Glenn Frey: Eagles Album Saved Band
Steve Kroft Interviews Members Of The Legendary Band
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Play CBS Video Video Eagles: Dark Days The Eagles' Glenn Frey and Don Henley talk with Steve Kroft about living in the "dark underbelly of the American dream" and finding their way out.
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Video Eagles: The Pressure Cooker After the success of "Hotel California," the Eagles were famous and rich but the pressures of their new lifestyle opened the door to power struggles and increased drug use.
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Video Eagles: Back In The Studio The first Eagles studio album in 28 years debuted recently in the number one slot on the Billboard charts. Steve Kroft asks the band why they returned to the studio.
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The Eagles' Glenn Frey, left, and band mate Don Henley, right, talk with 60 Minutes' Steve Kroft in Dan Tana's Restaurant in West Hollywood, where the two creative forces met before forming the legendary band in 1971. (CBS/Dustin Eddo)
"We've been through probably every trip a band can go through. And what is left now is working at our craft," Walsh tells Kroft.
By the time legendary guitarist Joe Walsh joined the band in the mid 1970's, the Eagles were already flying in private jets, with more than enough money to indulge all of their appetites, at a time when sex couldn't kill, and getting high was considered expanding your consciousness. Walsh gave them a harder edge -- less country, more rock, and he contributed a guitar riff that seemed to sum up their circumstances.
"We were just setting up to rehearse, you know, we hear this," Frey says, singing a riff. "And we go, 'Hey, that's a song. That's a song. Save that. Save that, man.' So then we actually started jammin' on it."
In some ways, "Life in the Fast Lane" would become their musical epitaph, written at the zenith of their career, part of a rock masterpiece so successful it would lead to their undoing.
"Hotel California," Kroft remarks. "Everybody wants to know what the song means."
"I know, it's so boring," Henley tells Kroft. "It's basically a song about the dark underbelly of the American dream, and about excess in America which is something we knew a lot about."
The album would sell 16 million copies. But the Eagles had already become "prisoners of their own device." Too much money, too much fame, and too many parties.
"We weren't the Stones, but we weren't the Osmonds either, somewhere in between," Frey says.
"Closer to the Stones?" Kroft asks.
"Closer to the Stones than the Osmonds, that's right," Frey agrees.
Asked if they ever got in any trouble, Henley tells Kroft, "Yeah, we've all been in trouble. Everybody in this group has been in trouble."
"Like, 'need a lawyer' kinda trouble?" Kroft asks.
"Yeah, oh, yeah," Henley says.
"Had your picture taken at the police department?" Kroft asks.
"Oh, yeah, yeah. Glenn and I both," Henley says. "We did some stupid things. I mean, I did some incredibly dumb things, you know, but managed to get through it."
After "Hotel California," there would be one more album, "The Long Run," which took nearly three years to produce. By the time it was finished, so were the Eagles.
"It was turmoil in this group from day one. There were disagreements and dramas, and you know once we started to have some success, we were all freaked out about losing it," Henley remembers.
"All we felt was the pressure to do better than 'Hotel California.' And, you know, it ate us up," Frey adds. "And then throw in the fact that we were able to afford and do whatever kind of drugs we wanted. You know, that sort of thing brought out the worst in everybody."
In the summer of 1980, they finally split up, and for 14 years, went their own way. They all had successful solo careers, especially Henley, but nothing like their success with the Eagles. In 1994, sensing they had they money on the table, they agreed to a reunion tour called "Hell Freezes over."
Produced By Graham Messick and Michael Karzis
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Eagles fan? 
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See all 53 CommentsBTW - I should have added Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band to my earlier post...I think they have contributed to American Music. I''m sure there are some of you out there that will poo poo Bruce as well, but if you have listened to all of his music and realize that he has NEVER sold the rights to his music to anyone for anyprice....well...nevermind.
P.O.!
That song sucked. Just sucked.
It was a travesty and crappy filler to stick on The Long Run, Timmeh''s first studio album with The Eagles.
It featured Joe Walsh, and I think was helped to be written by Jimmy Buffett, - a drunken colaberation after Buffett''s wedding in Aspen in 1975.
It was a horror song. Something Hitchcock would have never written or produced.
I cannot tell you how much time I spent recording the album, and then lifting up the stylus so I could get a tape without that horrible "song."
The Eagles did the best songs ever, but also one of the worst - These Greeks Don''t Want No Freaks. Gah!
And I am still pissed off about Felder''s cruel and unreasonable dismissal - he also wrote one of the Eagle''s best unknown classics - Those Shoes.
Besides, what do these guys have to "protest" about? They want more tax cuts maybe?
CBS - don''t be like FAUX News and try to rewrite history. Some of us are still around and remember the good ol'' days.
PS Ericsh - you are so right! Do you remember the horror you felt when MTV insisted Ann Wilson''s image be stretched out, so she wouldn''t look so fat, on the videos from Alone? That was a travesty.
In 1984, he released Playin It Cool, which gave a song, So Much In Love, to Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
The album had a few goofy songs on it, but did have Tell Me What You Dream, probably one of the greatest ballads ever written. It got little airplay, at least until Restless Heart did a cover.
Restless Heart''s version was blah. Timmy''s was so nice and dreamy. Occasionally you will hear it on Safeway''s mix, as you wheel your cart down the frozen foods section.
He not only replaced Randy in the Eagles, he had also replaced Randy in Poco. He also did backup for Linda as well.
Timmeh''s sweet falsetto voice quickly got Poco airplay on top-40 stations, altho Poco was drifting back and forth between a Flying Burrito Brothers kinda bluegrass-country sound, and a more ballady-country rock sound.
Timmeh''s long hair added a rockish look to the band, and he helped the band produce a more-top-40 album, probably Poco''s best, Crazy Eyes, with Gram Parson''s long and haunting ballad, Crazy Eyes, and JJ Cale''s breath-catchingly-beautful Magnolia.
Gesus CBS - dont you have any post-fifty Eagles & Poco groupies on your staff?
Joe Walsh replaced Bernie Leadon in 1976, probably partially as a result of Bernie hooking up with Patti Davis and letting her say she was a co-author of I Wish You Peace. Eventho Ronnie''s daughter was pretty and cool, she still was Ronnie''s daughter.
Timothy B. Schmit replaced Randy Meisner after Randy collaborated on the Eagle''s greatest album, Hotel California. It may have been due to Randy becoming too religious.
The founders of the band were Don, Glenn, Randy, and Bernie. They sang back up to Linda Ronstadt prior to splitting off and creating their unique LA-country-rock sound.
The greatest guitarist the Eagles had, Don Felder, joined in 1974 as a slide guitarist, and wrote the music to the Eagles'' greatest song, Hotel California, which Don and Glenn originally didn''t like and thought was too Mexican. Don was cruelly fired in 2001 and it was the Eagles'' loss.
Donny boy, you''re no Jackson Browne . . .
BTW...Chevy Chase was the first drummer for Steely Dan...that and 50 cents gets ya nothing. An indiosyncratic musical experiment that is talented but great? I don''t think so.
Essentially, the Eagles are like fast food...pleasant,popular but not much nutrician...Henley alone is deeper. Having been gone 14 years, now it seems they are everywhere. Saying that there Farewell Tour I gave them permission to have Farwell Tour XXVI or whatever is bogus and a tad silly.
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CBS/60 Minutes must not have a Rock ''n'' Roll fact-checker. The original band members were Glenn Frey, Bernie Leadon, Randy Meisner and Don Henley, with Henley being the last addition to the "original" group.
I''ve liked all of the various manifestations of the group, but the first mix was my favorite if I had to pick one. I do think Joe Walsh was a particularly cool addition. They''re all cool with me.
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