
Eagles biography
With five number one singles and four number one albums,
the Eagles
were among the most successful recording artists of the 1970s; at the end of
the 20th century, two of those
albums, Eagles: Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975 and Hotel
Though most of its members came from outside California, the group was
closely identified with a country- and folk-tinged sound that initially found favor in and around Los Angeles in the late '60s, as played
by such bands as the Flying
Burrito Brothers and Poco,
both of which contributed members to the Eagles.
But the band also drew upon traditional rock & roll
styles and, in their later work, helped define the broadly popular rock sound
eventually referred to as classic rock. That helped the Eagles
to achieve a perennial appeal among generations of music fans who continued to
buy their records many years after they had split up, which inspired the
reunion they mounted in the mid-'90s.
The band was formed by four Los Angeles-based musicians who had come to
the West Coast from other parts of the U.S. Singer/bassist Randy Meisner (born in Scottsbluff, NE, on March 8,
1946) moved to
In the spring of 1971, Frey
and Henley
were hired to play in Linda Ronstadt's backup
band. Meisner and Leadon also played backup to Ronstadt during her summer tour, though the four only
did one gig together, at
The Eagles
toured as an opening act throughout 1972 and into early 1973, when they
returned to
After touring to support Desperado, the Eagles
again convened a recording session with Glyn Johns for their third album. But their desire
to make harder rock music clashed with Johns'
sense of them as a country-rock band, and they split from the producer after
recording two tracks, "You Never Cry Like a Lover" and "The Best
of My Love." After an early 1974 tour opened by singer/guitarist Joe Walsh,
they hired Walsh's
producer, Bill Szymczyk, who handled the rest of On
the Border. Szymczyk brought in a session guitarist, Don Felder
(born in
The Eagles'
fourth album, One of These Nights, was an out-of-the-box smash. Released in
June 1975, it went gold the same month and hit number one in July. It featured
three singles that hit the Top Five: the chart-topping title song, "Lyin' Eyes," and "Take It to the Limit." "Lyin' Eyes" won the 1975 Grammy Award for Best Pop
Vocal Performance by a Duo, Group, or Chorus, and the Eagles
also earned Grammy nominations for Album of the Year (One of These Nights) and
Record of the Year ("Lyin' Eyes"). The
group went on a headlining world tour, beginning with the
The Eagles'
extensive touring kept them out of the studio, and with no immediate plans for a new album,
they agreed to the release of a compilation,
Eagles: Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975, in February 1976. The first album
certified platinum for sales of one million copies, it topped the charts and
became a phenomenal success, eventually selling upwards of 25,000,000 copies
and dueling with Michael
Jackson's Thriller for the title of the best-selling album of all time
in the
It took the Eagles
18 months to follow One of These Nights with their fifth album, Hotel
California. Released in December 1976, it was certified platinum in one week,
hit number one in January 1977, and eventually sold over 10,000,000 copies. The
singles "New Kid in Town" and "Hotel California" hit number
one, and "Life in the Fast Lane" made the Top 20. "Hotel
California" won the 1977 Grammy for Record of the Year and was nominated
for Song of the Year; the album was nominated for Album of the Year and for
Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo, Group, or Chorus. The Eagles
embarked on a world tour in March 1977 that began with a month in the
The Eagles
began working on a new album in March 1978 and took nearly a year and a half to
complete it. The Long Run was released in September 1979. It hit number one and
was certified platinum after four months, eventually earning multi-platinum
certifications. "Heartache Tonight," its lead-off single, hit number
one, and "I Can't Tell You Why" and "The Long Run" became
Top Ten hits. "Heartache Tonight" won the 1979 Grammy for Best Rock
Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal. The Eagles
toured the
The Eagles
were inactive after the end of their 1980 tour, but their breakup
was not officially announced until May 1982. All five released solo recordings.
(Walsh,
of course, maintained a solo career before, during, and after the Eagles.)
During the rest of the 1980s, the bandmembers
received several lucrative offers to reunite, but they declined. In 1990, Frey
and Henley
began writing together again, and they performed along with Schmit and Walsh
at benefit concerts that spring. A full-scale reunion was rumored,
but did not take place. Four years later, however, the Eagles
did reunite. In the spring of 1994, they taped an MTV concert special and then
launched a tour that ended up running through August 1996. The MTV show aired
in October, followed in November by an audio version of it, the album Hell
Freezes Over, which topped the charts and became a multi-million seller,
spawning the Top 40 pop hit "Get Over It" and the number one adult
contemporary hit "Love Will Keep Us Alive."
The Eagles
next appeared together in January 1998 for their induction into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame, when the five present members performed alongside past
members Leadon and Meisner. On December 31, 1999, they played a millennium
concert at the