and they could play new stuff and I could stop and start."" "And they played the stuff that they played in Aspen, and it all sounded pretty much the same." "Well, I was thinking, "I don't get it." "I still don't get it."" "So, we decided to take a break for lunch, and as we were leaving, somebody said, "Oh, why don't we play Glyn that ballad?"" "And it just completely blew me off my feet." "I mean, there it was." "That was the sound." "Extraordinary blend of voices, wonderful harmony sound." "Just stunning." "And that was it." "I was in with both feet." "Except that Glyn Johns didn't want to come to the United States and work." "He wanted to work in London in the recording studios that he was familiar with, and so they shipped us off to England." "I don't think that any of us except Bernie had ever been out of the country, so it was a little bit like going to the moon for us." "And I'm stoked." "You know, I'm thinking," ""I'm gonna go to Beatle country with Glyn Johns." "I'm gonna record in the same studio where Led Zeppelin did 'Rock and Roll'." "Oh, my God, I can't wait."" "We were recorded at the famous Olympic studios, where a lot of legendary records had been made." "Glyn Johns -- he had a certain style of recording, which was very organic." "He would simply place a few mikes around the room, and off you go." "You know, rather than, for example, placing a microphone on each and every drum, he would just put three microphones on the drum kit." "He was accustomed to recording people like John Bonham with Led Zeppelin." "And I said to Glyn, "I want the bass drum to be louder."" "And he said, "if you want it louder, hit it harder," you know?" "And I hit it as hard as I could, but I couldn't hit it as hard as John Bonham." "He had a bunch of rules that really didn't suit me and some of the other guys, too." "You know, no getting high in the studio, no drinking in the studio." "I agreed wholeheartedly with Glyn Johns regarding drugs and alcohol in the studio -- that we'd get more work done and that it would be better work." "When I got the opportunity to produce and therefore be in the chair," "I decided that I would no longer put up with that." "Somebody said to me the other night that I was the designated driver in the '60s and early '70s." "Glyn had worked with the Rolling Stones at a time when they went to the studio and did nothing except wait for Keith, you know, to go down in the basement and play his guitar until he came up with some riff." "So, Glyn was impatient." "The Stones had burned him out on the, you know," ""get high in the studio and wait for something to happen"" "kind of thing." "Let's go." "We're rolling." "One, two, three." "There were three hit singles on the first album." ""Peaceful Easy Feeling" was written by Jack Tempchin, who is our friend and frequent collaborator." ""Peaceful Easy Feeling" captures the time, captures this attitude." "You can feel the wind blowing across the desert." "The second hit was "Witchy Woman," which I wrote with Bernie." ""Witchy Woman" started as a guitar figure." "Then we were jamming it one day, and everybody was digging it." "And then Henley came back the next day with the lyrics." "During the time that the Eagles were on the road for the first album, we had just come through the '60s -- civil rights movement, '68 -- all the assassinations, all the rioting." "The Vietnam War still winding up." "Nixon, Watergate." "I welcome this kind of examination." "I really think that part of the reason that the Eagles succeeded the way they did was because the country and people and young people needed to feel like things were okay." "So, here comes this song "Take It Easy."" "Jackson had this song called "Take It Easy."" "He couldn't finish the song." "He was stuck in the second verse." "He had "I'm standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona."" "And so, I filled in, "Such a fine sight to see." "It's a girl, my Lord, in a flatbed Ford slowing down to take a look at me."" "Girl, Lord, Ford " " I mean, all the redemption, you know -- girls and cars and redemption all in this one line." "I mean, he's very mercurical." "You know... mercurial?" "Mercurial." "And he's mercurical, too." "All right!" "Someone once asked Stephen Stills about the Eagles, and his response was, "They just wanted to be us."" "But when it came time to do our album covers, they suggested that we use Gary Burden and Henry Diltz." "They had done the first Crosby, Stills, Nash cover and some stuff for Joni." "The one I really remember was the Mamas and Papas all sitting in the bathtub." "That was one of their album covers." "So, these were, like, the cool guys to have work on your album." "Gary Burden is about 40 years old, full beard, long, grayish, wavy hair, crystal-blue eyes." "Henry was sort of magical, non-invasive photographer guy." "For the Eagles, it was the peyote spirits which the American Indians, of course, ate peyote and had a very, very spiritual experience, and they would maybe meet their animal totem or they would get their quest for life." "My deal was always to take the bands out of their comfort zone." "Take them away from their girlfriends, from telephones, from anything, and have them under my control so that I could get things to happen without any interference." "And so, we would take trips." "Now, how this plan came about exactly, today you have to scratch your head, but this was the plan." "Okay, we'll all go to the Troubadour, and we'll stay there till closing time." "And then we'll drive to Joshua Tree." "We had a bag of peyote buttons, a bunch of trail mix, some tequila, and some water, and some blankets." "And the seven of us set out for Joshua Tree." "We got there probably about 4:30 in the morning, parked in this special place that I don't know how we found it in the dark." "We all took one peyote button, put it in our mouths, and started hiking up to the place that we were supposed to go." "So, right around the time that we're getting to the campsite and we're starting to build the fire and starting to cook some peyote tea, and the first buttons -- everybody's chewing the first button," "and the drug starts coming on just as the sun is rising." "I think everybody got higher than they ever imagined anybody could be, and it was a good thing." "We were after getting into life deeper and better and more and surrendering." "I had to go to the bathroom, so I left the campsite, and I hear the guys yelling from the campfire, "Eagle!" "Eagle!"" "I look up, and it's soaring right above me." "Huge Wingspan." "I'm, like, scuffling to get my pants back up, and I'm slipping." "I fall down, and the bird just kind of goes," ""Eagles, huh?" "Yeah, I don't think so."" "The images of the first album cover," "I think, really set the tone for visually what Eagles are." "Gary designed the album cover so that it would open up into a whole poster, and at the bottom were the Eagles around the campfire." "And then, up at the top, it would go on up into the sky and the eagle up in the sky." "But David Geffen thought that would be confusing, and without consulting us or consulting Gary or the Eagles or anybody, he told them, "Just glue it shut."" "And so, then, when they glued it shut, you would get this -- this album, front and back, and you'd open it up, and it would be upside-down, which didn't make any sense to anybody." "The fact was that the success of the first album scared the hell out of us." "Why me instead of some guy down the street, you know?" "Why me and some friends of mine who are just as good of musicians as I am, you know, but it happened to me and it didn't happen to them?" "I don't know." "Success can sometimes be just as disconcerting and frightening as failure, especially when you have questions about your own worthiness and your abilities." "It came time to do another album." "Don and I decided we'd try to write some songs together." "I had been sitting over on Aqua Vista." "I was living on the couch, and I'm just laying there playing the guitar, and I started going..." "You know, I'm thinking, "Yeah, that's pretty cool, kind of Roy Orbison, kind of Mexican." "Yeah, I like that."" "So, I showed him, you know, that guitar riff." "I said, "Maybe we should write something to this."" "Songs like "Desperado" and "Tequila Sunrise" -- that's when Glenn and I began collaborating, and that's when we really became a songwriting team." "Earlier that year, someone had given Jackson Browne the book of gunfighters." "It had all the big outlaw groups " "Frank and Jesse, the Doolin-Dalton gang." "We were all just fascinated with those guys, and we thought it would make a great analogy." "Well, for example, we live outside the laws of normality." "Also, you usually -- because of records or bank robberies, you usually heard about these guys before you ever saw them." "They had posters that were wanted posters up for people." "There just seemed to be some parallels." "It wasn't really like we were outlaws, but I think they did have their nobler characteristics." "We started talking about it." "Then we said, "Well, maybe we should do, like, an album all about the rebels."" "We got to doing this outlaw album, and we had eight songs finished, and we needed two more." "An idea Randy came up with was how the guy became an outlaw and how he became a guitar player." "I kind of started it, and that's what usually happened." "I'd get a verse or two, and then I'm done, and they would help fill in the blanks." "Nobody expected there to be a concept album with Western cowboys music." "Don Henley was from Texas." "He was a cowboy." "Glenn was from Detroit." "He wanted to be a cowboy." "Because I knew all these guys had a little cowboy inside of them," "I took them to Western costume and just said, "Pick out your persona."" "Their premise was that, if they had lived 100 years ago, in like 1872, they probably would have been gunslingers." "Everybody's gonna be firing in the direction of this building right here." "Jackson, J.D., Boyd, you all got to be in the picture more." "We're gonna be in there." "You ready?" "One, two, three!" "And we fired so many blanks that it was a cloud of smoke hanging over this Western town, and the fire department came 'cause they thought it was a fire." "Keep firing!" "We were just a bunch of kids." "We were just playing around." "The picture that's on the back of the album -- there's a lot of reality in it." "All of the agents and managers and road managers, all the guys who didn't play are standing up, alive with badges and guns, and the four Eagles at the time and Jackson and I are all dead," "bound up the way they used to do when they'd catch outlaws in those days." "They'd stand them up for display." "People never tired of looking at the corpse of a bad boy." "We all felt, when we were doing it and as it was delivered, that it was another really remarkable record on the part of the band." "I mean, it was pretty extraordinary." "The band and I were enormously thrilled with it." "They literally carried me out of the control room." "They chaired me out of the control room." ""Desperado" comes out, and it bombs." "Jerry Greenberg was the Vice President of Atlantic Records." "They were excited to get the second Eagles album." "We played him "Desperado," and he said, "Hmm, that's, yeah, that's nice, that's good, that's nice,"" "and turned around and said," ""God, they made a fuckin' cowboy record."" "I was extremely flattered that Linda recorded "Desperado."" "It was really her that popularized the song." "Her version was very poignant and beautiful." "There have been a lot of articles and things that identify me with the L.A. sound." "It's sort of, like, me and Jackson Browne and the Eagles." "All of us are reaching out for other musical influences all the time." "The so-called southern California sound was developing." "It was fresh, it was different, it was unique." "It was a melting pot, people moving here from all over the United States to pursue their dream -- actors, musicians, wannabe managers, agents, wannabe, you know, like me." "I picked up the phone cold and called David Geffen, who was just starting Asylum Records." "Long story short, I took a job as a manager with Asylum." "I was intrigued." "I wanted to know about the Eagles and meet the Eagles 'cause I was a fan." "Emergency." "I get a phone call." "Glenn Frey's on the phone." ""We need money for Christmas." "Can you book dates?"" "I book some dates." "So, I get on a plane and go out to meet them." "First of all, the show was fantastic." "Crowd was nothing like I'd seen a year, year and a half earlier." "Good evening." "Welcome to the Portland version of " " Spread eagle." "Spread eagle." "Tonight, the promoter gave us chopsticks." "I don't think we ever checked in a hotel." "We went from there to a party at a sorority house." "One thing led to another, and I'd never seen anything like this." "They wouldn't give us any booze in the bar." "We tried to get some booze, but they fucked up, so we may burn the fucking place down." "We're not sure." "I don't think we went to sleep." "It was Eagle mania." "And then they went off to England to record "On the Border" with Glyn Johns." "They were quite open to being produced." "Understandably, that changed." "They began to be more opinionated and less insecure, perhaps." "We wanted to play rock 'n' roll or at least a more rock-'n'-roll version of country music, and Glyn Johns was of the opinion that we weren't really capable of that." "I think he had been bombarded byloud, aggressive rock 'n' roll for many, many years." "At that point in his life, he wanted mellow people and mellow music, and we weren't exactly at the same stage in life." "Frey sort of took over more." "He had this desire to be something that I didn't really feel that they were capable of doing." "He and Glenn Frey were like oil and water." "They clashed frequently." "In the studio, Glyn Johns was pretty much a schoolmarm." "He'd push, push, push, you know?" "And then he'd say, "That's it." "That's good enough." "We're moving on." "You're not a rock-'n'-roll band." "The Who is a rock-'n'-roll band, and you're not that."" "After each of those records, the band freaked out and said, "We've made a huge mistake." "Glyn Johns missed it."" "We actually had conversations." "You know, "Desperado" hadn't done as well as the first album." "None of them were thrilled with the way the record sounded." "We wanted more input into how our albums were being made." "We wanted more input into the recording process itself." "Don and I thought that the vocals were too wet." "There was too much echo on them." "And he definitely told us, "Excuse me, that's my echo." "It's my signature." "It's my bloody echo." "It stays there." "You don't tell me what to do."" "We needed to make a change." "I joined the Navy at the height of the cold war." "One of the main things they were doing was looking for Russian submarines, and you do that by using sonar." "When I got out, I had a lot of electronics education, obviously." "And I got a job in a recording studio here in New York." "The first session I ever saw, like day one, day two, was a Carole King demo." "She sat down and played piano, and it was like, "Boy, this is fun." "These people are having fun here."" "I worked my way up through the ranks, and then, of course, after engineering for four or five years," "I was like, "Well, I can produce better than some of these guys I'm working for."" "At the time, I was managing Joe Walsh, so I played them Walsh music that I thought was an example of how it could be edgier." "Joe and I had just finished an album called" ""The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get."" "And they heard that and said, "That's what we want to sound like."" "So, Irving arranged for us to have a meeting with Bill Szymczyk." "We really only had two questions that we wanted to ask him " "Do you mind if we have some input about how much echo is on the vocals?" "And we wanted somebody who would put a microphone on each and every drum so we could have more control over the mix." "He said yes to every question, and so we knew he was the guy for us." "I said, "Okay, under one condition." "I have to call Glyn and make sure it's okay with him."" "So, I called him, and I said, you know, "Glyn, the Eagles want me to produce them."" ""Better you than me, mate."" "That's pretty much how I felt." "I mean, it had come to a fairly unpleasant end." "Well, okay, you know, so much for Beatle country with Glyn Johns." "Let's have a warm round of applause on a hot afternoon for the Eagles." "Along about the third album," "I was having some difficulty in communicating," "I felt, in the band, and I was starting to think maybe I should go at some point." "They still had this unfulfilled desire to be a mainstream rock band and not just a vocal band, but I think they wanted to go in a tougher direction." "Bernie Leadon was a country-based guitar player, but every time I wanted to do a rock-'n'-roll song, he was the lead guitar player." "Every time we wanted to do something country that Bernie sang," "I was supposed to be the lead guitar player, and I wasn't a country musician by any stretch." "It always felt like we needed a third guitar player." "We had met this friend of Bernie's, this guy named Don Felder." "We were playing in Boston, and he came back to visit Bernie, and we were jamming upstairs in the dressing room, and this guy was all over the neck." "What he brought was great chops." "I mean, we called him Fingers -- Fingers Felder -- because he was an incredible player." "We did that session." "I think it was like three hours." "And then I packed up and went home, not thinking anything more about it than it was just another session." "And the next day, Glenn called me and asked me if I would like to join the band." "I said, "Absolutely."" " All right, let's do " "I'm in heaven." " Let's go another one." "All right, do it right!" "The banter that would go on in between takes was hysterical, and so I took to running a two-track to pick up these silly things." "We were young men with raging hormones and something to prove." "In the context of the times and the profession, the way we behaved wasn't really all that remarkable." "The creative impulse comes from the dark side of the personality, so we worked it good, you know." "We did a lot of stupid things, said a lot of stupid things." "It was the '70s." "There were drugs everywhere." "Cactus sunrise was in my face" "Everyone was dying, everyone was lying and trying" "Well, rub your belly in the linseed oil" "There you go." "Well, the heartbreak of psoriasis has once again descended upon the adolescent experience, and we'll see you later." "See you at the show later on tonight." "The question was, you know, who could handle it?" "Who could function?" "Who could show up?" "There were always girls." "There were a lot of opportunities out on the road to entertain ourselves with one thing or another." "So, we started to perfect after-show partying, and we invented a place called the Third Encore." "We did two encores in our show, so the third encore was the party." "Everybody in the band and everybody in the crew was given a bunch of buttons, and all we said was," ""No weirdos, no strange people, okay?" "If you're gonna give a button to somebody, you know, make it count."" "Totally sick." "There's some real warped shit coming on now, ladies and gentlemen." "A member of Andy Warthog's pop-bowel movement has just tried to crash our party." "What the " "Welcome to Pittsburgh Spread Eagle." "We want to just ask these girls why they think they have to leave now that it's 2:00." "One thing, he smells like beer." "We'd fill the bathtubs up with Budweiser, and we'd have a party after every show." " Your name, please." "Tammy Farley." "Tammy, Tammy, Tammy." "Here we have Karen." "Karen is 20 years old." " Is that correct?" "Yeah." "What's your name, dear?" " Fuck it, man." "Pardon?" "Fuck it." "Her name's fuck it, man." "I want to talk about sex and drugs." "Who wants to go first?" "I'm not lost for words on either subject." "Sex and drugs kind of came as a big package in the '60s." "You know, it seemed like everybody -- the sexual revolution and the drug thing, I guess, probably started out together." "Didn't they?" "Don and I both tried to have relationships while we were members of the Eagles, but it was always like the Eagles trumped everything." "When the Eagles became successful, we challenged all the rules." "Like when David Geffen left Asylum Records and sold everything to Warner Bros. and started his new empire." "Let's be frank." "When we signed that contract, we were idiots." "We knew nothing about the business." "We had poor legal representation, nobody looking out for us." "Remember, bands don't really get record royalties usually ever." "So, they get money from touring, but they get publishing money." "So, in the very beginning, one thing that Geffen did that I thought was great -- he had us form a band publishing company." "All the band's publishing went in that." "The problem was Geffen had the other half." "Half the Eagles' publishing, half of my publishing, half of all the artists that he signed went to Warner Bros., but he got them to return mine." "Jackson turned me on to the Eagles." "He had turned me on to a lot of artists, and I felt I owed him something." "And that, not surprisingly, was not acceptable rationale to the Eagles." "There's a certain amount of ire, like, real, you know, like, "What the fuck?" "I mean, we didn't get our publishing back."" "So, it was the publishing issue and the fact that the business managers and the lawyers were all shared common guys, and did they have a conflict when an issue came up and which side to take?" "Well, it just makes you feel like meat, you know?" "It started out as such a personal, nurturing endeavor, you know, with Mr. Geffen saying, "Oh, I'm going to protect you guys." ""That's why I'm calling my new label 'Asylum'." "It's going to be a sanctuary for real artists."" "He once said to Irving Azoff, "You know, Irving, this would be a great business if there weren't artists."" "Irving was the one guy who really believed in us, that I thought could do something to help us." "I basically hired a lawyer and went in after I said the Eagles would like their publishing back, to which the obvious response was "No"." "He sort of drew a line in the sand and declared war, so I felt, for my survival as their manager," "I needed to prove to them that I wasn't afraid of Geffen and would stand up and, you know." "The lawsuit was filed as a last resort." "I don't think David liked reading his name in the lawsuit." "I thought it was incredibly ungrateful and they misrepresented the facts, but so be it." "Ultimately, we settled out of court, and I don't believe it took very long." "He just wanted to get rid of us." "This is our new record contract." "Just paper." "So, then we headed off for parts unknown with Irving Azoff at the helm." "This card game is called Eagle Poker." "It's a bastardization of Red Dog." "I invented it in Detroit, Michigan, in 1947, one year before I was born." "We were big gamblers." "We played poker all the time." "Oh, boy." "They should have never given me money." "So, we decided we'd go to the Bahamas to gamble." "Everybody but Don was holding." "I had like fourjoints in a baggie, stuffed down my sock in my cowboy boot." "Durkin, the pilot, has a joint." "Irving had about 30 valiums in a sugar pack." "There was a couple of customs officials there that asked us to collect all our luggage and come over, and they wanted to search us 'cause we looked terrible." "We had really long hair and patches on ourjeans and a beard and not slept." "Now, I'm freaking out." "Bernie's freaking out." "Irving's freaking out." "Henley's pissed off." "Don't touch me." "Well, the guy proceeds to put us all in a room together, and they start searching us one by one." "My greatest fear is that I'm gonna be locked in a jail cell with Bernie Leadon." "So, at this point, Irving steps in and takes one of the Bahamian customs guys over to the side and has a chat with him." "I'm not sure, to this day, what Irving said to him." "The next thing I knew, they let us pass with no problem." "It was sort of miraculous, really, it was, because I thought for sure we were gonna be in the slammer." "It was dumb luck that this guy bought my line and didn't search them." "That was the day I decided Irving Azoff was the greatest manager in rock 'n' roll and I would never do anything without him by my side." "I had the only seat in a major championship fight -- to be sitting there when, you know, when a lyric was thrown out and then hear a track." "And I've watched the creative process with lots of other people, but I've never seen it the way it fell in place with them." "I remember watching "Lyin' Eyes" written." "Glenn just had a way of coming up with a phrase, you know?" "He had written some kind of a tune, and they were sitting in Tana's one night and looking at some young girl with an older guy at the bar, and Glenn said, "Look at those lying' eyes."" "And just -- just like that, wow, there's the song." "It was just about all these girls who would come down to Dan Tana's looking beautiful, and they'd be there from 8:00 to midnight and have dinner and drinks with all of us rockers, and then they'd go home because they were kept women." "You know, when we were doing the "One of These Nights" album, we'd gone through three albums, and the only people who'd sung on any hit records were Don and myself." "And Randy always felt like, you know, he was a lead singer, too." "And I actually felt that way, too." "I liked his voice." "So, he brought in the beginnings of "Take It To the Limit,"" "and it became the Eagles' first number-one single." "The line "Take It To the Limit"" "was to keep trying before you reach a point in your life where you feel, you know, you've done everything and seen everything sort of feeling." "You know, a part of getting old, and just to take it to the limit one more time, like every day, just keep punching away at it." "And that's all that I really -- that was the line, and from there, the song took a different, you know, course." "I think everybody in the Eagles did the level best we could." "You have to remember how young we were, the fact that nobody had anything when we started, and you got all this stuff coming at you." "Meanwhile, you're touring all the time." "It's a lot." "To Bernie, success on any scale was synonymous with selling out." "He wanted us to remain sort of an underground band." "We had our problems with Bernie, and Bernie had his problems with us." "Some of it was based on him being able to have a voice in the Eagles and record the songs he wanted to the way he wanted to." "We were getting more and more rocked out, and I think Bernie was less and less happy about that to the point that, one time, we had worked on a track all night." "I mean, it was a rocked-out track, and we're all sitting behind the board the next day, listening to the various takes of it, trying to decide which take we like the best." "Bernie hadn't said a word." "So, I asked him over the board," "I said, "Bernie, what do you think?"" "There's a long pause, and he gets up, and he stretches, and he says, "I think I'm going surfing."" "And he left." "I was caught in the middle a lot of times." "And sometimes I would agree with Bernie, but most of the time, I would agree with Glenn." "Glenn and I always wanted the band to be a hybrid, to encompass bluegrass and country and rock 'n' roll." "There was a part of Bernie that really resisted that." "After a while, it became a real problem, particularly between Bernie and Glenn." "Finally, we were at the Orange Bowl in Miami." "We were backstage, and we were talking about what our next move was gonna be, what our plans were supposed to be, and I was animated and adamant about what we needed to do next here, there, and everywhere," "and Bernie comes over and pours a beer on my head and says, "You need to chill out, man."" "I have no idea." "It was a spontaneous thing." "I mean, I take that incident now quite seriously." "That was a very disrespectful thing to do." "Obviously, it was intended to be humiliating to him, I would say, and is something I'm really not proud of." "It did illustrate a breaking point." "During that time, we got a couple shows opening for the Rolling Stones, and Irving was managing Joe Walsh." "Joe Walsh was a bona fide rock-'n'-roll guitar player." "So, for a couple of those shows, just for our encores, we'd put Joe Walsh in a road box, and we'd come back to do an encore, and we'd roll the road box out," "and just like the model jumping out of a cake, we'd open the guitar case, and there would be Joe Walsh with his Les Paul, and he'd climb out of the box and plug in, and the Eagles " "We would play "Rocky Mountain Way."" "I loved the way he played." "I'd loved the James gang when I was growing up in Detroit." "Now I started thinking, "Joe Walsh for Bernie Leadon."" "Okay, maybe the vocals won't be quite as good, but, boy, are we gonna kick some ass." "I think one of the things that I brought into the band that was good for the band was to bring it up a notch when we played live." "Just keep kicking it in the butt a little bit, you know?" "All right, D.C., come on, give it up." "I went to a show maybe eight months later, and the band are interacting with each other exactly like we did with me onstage, except instead of me, Walsh was up there, and it just was, like, really, really odd, you know," "to be watching it and not be part of it." "So, I actually left that show." "I was just like, "This is, like, too weird."" "So, we got Joe Walsh in the band." "That's another adventure because Joe was an interesting bunch of guys." "Hey, I tell you what." "If you got firecrackers, just wait until you get home, lock yourself in the closet, and light everything you got, okay?" "Thank you, Joe." "He brought a lot of levity to just about everything that happened, which was needed at that time." "Heads or tails?" "Heads." "Well, I could use a little head myself." "In those days, you didn't know what he was gonna do next." "It was fun most of the time, although not all the time." "It was fun, depending on how much you'd had to drink, to see a television go sailing off the 14th-floor balcony and into the pool, as long as nobody got hurt." "Joe Walsh was the American King of room trash." "He had studied under some of the best." "One of the most terrifying things that ever happened to me was that Keith Moon decided he liked me." "All those Keith Moon stories are true." "This guy was full-blown nuts, and you never knew what was coming next." "Keith was my mentor at chaos, getting arrested, practical jokes, pranks, room damage." "One year, we gave him a chain saw for his birthday as a joke." "By this time, we were eating in nice restaurants and buying expensive wine and staying in great hotel rooms." "There were a lot of hotels that we weren't allowed to go back to." "We were in Chicago, and we were staying at the Astor Towers." "In Chicago, here's what happened." "There was a knock on the door, and in walked John Belushi." "John wanted to show me the finer restaurants of Chicago." "So, we went to the restaurant, and they wouldn't let us in 'cause we had jeans, and he got the maTtre d' up to like $300 bribe, and still they would not let us in." "And John said, "I know what to do." "I know what to do."" "And the next thing I knew, we were standing in the alley, and he spray-painted my jeans black and made me do his, and we went back, and we got in." "We were sitting in these Queen Anne-period chairs that had needlepoint, and when we stood up, that was all black, and the butts of our pants were jeans again." "So, we had to kind of back out of there and leave fast." "But that was the beginning of it." "And so that night, with much glee," "Joe set about to set the world record for room trash." "John and I did $28,000 of room damage." "Glenn and Don didn't really ever approve of the room trashing, but they understood it." "They wanted respect as rock 'n' rollers, and Joe brought that respect." "I was insecure always and afraid, so I hid behind all of my hang-ups with humor." "I was totally in awe of Don and Glenn." "I was intimidated by Don and Glenn because they sang so good and they were writing stuff" "I could never come close to writing." "After we just had a bunch of hit records on "One of These Nights," we were under the microscope." "Everybody was gonna look at the next record we made and pass judgment." "Don and I were going, "Man, this better be good."" "Look at that." "It's gonna be quite a nice guitar." "Fewer, you see 'Ms'?" "Who, uh, who tuned this?" "Well, it has no nut." "With Joe in the band with me, I wanted to write something, musically, that would fit two guitar players, that we could play off of each other." "So, I was sitting on a sofa in Malibu at this rental house that I had on the beach, and I was playing this acoustic guitar, and this introduction came out, that progression." "I kept playing it three or four times." "I had an old reel-to-reel tape recorder, so I went back and recorded that introduction to that song and laid down that progression, made a mix of it, and put it on a cassette with, I don't know," "the other 14 or 15 pieces of music that I had assembled, and I gave a copy of the cassette to Don, one to Glenn." "Don Felder used to send Henley and I instrumental tapes, song ideas." "95% of them were cluttered with guitar licks, and we would listen to these things and go," ""Well, where do you sing?"" "As Don and I were listening through one of the Felder cassettes and this song came up, we both sort of said," ""Hmm, now, this is interesting."" "The music sounded to me like some sort of a cross between Spanish music and reggae music, and that one reallyjumped out at me." "So, we set out to write a song to that progression." "I'm pretty sure it was Henley's idea to have a song called "Hotel California."" "I think Henley's and Glenn's lyric writing really came to a head." "They became real honest-to-God songwriters then." "During the recording of it," "I thought that we were on to something." "I knew we were on to something." "We were in a really creative phase, and it just so happened that Bill Szymczyk pushed record." "Thank God." "We've been asked a million times, "What does that song mean?"" "Don and I were big fans of hidden, deeper meaning." "You know, you write songs, and you send them out to the world..." "And maybe somewhere in that song is some stuff that's just yours that they're never gonna figure out." "There has been a great deal of ridiculous speculation about that song over the years." "I mean, it's really taken on a life or a mythology of its own." "You know, it's sort of like the "Paul is dead" thing or who was the walrus?" "It's been denounced by evangelicals." "We've been accused of all kinds of wacky things, like being members of the Church of Satan." "People see images on the album cover that aren't there." "Just lunatic stuff." "My simple explanation is it's a song about a journey from innocence to experience." "That's all." "Whereas Felder was technically very, very good," "Walsh brought spontaneity to it, and the two of them playing off each other was just brilliant." "Out of great respect for each other, there was always a little competition between Felder and I." "We always tried to kind of one-up each other, you know?" "And that's really healthy." "It always made the song better when we were kind of, "Oh, yeah?" "Listen to this."" "We got to the end, where now is the harmony guitars that are playing together, and Joe said, "We should do something that's like..." "The ending of "Hotel California" -- that's one of my high points of my entire recording career." "To have a seven-minute single be number one -- that was unheard of." "The record company said, "You got to do an edit." "You got to do an edit."" "And we all said, "No." "Take it or leave it."" "And they took it." "We had no idea that that song would affect as many people on the planet as it did." "Thank you." "The rest of the album kind of developed around that song." "The album, you could loosely say, is a thematic album, a concept album." "Not unlike "Desperado,"" ""Hotel California" was our reaction to what was happening to us." "On just about every album we made, there was some kind of a commentary on the music business and on American culture in general." "The hotel itself could be taken as a metaphor not only for the mythmaking of Southern California but for the mythmaking that is the American dream because it's a fine line between the American dream and the American nightmare." "All the songs we write for this album can fit inside this concept." "Once the rest of the guys in the band understood what the song "Hotel California" was about, it became kind of a theme, and they started to customize their writing to fit in with it." "I think that the Eagles started breaking up during the recording of "Hotel California."" "There were creative tensions, but there was always tension tensions." "By the time we got to recording "Hotel California,"" "if the song wasn't good enough to survive the amount of time we were working on the record, it didn't make it on the record." "Perfection is not an accident." "Our goal was just to be the best we could be." "We wanted to get better as songwriters and as performers, and we worked on it." "Don and I felt like there was no space now for filler, and Don Felder, for all of his talents as a guitar player, is not a singer." "Felder wanted to write more, sing more, and Felder had kind of demanded that "I'm gonna sing two songs on 'Hotel California."'" "We were all Alphas, and we were all very assertive and powerful in our own way." "You could bring in a great track to Don and Glenn and be really excited about it." "This happened to Felder." "I wrote the track for "Victim of Love."" "It was gonna be a follow-up song on the "Hotel California" record for me to sing." "I have no recollection of anybody being promised anything." ""Victim of Love" was not brought to the band as a complete song." "It was simply another chord progression that Don Fewer brought tn." "It had no title, no lyrics, and no melody." "Glenn and I and J.D. Souther all sat down and hammered out the rest of it." "We did let Mr. Felder sing it." "He sang it dozens of times over the span of a week, over and over and over again." "It simply didn't come up to band standards." ""Victim of Love" had been recorded with Felder as the lead vocalist, and my job was to take Don Felder out to lunch or dinner while they went in the studio and put Henley's vocal on it." "Irving took me out and said that everybody in the band thought that it was better if Don sang that." "And it was a little bit of a bitter pill to swallow." "I felt like Don was taking that song from me." "I'd been promised a song on the next record." "But there was no real way to argue with my vocal versus Don Henley's vocal." "There was no way to argue with anybody's vocal in the band compared to Don Henley." "Felder demanding to sing that song would be the equivalent of me demanding to play lead guitar on "Hotel California."" "It just didn't make sense." "If you look at my vocal participation in the Eagles over the course of the 1970s, I sang less and less." "It was intentional." "We had Don Henley." "Don and Glenn's position was," ""This is the best thing for the Eagles."" "And Don Felder never forgot that." "Get it!" "Get it!" "Run!" "Run!" "Run!" "Shit." "This is a real healthy thing." "It promotes good feelings, you know, among the guys, and it keeps us from killing each other." "Where's my glove?" "Who's got my glove?" "We can yell at each other on a baseball field, then we don't have to yell at each other when we're working." "Get all my frustrations out." "What frustrations?" "I haven't been getting laid." "We try to get out and play softball with the crew if we have a day off." "Swing, batter!" "Oh, it's gone, it's gone." "It's gone." "Something to help release the tension." "That's really what I do to keep from going crazy." "How do you keep from going crazy, Joe?" "Well..." "I tell you, I just, uh..." "In the press and the media, it was presented that we were constantly at war, and I can't say that's exactly the case." "We were interacting, and we were all intense." "Glenn said to me one time," ""I get nuts sometimes, and I'm sorry."" "Hey, Joe." "But that tension had a lot to do with fanning the artistic fire." "Having that dynamic was important in making the music." "Well, we're rehearsing now, and before we're even playing and guys are just noodling around and getting their amps going and stuff, we hear Joe go..." "You know, and everyone would kind of go, "What did you play?" "Play that again."" "That was an exercise I was doing because it's a coordination thing." "You know, it's like one of these deals." "So, I was doing that to warm up, and they said, "Well, what is that?"" "And I said, "Well, that's just something I have, you know?" "There you go."" "That's the lick." "That's what we should build the song around." "I was riding shotgun in a corvette with a drug dealer on the way to a poker game, and the next thing I knew, we were going about 90 miles an hour, holding big time." "I was like, "Hey, man." "What are you doing?"" "You know, and he looked at me, and he grinned." "He goes, "Life in the fast lane."" "And I thought immediately, "Now, there's a song title."" "Then they put out the greatest hits." "There was a period where we sold a million records a month for 18 months." "It's a little-known fact that the Eagles had the biggest-selling album of the 20th century." "But the music business never ever got honest of its own volition." "No record company ever went to an artist and said," ""You've done a great job." "We're gonna increase your royalties."" "So we created our own promotion company." "We created our own management company." "We had our own booking agency." "Stop any time." "We achieved an amount of success beyond our wildest imagination, and Randy really had trouble with it." "Bam!" "Bam!" "Randy used to have trouble singing the high note at the end of "Take It To the Limit."" "Oh, yeah, I was always kind of scared, basically." ""What if I don't hit it right?"" "it was a pretty high note." "And in the middle of the fade, you crank the volume knob and go, "What?" "!"" "Randy could do it, but if you made him do it," ""Oh, no, man, I, uh..."" "Thank you." "Randy Meisner." "He'd call the road manager and say," ""Tell Glenn I don't want to do 'Take It To the Limit' anymore." "Take it out of the set."" "I confronted him about this." "I called him up, and I said, "Randy, there's thousands of people waiting to hear you sing that song." ""You just can't say, 'Fuck them." "I don't feel like it.'" "Do you think I like singing 'Take It Easy' and 'Peaceful Easy Feeling' every night?" "I'm tired of those songs, but there's people in the audience who've been waiting years to see us do those songs."" "We just got fed up with that and just said, "Okay, don't sing it." "Why don't you just quit?" "You say you're unhappy." "Quit."" "Randy never knew how great he was." "He wasn't Alpha." "Confrontations were really hard for him." "All I want to see is five guys happy playing together, you know?" "And that's what makes the music." "We were backstage, and the crowd was going wild." "And our encore number was "Take It To the Limit."" "People loved that song." "They went crazy when Randy hit those high notes." "But Randy didn't want to do the song that night." "He'd been up partying all night with a couple of girls and a bottle of vodka." "And Glenn kept trying to talk him into it." "He said, "Man, the people want to hear that song." "You got to do it."" "And Randy kept saying, "No."" "So after about the third or fourth time that Randy refused," "Glenn just backed up a couple of steps and said," ""Well, fuck you, then!"" "There were police officers standing backstage, and when they saw us about to go at it, they started to move in." "And Henley turned right to the cops and said," ""Stay out of this." "This is personal, and it's private -- real fucking private."" "The writing was on the wall that Randy was gonna leave." "There was only person to ever replace Randy Meisner in the Eagles in my mind, and it was Timothy B. Schmit." "He replaced him in Poco and plugged in and sang the same parts." "And I remember sitting with Irving and saying," ""Irving, I think we should get Timothy Schmit."" "He said, "Well, I just saw Timothy." "I was out on the road when the guys in Poco were in the hotel bar, and Timothy was smashed out of his mind." "He was gacked up." "Are you sure about this?"" "I said, "Irving," I said, "If you'd been in a band for 11 years and you were still making $250 a week working 40 weeks a year, maybe you'd be a little smashed and gacked-up yourself."" "They asked me to join their band before I even played a note of music with them." "I just said, "You know, where do you want me?" "When?" "I'm definitely in."" "We want to introduce you to the newest member of our band." "He's our new bass player, and we got him from a really fine band " " Poco." "Please give a nice Houston, Texas, welcome to Timothy Schmit." "I went on the road with them in 1978 as the new guy." "And I heard a few, "Where's Randy's" from the audience, you know?" "But I knew it was a good move for them and me." "There were a lot of decisions, business-wise, that needed to be made in a secret session " "Glenn and Don and Irving in the back of the plane." "I didn't like that I wasn't part of that, but I knew that it was good for the Eagles." "Don Felder really didn't like it." "Glenn and I saw ourselves as the leaders of the band, but other people saw us as dictators." "You just cannot have five leaders in a band." "It doesn't work." "People have to do what they do best." "There was all this undercurrent and resentment and, you know, plotting and complaining." "And I'm sure Timothy thought, "What have I gotten myself into?"" "I was just really happy to be there, and all these tensions -- it's not that I didn't feel it, but I had no idea how deep it was." "In my experience, all rock-'n'-roll bands are on the verge of breaking up at all times." "The band at that point had begun to split up into factions." "Don Felder, in an effort to gain more control, had co-opted Joe Walsh." "So much of the time, it was Felder and Walsh against me and Glenn." "At that point, even Glenn and I were beginning to have our differences." "And it was tearing the band apart." "The magic ingredient that made the band successful was the relationship between Don and Glenn." "Through years of touring, years in the studio -- all of that friction really started driving a wedge in between that relationship." "It reached a point where we were just tired of each other -- tired of the hoopla, tired of touring, tired of pretty much everything." "At that point, songwriting was becoming very difficult." "How much sleep did you guys get?" "When did you get finished loading out?" "2:00?" "5:30." "5:30 this morning?" "Yeah." "Okay." "After the success of "Hotel California" " "Grammy winner, mega sales -- top that." "And we show up at the studio, and nobody has one song done." "I don't know what we'll do first, but..." "I had enough of a piece where they both went," ""That's great." "Let's develop that."" "And I was really pleased that they wanted to develop that one because it came out more as an RB song." "And it's very simple." "Very simple instrumentation." "Very simple arrangement." "There's a lot of air in it." "That's why it works." "About halfway through, Don comes up to me and says," ""There's your hit."" "We're on top of the world." "We're young." "We were overdoing everything." "There was a lot of chemical dependency going on within the band." "And that was rough." "During all of that time of writing and recording" ""The Long Run" and all the time on the road -- we were on the road during "The Long Run,"" "we were all using cocaine." "When we first started snorting coke, it was like a writing tool." "Do a couple bumps and kind of get started talking about stuff, get yourself going and launch into some sort of idea for a song." "But in the end, cocaine brought out the worst in everybody." "Yes, this half-hour of the show is brought to you by cocaine -- the makers of hits." "Making that album was excruciating." "We were just completely burned out." "We had driven ourselves really hard for almost a decade, and we were just fried." "It was long, too." "I mean, the days and hours would drag on, and it would feel like we weren't getting anything done." "It was more painful than "Hotel California."" "It was more of a painful birth because all of this stuff was going on, and we were getting pretty frazzled." "And the record company didn't care if we farted and burped." "They would put that out." "They didn't care." ""When can we have it?"" "Because that was their whole corporate quarter." "At that point, we inked in "The Long Run" as the title." "I think Henley said, "Well, I know what to call this one." "Look at us."" "Hold it." "Stop." "That's it!" "Song two." "Eagles -- "The Long Run" -- song two take one." "It was a struggle -- an endless start-stop-start-stop." "We called it "The Long One."" "It was the beginning of the end, even though I don't think I saw it right then." "There were a lot of things building up and a lot of things I tried to overlook for the good of the band." "And ultimately, I just couldn't look past some of this anymore." "And it festered because we didn't talk about these things." "It finally came to a head in Long Beach." "We were doing a benefit for Senator Alan Cranston." "He was concerned about a lot of the same issues we were concerned about, including environmental destruction and the war, so we wanted to support him." "Now, Felder didn't like us doing benefits." "He just thought that was money that should be going into his pocket." "Why were we doing it for Jerry Brown or anti-nukes?" "Alan Cranston and his wife are coming around to personally thank every member of the Eagles for doing this." "I was very uninformed about politics." "I could care less about politics." "I didn't even know or care who Alan Cranston was." "And Senator Cranston went up to Felder and said," ""I want to thank you."" "And Felder looked at the Senator and said, "You're welcome."" "Then as he was turning away, he said, "I guess."" ""lguessP" ""I guess." And Glenn heard it." "And I just got really mad." "I was drinking a longneck Bud and then walked into the tuning room where Walsh and Felder was and took the beer bottle and threw it against the wall and smashed it." "I stormed out." "I got more mad and more mad." "By the time we went onstage, I was seething." "I wanted to kill Felder." "Thank you again very much from all the Eagles and from Senator Cranston for coming out here and checking it out." "One, two, three, four." "A lot of tensions between Glenn and Felder, and the real manifestation of it came that night." "So now we're playing the show and trying to act like everything's okay, and we'll get through a few songs." "And I just keep looking over at him." ""You ungrateful son of a bitch."" "The scene there " "I really saw how serious it was at that show." "They were fighting onstage." "Szymczyk's got audio of it." "So we started getting towards the end of the set, and I'm looking at him going, "Three more songs, asshole."" "You know, and I'm looking at him, and I am ready to go." "I can't wait to get my hands on him." ""When we get off the stage, I'm gonna kick your ass."" "Whoa." "When that kind of stuff is onstage and you're in front of people, you got problems." "Thank you very much." "We got through the show, and it just -- all hell broke loose backstage." "When the set ended, he was out ahead of me, took his cheapest guitar busted it in a million pieces and jumped in his limousine and drove off." "And that was it." "That was really the straw that broke the camel's back." "Someone wrote, "The Eagles went out with a whimper, not a bang,"" "which was true." "I didn't want to hear it." "This was, like, my super dream had come true." "So I called Glenn, and I said, "What is the status?" "What's going on?" "Is this thing really broken up?"" "He said, "Yeah, it's over."" "We were beat, and it was really affecting the foundational core -- the soul of the band." "We hit the wall." "You work, work, work, work, work." "You get up to a peak, and then it's almost, you know, invariably people head-butt and, "Whose band is it?"" "And, "I'm in charge," and, "No, you're not," and there you go." "We had always said that we wanted to step off the wave just before it crashed into the beach." "And we did." "The Beatle guys say they never thought " "McCartney never thought that band was gonna last more than two years because no pop band did." "I think it's part of it." "It comes together." "It's magic, and it falls apart, you know?" "But, you know, how cool that it even happens at all." "It was magical." "They wrote a lot of great, great songs that will be celebrated and listened to and loved for a long time." "We managed to represent that period of time in the '70s," "Southern California, which was very artistically creative." "I hope that's remembered like the Roaring '20s are, you know -- our generation and what we did." "We set out to become a band for our time, but sometimes if you do a good enough job, you become a band for all time."