0:00:02 > 0:00:04This programme contains strong language.
0:00:05 > 0:00:10# There are stars
0:00:10 > 0:00:13# In the southern sky
0:00:16 > 0:00:24# Southward as you go-o-o
0:00:25 > 0:00:31# There is moonlight
0:00:31 > 0:00:34# And moss in the trees
0:00:35 > 0:00:45# Down the Seven Bridges Ro-o-oad
0:00:45 > 0:00:48- Pretty close.- Not too bad.
0:00:48 > 0:00:50It's going to be about two minutes, so come on.
0:00:50 > 0:00:51- Do what you got to do.- We got to go.
0:00:51 > 0:00:53I need a wrist band.
0:00:53 > 0:00:56It's something that you can't do for ever, you know?
0:00:56 > 0:00:59This is not a lifetime career that we can do, you know? So...
0:00:59 > 0:01:01It's not?!
0:01:07 > 0:01:09All right, let's go.
0:01:10 > 0:01:12DISTANT CHEERING OF AUDIENCE
0:01:18 > 0:01:20AUDIENCE WHISTLE AND CHEER
0:01:26 > 0:01:30Thank you and good evening. We're the Eagles from Los Angeles.
0:01:30 > 0:01:32LOUD CHEERING
0:01:35 > 0:01:38One, two, three, four.
0:01:38 > 0:01:40MUSIC STARTS
0:01:54 > 0:01:57# Well, I'm running down the road
0:01:57 > 0:01:58# Trying to loosen my load
0:01:58 > 0:02:02# I got seven women on my mind... #
0:02:02 > 0:02:04People are always saying things to me like,
0:02:04 > 0:02:07"You're just like a normal person."
0:02:07 > 0:02:10And I always say, "Of course!"
0:02:10 > 0:02:11# Ooh, ooh
0:02:11 > 0:02:13# Ooh, ooh! #
0:02:13 > 0:02:14All right!
0:02:20 > 0:02:22We might be a little more world-wise, you know,
0:02:22 > 0:02:24than some of those kids, that's all.
0:02:24 > 0:02:26We just maybe have less innocence than they do, but, I mean,
0:02:26 > 0:02:29I eat, I sleep, I fall in love, I fall out of love, I work.
0:02:29 > 0:02:31You know, I do pretty much the same thing.
0:02:31 > 0:02:35# You got your demons and you got desires
0:02:35 > 0:02:38# But I got a few of my own
0:02:40 > 0:02:45# Oooh someone to be kind to
0:02:45 > 0:02:47# In between the dark and the light
0:02:49 > 0:02:53# Oooh coming right behind you
0:02:53 > 0:02:57# Swear I'm gonna find you one of these nights! #
0:03:03 > 0:03:06We saw a poster of us when On the Border was made.
0:03:06 > 0:03:11Everybody looked like little kids, you know, like, early 20s and stuff.
0:03:11 > 0:03:14And everybody didn't have their wrinkles and baggy eyes.
0:03:14 > 0:03:16Sort of like a president when he first takes office.
0:03:16 > 0:03:18THEY LAUGH
0:03:18 > 0:03:21And then, like four or five years later, you know,
0:03:21 > 0:03:23he just walks out, and his hair is grey,
0:03:23 > 0:03:27and his eyes are drooping, and he's just really, you know, real burned.
0:03:27 > 0:03:32# Spent the last year Rocky Mountain way
0:03:32 > 0:03:36# Couldn't get much higher! #
0:03:36 > 0:03:40The first thing that happens is you get some kind of label,
0:03:40 > 0:03:43then you've got to live up to it, and then you just get caught in that,
0:03:43 > 0:03:46and I forget what the second thing is!
0:03:46 > 0:03:48THEY LAUGH
0:03:48 > 0:03:53# You know I've always been a dreamer
0:03:53 > 0:03:57# Spend my life running round
0:03:57 > 0:04:00# And it's so hard to change
0:04:00 > 0:04:03It's hard. It's like living two lives.
0:04:03 > 0:04:05You know, I have a family, three kids.
0:04:06 > 0:04:09And it's just hard to live in between that line, you know,
0:04:09 > 0:04:13of being out on the road and being away for a month.
0:04:13 > 0:04:17# Keep on turning out and burning out
0:04:17 > 0:04:23# And turning out the sa-a-ame
0:04:23 > 0:04:27# So put me on a highway
0:04:27 > 0:04:31# And show me a sign
0:04:31 > 0:04:34# And take it to the limit
0:04:34 > 0:04:37# One more time. #
0:04:37 > 0:04:40Maybe we wouldn't want to do this any more,
0:04:40 > 0:04:42or maybe we can't do this any more,
0:04:42 > 0:04:44or maybe nobody will give a shit if we do this any more.
0:04:44 > 0:04:47# Take it to the limit
0:04:47 > 0:04:52# One more t-i-i-ime. #
0:04:54 > 0:04:56Thank you.
0:04:56 > 0:04:57APPLAUSE
0:05:06 > 0:05:08No, I insist. You first.
0:05:10 > 0:05:11Hi, there.
0:05:13 > 0:05:15Lock it up.
0:05:15 > 0:05:17A hearty bunch out there. Oh, he's not even here. Now lock it up.
0:05:17 > 0:05:20Hey, driver, lock 'em up for us tonight, OK?
0:05:20 > 0:05:23- Out of sight.- You just don't know what those kids will do.
0:05:23 > 0:05:25Doggone.
0:05:31 > 0:05:33How about a beer? Is that what I heard?
0:05:33 > 0:05:36- You got it, brother. - Don't hurt yourself, young America.
0:05:38 > 0:05:40- Would you like one? - Yeah, I would like one.
0:05:40 > 0:05:43I'm going to drink tonight.
0:05:43 > 0:05:46I think they feel like they're up there, you know,
0:05:46 > 0:05:48like they're on the stage.
0:05:48 > 0:05:50Cos we look like them. We dress like them.
0:05:50 > 0:05:52Part of it is that, and part of it's the records.
0:05:52 > 0:05:54I think they just relate to the songs.
0:05:54 > 0:05:56I think it's 50/50, I guess.
0:05:56 > 0:05:59The thing is now is to try to see how long
0:05:59 > 0:06:01we can stay up here at the top of the mountain.
0:06:01 > 0:06:03It's very narrow and windy up here.
0:06:03 > 0:06:07We can probably continue doing what we're doing as long as the songs keep coming.
0:06:07 > 0:06:09That's the only thing that frightens us,
0:06:09 > 0:06:11is to not be able to do that any more.
0:06:11 > 0:06:14If we go to the well and nothing comes up, we would be in trouble. So far, so good.
0:06:14 > 0:06:17I think we can maintain this for a few more years.
0:06:17 > 0:06:20I don't see why not.
0:06:20 > 0:06:22Other people have. The Rolling Stones and the Who and the Led...
0:06:22 > 0:06:26and Led Zeppelin. I almost said THE Led Zeppelin! ..Have done it.
0:06:26 > 0:06:28Chicago's done it.
0:06:31 > 0:06:33Groups last longer than they used to, you know?
0:06:38 > 0:06:40Shit don't float.
0:06:58 > 0:07:0290% of the time, being in the Eagles was a fucking blast.
0:07:03 > 0:07:05You know, I was living the dream.
0:07:06 > 0:07:08# He was a hard-headed man
0:07:08 > 0:07:10# He was brutally handsome... #
0:07:10 > 0:07:15We never in our wildest dreams figured on being this successful and lasting this long.
0:07:15 > 0:07:17# She held him up... #
0:07:17 > 0:07:20We were a bunch of guys out there touring the country.
0:07:20 > 0:07:24We had a little private plane. We had parties after the shows.
0:07:24 > 0:07:27We had a good time. We were starting to make some money.
0:07:27 > 0:07:31# They took all the right pills They threw outrageous parties... #
0:07:31 > 0:07:35We had three guitar players finally, you know, so we could rock a bit.
0:07:35 > 0:07:40So, it was a good time, a good time for me, a good time for Don.
0:07:40 > 0:07:42# Life in the fast lane
0:07:42 > 0:07:43# Surely make you lose your mind... #
0:07:43 > 0:07:45Everybody was really happy...
0:07:47 > 0:07:48..then!
0:07:48 > 0:07:51# Life in the fast lane
0:07:51 > 0:07:53# Everything, all the time
0:07:53 > 0:07:54# Life in the fast lane... #
0:07:54 > 0:07:59It was going really fast, and probably too fast.
0:08:06 > 0:08:08There was turmoil within the band.
0:08:08 > 0:08:10We put a lot of pressure on ourselves.
0:08:10 > 0:08:13As Glenn used to say, "We made it, and it ate us."
0:08:14 > 0:08:17It's hard to be in a group. It's a bit like being in a marriage,
0:08:17 > 0:08:20if you quadruple it or quintuple it, in our case.
0:08:22 > 0:08:26They asked Don when the Eagles broke up, "What was that like for you?"
0:08:26 > 0:08:28And he said it was a horrible relief.
0:08:30 > 0:08:33And I think that clocks it pretty well.
0:08:36 > 0:08:38You're a real pro, Don, all the way.
0:08:38 > 0:08:40Yeah, you are, too. The way you handle people.
0:08:40 > 0:08:42Except the people you pay, nobody gives a shit about it.
0:08:42 > 0:08:46Fuck you. I've been paying you for seven years, you fuckhead.
0:08:46 > 0:08:48So much stuff just happened.
0:08:49 > 0:08:56You know, there's a philosopher who says, "As you live your life...
0:08:58 > 0:09:02"..it appears to be...
0:09:02 > 0:09:08"anarchy and chaos and random events,
0:09:08 > 0:09:12"non-related events smashing into each other
0:09:12 > 0:09:15"and causing this situation."
0:09:15 > 0:09:20And then... then this happens, and it's overwhelming,
0:09:20 > 0:09:25and it just looks like, "What in the world is going on?"
0:09:27 > 0:09:31And later, when you look back at it...
0:09:33 > 0:09:36..it looks like a finely-crafted novel.
0:09:38 > 0:09:42But at the time, it don't!
0:09:43 > 0:09:46And a lot of the Eagles' story is like that.
0:09:49 > 0:09:53I'm going to fuckin' kill you. I can't wait. I can't wait.
0:09:58 > 0:10:00We might as well start at the beginning.
0:10:05 > 0:10:09I grew up in Detroit, Michigan. My dad worked in a factory.
0:10:09 > 0:10:11My mother baked pies at General Motors.
0:10:11 > 0:10:14I started taking piano lessons when I was five years old.
0:10:14 > 0:10:18That alone could get you beat up after school in suburban Detroit.
0:10:18 > 0:10:19# And then she said...
0:10:19 > 0:10:23# Just because you've become a young man now
0:10:23 > 0:10:26# There's still some things that you don't understand... #
0:10:26 > 0:10:30Detroit was Motown, and so they played all the Motown hits.
0:10:30 > 0:10:34# Keep your freedom for as long as you can now
0:10:34 > 0:10:37# My momma told me, you'd better shop around.... #
0:10:37 > 0:10:40And that was the kind of stuff that we would listen to.
0:10:42 > 0:10:45I stopped playing piano when I was 12. It was too much.
0:10:45 > 0:10:46I wanted to do other things,
0:10:46 > 0:10:50and I think the girl thing was starting to happen, as well.
0:10:50 > 0:10:52THEY SCREAM
0:10:52 > 0:10:53Then the Beatles came along,
0:10:53 > 0:10:57and my aunt took me down to see the Beatles at the Olympia.
0:10:57 > 0:10:59THEY SCREAM
0:10:59 > 0:11:00It was crazy.
0:11:00 > 0:11:03I remember having a girl that was standing on her seat in front of me
0:11:03 > 0:11:10fall backwards into my arms, delirious, going, "Paul, Paul!"
0:11:10 > 0:11:13You know, and I thought, "Oh, my God!"
0:11:13 > 0:11:15I have a very vivid memory of seeing the Beatles
0:11:15 > 0:11:18with my parents on our old Admiral TV set.
0:11:18 > 0:11:19It was like a bolt of lightning.
0:11:19 > 0:11:22It had a huge impact on me. It was revolutionary.
0:11:22 > 0:11:24And it was an impact that would last a lifetime,
0:11:24 > 0:11:27and I know that had a huge impact on Glenn, too,
0:11:27 > 0:11:29even though we didn't know each other at the time.
0:11:33 > 0:11:38Linden, Texas, is my hometown. It's a small town in North-eastern Texas.
0:11:38 > 0:11:41When I was growing up, the population was about 2,500, 2,600.
0:11:41 > 0:11:46# I can settle down... #
0:11:46 > 0:11:48It's primarily an agricultural area.
0:11:48 > 0:11:51Some people worked at the steel mill.
0:11:51 > 0:11:53It's just a typical small Texas town.
0:11:53 > 0:11:57There's an old courthouse dating back to before the Civil War
0:11:57 > 0:11:59and one stoplight.
0:11:59 > 0:12:02It's kind of like The Last Picture Show, you know?
0:12:04 > 0:12:05It was a great place musically,
0:12:05 > 0:12:07because it was kind of a cultural crossroads.
0:12:07 > 0:12:11It's really located where the old South begins to meet the West.
0:12:13 > 0:12:17Linden, Texas, was the birthplace of Scott Joplin and T-Bone Walker.
0:12:17 > 0:12:20# Yes, time is hard, baby... #
0:12:20 > 0:12:24Both my parents loved music, so we had a lot of records in the house.
0:12:24 > 0:12:29I was exposed to music of all kinds from an early age.
0:12:29 > 0:12:33You know, Country and Western music, Western swing music, gospel music, Blues...
0:12:33 > 0:12:36Johnny Cash, Hank Williams, and Patsy Cline.
0:12:36 > 0:12:37# More, more, more
0:12:37 > 0:12:39# Gonna live it up and tear it down
0:12:39 > 0:12:42# Get in the groove and paint the town
0:12:42 > 0:12:44# Got a lot of rhythm in my soul... #
0:12:44 > 0:12:46There was a 50,000-watt radio station in New Orleans,
0:12:46 > 0:12:49and I heard things on that station that I didn't hear anywhere else.
0:12:51 > 0:12:53So, I had a lot of radio coming in.
0:12:56 > 0:12:58And when I would go to work with my dad,
0:12:58 > 0:13:01he would listen to a station in Shreveport, Louisiana. KWKH.
0:13:04 > 0:13:07# Say, hey, good lookin'!
0:13:07 > 0:13:10# What you got cookin'?
0:13:10 > 0:13:13# How's about cooking something up for me? #
0:13:13 > 0:13:17And that station broadcast a radio show called the Louisiana Hayride,
0:13:17 > 0:13:21where Elvis Presley made his first radio broadcast in 1954.
0:13:21 > 0:13:23# Well, that's all right, Mama
0:13:23 > 0:13:26# That's all right with you
0:13:26 > 0:13:28# That's all right, Mama
0:13:28 > 0:13:30# Just anyway you do
0:13:30 > 0:13:32# That's all right
0:13:32 > 0:13:34# That's all right... #
0:13:34 > 0:13:38The very first rock'n'roll record I bought was by Elvis Presley.
0:13:38 > 0:13:42# Anyway you do... #
0:13:42 > 0:13:44My playing the drums was sort of an organic process.
0:13:44 > 0:13:48I began by beating on my school books with my fingers
0:13:48 > 0:13:49and with pencils.
0:13:49 > 0:13:51I would beat out little cadences,
0:13:51 > 0:13:54and I used to drive my classmates crazy doing that, until, I think,
0:13:54 > 0:13:55one day, somebody said to me -
0:13:55 > 0:13:57I think it was my friend Richard Bowden - he said,
0:13:57 > 0:14:00"Why don't you just start playing the drums?"
0:14:00 > 0:14:03I managed to cobble together a drum kit from old drums
0:14:03 > 0:14:06that I found stashed in the back of the band hall at high school.
0:14:06 > 0:14:09And then one day, my mom said, "Come on, get in the car."
0:14:09 > 0:14:12And she drove me to a town about an hour and a half away
0:14:12 > 0:14:15called Sulphur Springs, Texas, to McKay Music Company.
0:14:15 > 0:14:17Much to my surprise,
0:14:17 > 0:14:20she bought me a set of red-sparkle Slingerland drums
0:14:20 > 0:14:22that I still have today.
0:14:22 > 0:14:24So, I have to give my parents a lot of credit.
0:14:24 > 0:14:26They bought me that drum kit
0:14:26 > 0:14:28even though they couldn't really afford it.
0:14:32 > 0:14:35The first band I was in was a band with my high-school buddy
0:14:35 > 0:14:38Richard Bowden and another high-school friend, Jerry Surratt,
0:14:38 > 0:14:43and we played Dixieland jazz music. Nobody sang. We just played music.
0:14:46 > 0:14:50MUSICAL INTRO TO SATISFACTION BY THE ROLLING STONES
0:14:50 > 0:14:52I went to a high-school party, and there were four kids
0:14:52 > 0:14:55who were freshmen in high school who were playing.
0:14:55 > 0:14:57I was a junior, and I had a couple beers that night and said,
0:14:57 > 0:15:02"Hey, you know, do you know Satisfaction? Cos I can sing it."
0:15:02 > 0:15:04So, I became the lead singer of the Subterraneans.
0:15:04 > 0:15:06# And I try and I try
0:15:06 > 0:15:09# And I try... #
0:15:09 > 0:15:11I played in the Subterraneans for a while,
0:15:11 > 0:15:14and then I played in another band called the Mushrooms.
0:15:14 > 0:15:16The most important thing that happened to me
0:15:16 > 0:15:18when I was in Detroit was I met Bob Seger.
0:15:21 > 0:15:23# Ye-e-e-ah
0:15:23 > 0:15:26# I'm gonna tell my tale, come on! #
0:15:26 > 0:15:28He took me under his wing.
0:15:28 > 0:15:31He invited me to recording sessions that he was having, you know,
0:15:31 > 0:15:34so I could see how records were made.
0:15:34 > 0:15:35I was his mentor.
0:15:35 > 0:15:38He was just so young, and I liked him right away
0:15:38 > 0:15:40because he was so funny.
0:15:40 > 0:15:44He had a great sense of humour, and, like me,
0:15:44 > 0:15:49I could see he was really ambitious. He really wanted to be on the radio.
0:15:49 > 0:15:51He cut a song called Ramblin' Gamblin' Man.
0:15:51 > 0:15:54He let me play acoustic guitar on the basic track
0:15:54 > 0:15:56and sing background vocals.
0:15:56 > 0:15:58# Ramblin' ma-a-an
0:15:58 > 0:16:01# A gamblin' man... #
0:16:01 > 0:16:04You can really hear Glenn blurt out on the first chorus.
0:16:04 > 0:16:08He comes out really loud. Tremendous gusto.
0:16:08 > 0:16:12Of course, that was a national hit for us, so that was really cool.
0:16:12 > 0:16:16Bob was the first guy that wrote his own songs and recorded them
0:16:16 > 0:16:18that I had ever met. He said, "You know, if you want to make it,
0:16:18 > 0:16:20"you're going to have to write your own songs."
0:16:20 > 0:16:23And I said, "Well, what if they're bad?" he said, "Well, they're going
0:16:23 > 0:16:26"to be bad." He says, "You just keep writing and keep writing,
0:16:26 > 0:16:29"and eventually, you'll write a good song."
0:16:29 > 0:16:31We were going to have a band together.
0:16:31 > 0:16:33He was going to get rid of his other guys,
0:16:33 > 0:16:35and I was going to be his bass player.
0:16:35 > 0:16:37It didn't work out.
0:16:37 > 0:16:40My mom found me smoking pot with a friend of mine
0:16:40 > 0:16:43in somebody's basement, and she called up Seger's manager,
0:16:43 > 0:16:47Punch Andrews, and said, "Just a minute, not so fast."
0:16:50 > 0:16:52In the years leading up to the Great Depression,
0:16:52 > 0:16:54my dad had to quit school after the eighth grade.
0:16:54 > 0:16:57He had to go home and work in the fields with his brother and sister
0:16:57 > 0:16:59to help support the family.
0:16:59 > 0:17:01His fondest wish, in fact, his life's goal,
0:17:01 > 0:17:03was that I would go to college.
0:17:04 > 0:17:07Every Saturday night, he would bring home seven quarters,
0:17:07 > 0:17:10and we'd put them in a piggy bank, and when those quarters
0:17:10 > 0:17:13amounted to 100, he would take me to the bank
0:17:13 > 0:17:17and we would buy a savings bond, a United States savings bond,
0:17:17 > 0:17:20and put that away for my college education.
0:17:22 > 0:17:25So, between what my dad had saved and between what I was making
0:17:25 > 0:17:27doing gigs all over Texas and Arkansas and Louisiana
0:17:27 > 0:17:31on weekends, I paid for three and a half years of college.
0:17:31 > 0:17:35They have a world-famous music department in which I did not excel.
0:17:35 > 0:17:37I took one music course.
0:17:37 > 0:17:40I think it was beginning theory, and I flunked.
0:17:40 > 0:17:42I made an F.
0:17:42 > 0:17:44But I didn't really care because I was an English major.
0:17:52 > 0:17:55Well, after the Mushrooms, I got invited to join this band
0:17:55 > 0:17:57called the Four of Us.
0:17:57 > 0:18:00Started getting into some of the California bands -
0:18:00 > 0:18:03the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, the Beach Boys.
0:18:03 > 0:18:05Always wanted to go to California.
0:18:05 > 0:18:08And I got out there, my mind was blown.
0:18:08 > 0:18:10The vegetation - I'd never seen palm trees.
0:18:10 > 0:18:12You know, it was just like a dream come true.
0:18:12 > 0:18:15# So you want to be a rock'n'roll star?
0:18:15 > 0:18:19# Then listen now to what I say
0:18:19 > 0:18:21# Just get an electric guitar...
0:18:21 > 0:18:25The first celebrity I saw was David Crosby.
0:18:25 > 0:18:29# And when your hair's combed right and your pants fit tight
0:18:29 > 0:18:32# It's gonna be all right...
0:18:32 > 0:18:34And he had on that flat-brimmed hat that he wore
0:18:34 > 0:18:37on the second Byrds album, and he had a little leather cape on,
0:18:37 > 0:18:42and I just looked and I thought, "My God, there's David Crosby."
0:18:42 > 0:18:44Zoom, and we went right by.
0:18:44 > 0:18:48# And in a week or two if you make the charts
0:18:48 > 0:18:51# The girls'll tear you apart... #
0:18:51 > 0:18:54And the first person I met was John David Souther.
0:18:54 > 0:18:56We wanted to get high and play music.
0:18:56 > 0:18:58There were two of us with guitars.
0:18:58 > 0:19:01We were listening to a lot of that sort of interface between
0:19:01 > 0:19:04rock'n'roll and country and western music that was
0:19:04 > 0:19:07happening in Southern California at the time with the Byrds
0:19:07 > 0:19:11and Dillard & Clark and the Burrito Brothers and Poco.
0:19:11 > 0:19:14# When I last saw you
0:19:14 > 0:19:18# I couldn't find a reason why
0:19:18 > 0:19:22# I felt kind of blue...#
0:19:22 > 0:19:25There was a lot of great music of that sort going around then.
0:19:25 > 0:19:27Longbranch Pennywhistle here.
0:19:27 > 0:19:29I suppose you wonder what that name meant, and John David and I -
0:19:29 > 0:19:32It was a well-kept spring back funky women.
0:19:32 > 0:19:35The songs weren't very good.
0:19:35 > 0:19:38I don't think Glenn and I were very far along as songwriters then.
0:19:38 > 0:19:40# Run, boy, run
0:19:40 > 0:19:43# You gotta move... #
0:19:43 > 0:19:46We were a funny little group, but we got gigs.
0:19:46 > 0:19:49We, you know, managed to play in some of the folk clubs around LA -
0:19:49 > 0:19:52the Golden Bear and the Ash Grove.
0:19:57 > 0:20:00# Yeah, yeah, oh, yeah
0:20:00 > 0:20:03# What condition my condition was in...
0:20:03 > 0:20:08We had a chance meeting with Kenny Rogers in Dallas, Texas, one day.
0:20:08 > 0:20:10He was coming through town with the First Edition.
0:20:10 > 0:20:12They were very hot at the time.
0:20:12 > 0:20:15# I tripped on a cloud and fell-a eight miles high... #
0:20:15 > 0:20:18I remember this like it was yesterday.
0:20:18 > 0:20:20This little kid came up and said, "Mr Rogers," he said,
0:20:20 > 0:20:23"I'm Don Henley, and I'm with a group called Felicity,
0:20:23 > 0:20:27"and we're doing a show tonight, and we'd love to have you come see us."
0:20:27 > 0:20:30And I said, "You know, I'm really sorry, but I don't do that.
0:20:30 > 0:20:33"I don't just go to clubs and watch groups."
0:20:33 > 0:20:36He said, "I really think you'd like us."
0:20:36 > 0:20:39And I thought, "Well, that's pretty cool," so I did.
0:20:39 > 0:20:43# From the minute that I met you, baby
0:20:43 > 0:20:46# You were hanging your chains on me
0:20:46 > 0:20:48# And I loved you so
0:20:48 > 0:20:53# I nearly lost my mind... #
0:20:53 > 0:20:56Kenny is a Texas boy, and he was looking for groups to produce.
0:20:56 > 0:20:58So, I brought them to LA,
0:20:58 > 0:21:02and they literally lived at my house for about four months.
0:21:03 > 0:21:05We changed their name to Shiloh.
0:21:05 > 0:21:08It was so much fun to take them into the studio.
0:21:08 > 0:21:15# Well, thank you Mr Big Time Music Business Man
0:21:15 > 0:21:20# For taking time to listen to my song...#
0:21:20 > 0:21:22With Shiloh, we made one album, and it had a single called
0:21:22 > 0:21:26Simple Little Down Home Rock And Roll Love Song For Rosie.
0:21:26 > 0:21:28Not exactly a short title!
0:21:28 > 0:21:30# Just a simple little down home
0:21:30 > 0:21:34# Rock'n'roll love song for Rosie... #
0:21:34 > 0:21:36We didn't know much about the business at that point.
0:21:36 > 0:21:37We were pretty naive.
0:21:37 > 0:21:41# Going down to the swamp river country some day... #
0:21:41 > 0:21:44We kicked around in the LA clubs for a while,
0:21:44 > 0:21:48played the Whisky, played some of the clubs down in the South Bay area,
0:21:48 > 0:21:51and nothing really happened for us.
0:21:54 > 0:21:57JD and I were looking for any place to play.
0:21:57 > 0:21:59We had heard about this guy Jackson Browne.
0:21:59 > 0:22:01He'd been playing the same clubs we had,
0:22:01 > 0:22:04but we never had seen him perform.
0:22:04 > 0:22:07- This is California. Mr Jackson Browne.- Ah, thank you, thank you.
0:22:07 > 0:22:10'Then there were a bunch of gigs that they had and some gigs that I had'
0:22:10 > 0:22:12that they would show up at my gigs
0:22:12 > 0:22:15and me at their gigs, and we became really good friends.
0:22:15 > 0:22:19And we'd start talking about, "Where do you live, and what's going on?"
0:22:19 > 0:22:24And Jackson said, "You know, you should come down to Echo Park.
0:22:24 > 0:22:26"Rent's real cheap."
0:22:26 > 0:22:29Glenn got the apartment next to my apartment,
0:22:29 > 0:22:34and this apartment cost like 125 or something a month, you know.
0:22:34 > 0:22:36And I needed to economize, so I moved into the basement
0:22:36 > 0:22:40underneath Glenn's place, which I could get into for 35 a month.
0:22:40 > 0:22:43It only had one door. It was really just kind of an illegal place,
0:22:43 > 0:22:47just a cubby-hole, and that's where Jackson lived,
0:22:47 > 0:22:50with JD and I above. You know, that was it.
0:22:50 > 0:22:55There was a stereo, a piano, a bed, a guitar, you know, a teapot.
0:22:55 > 0:22:59KETTLE WHISTLES
0:22:59 > 0:23:04We slept late in those days, except around nine o'clock in the morning,
0:23:04 > 0:23:06I'd hear Jackson Browne's teapot going off,
0:23:06 > 0:23:08this whistle in the distance.
0:23:08 > 0:23:11And then I'd hear him playing piano.
0:23:11 > 0:23:13I didn't really know how to write songs.
0:23:13 > 0:23:18I knew I wanted to write songs, but I didn't know exactly -
0:23:18 > 0:23:22you just wait around for inspiration, what was the deal?
0:23:22 > 0:23:26Well, I learned through Jackson's ceiling
0:23:26 > 0:23:29and my floor exactly how to write songs cos Jackson would get up,
0:23:29 > 0:23:33and he'd play the first verse and first chorus,
0:23:33 > 0:23:37and he'd play it 20 times until he had it just the way he wanted.
0:23:37 > 0:23:39And then there'd be silence.
0:23:39 > 0:23:42And then I'd hear the teapot go off again.
0:23:42 > 0:23:44Then it'd be quiet for ten or 20 minutes.
0:23:44 > 0:23:47Then I'd hear him start to play again,
0:23:47 > 0:23:48and there was the second verse.
0:23:48 > 0:23:52So, then he'd work on the second verse, and he'd play it 20 times.
0:23:52 > 0:23:54And then he'd go back to the top of the song,
0:23:54 > 0:23:58and he'd play the first verse, the first chorus and the second verse
0:23:58 > 0:24:01another 20 times until he was really comfortable with it and,
0:24:01 > 0:24:05you know, change a word here or there, and I'm up there going,
0:24:05 > 0:24:07"So, that's how you do it" -
0:24:07 > 0:24:13elbow grease, you know, time, thought, persistence.
0:24:21 > 0:24:25# Doctor, my eyes have seen the years
0:24:25 > 0:24:28# And the slow parade of fears
0:24:28 > 0:24:30# Without crying...
0:24:30 > 0:24:31I wanted to kill him sometimes.
0:24:31 > 0:24:36Jackson would play the same phrase from Doctor, My Eyes for six weeks.
0:24:36 > 0:24:39The same thing with The Pretender. I just wanted to murder him.
0:24:39 > 0:24:44# Doctor, my eyes... #
0:24:44 > 0:24:46And it was during that period of time that I met Glenn Frey
0:24:46 > 0:24:49because we were on the same label, called Amos Records.
0:24:49 > 0:24:51Some of the things that struck me
0:24:51 > 0:24:53when I first met Glenn were things we had in common.
0:24:53 > 0:24:57Both of our dads made a living in the automotive industry.
0:24:57 > 0:25:00Glenn and I loved old cars, especially cars from the '50s.
0:25:00 > 0:25:03He had a '55 Chevy that he named Gladys.
0:25:03 > 0:25:07And we drove around Los Angeles in Gladys.
0:25:07 > 0:25:08- RADIO:- Check out the new talent.
0:25:08 > 0:25:11There's no better place in town to catch those new singers
0:25:11 > 0:25:13and songwriters than down at the Monday night Hoot Night,
0:25:13 > 0:25:16Doug Weston's world-famous Troubadour, happening tonight.
0:25:16 > 0:25:20'The Troubadour club was the centre of the musical universe.
0:25:20 > 0:25:23It was a very seminal place. It was the place to see and be seen.
0:25:24 > 0:25:26Every Monday night they had an open stage.
0:25:26 > 0:25:27It was called Hoot Night.
0:25:31 > 0:25:34The Troubadour was the place to go if you were young
0:25:34 > 0:25:38and happening and trying to get involved in the music scene.
0:25:38 > 0:25:40It was happening there.
0:25:40 > 0:25:41# California
0:25:41 > 0:25:44# Oh, California
0:25:44 > 0:25:47# I'm coming home
0:25:47 > 0:25:50# Oh, make me feel good Rock'n'roll band
0:25:50 > 0:25:52# I'm your biggest fan
0:25:52 > 0:25:56# California, I'm coming home. #
0:25:56 > 0:25:58I saw a lot of great acts at the Troubadour.
0:25:58 > 0:26:02# So far away
0:26:02 > 0:26:09# Doesn't anybody stay in one place any more?
0:26:09 > 0:26:13# It would be so fine to see your face... #
0:26:13 > 0:26:18I witnessed Elton John's American debut performance in 1970.
0:26:20 > 0:26:25# And it's good old country comfort in my bones
0:26:27 > 0:26:32# Just the sweetest sound my ears have ever known... #
0:26:32 > 0:26:34Everybody who was anybody at the time played at the Troubadour.
0:26:37 > 0:26:38Of course, Linda,
0:26:38 > 0:26:41she still has one of my favourite voices in the business, ever.
0:26:41 > 0:26:47# Feeling better now we're through
0:26:47 > 0:26:51# Feeling better cos I'm over you...#
0:26:51 > 0:26:55The Troubadour is really responsible for the entire music scene.
0:26:55 > 0:26:58I mean, everything I got, really, was virtually through either
0:26:58 > 0:27:02performing there onstage or in the bar, you know?
0:27:02 > 0:27:04# I'm telling you now, baby
0:27:04 > 0:27:06# And I'm going my way... #
0:27:06 > 0:27:09I was just started managing Linda then,
0:27:09 > 0:27:12and Linda was going to be a star - that voice as big as a house.
0:27:12 > 0:27:14There wasn't anybody in the room
0:27:14 > 0:27:16that cared about anything but that voice.
0:27:16 > 0:27:20# I'm gonna say it again... #
0:27:20 > 0:27:22One night, we're down at the Troubadour,
0:27:22 > 0:27:24and John Boylan comes to me - he's managing Linda Ronstadt -
0:27:24 > 0:27:27and he says, "I'm taking Linda on the road.
0:27:27 > 0:27:31"We need guys who can sing. You want to play rhythm guitar and sing?"
0:27:31 > 0:27:34I offered him 250 a week, and he took it.
0:27:37 > 0:27:40I went back to him, I said,
0:27:40 > 0:27:43"Can you give me some of that money right now?"
0:27:43 > 0:27:44I think he gave me 50 bucks.
0:27:44 > 0:27:48And then I found Don from this band called Shiloh.
0:27:48 > 0:27:49I heard him playing at the Troubadour.
0:27:49 > 0:27:54# I'm coming down... #
0:27:54 > 0:27:58I was looking for a job. Glenn introduced me to John Boylan.
0:27:58 > 0:28:00I auditioned at this little house in Laurel Canyon.
0:28:00 > 0:28:03I had listened to her album hundreds of times,
0:28:03 > 0:28:05so I knew the songs backwards and forwards,
0:28:05 > 0:28:08and I guess I passed the audition, because I got the job.
0:28:08 > 0:28:12# I got a feeling called the blues Oh, Lord
0:28:12 > 0:28:15# Since my baby said goodbye
0:28:15 > 0:28:18# And I don't know what I'll do
0:28:18 > 0:28:22# All I do is sit and cry Oh, Lord
0:28:22 > 0:28:25# I've grown so used to him somehow
0:28:25 > 0:28:29# But I'm nobody's sugar momma now
0:28:29 > 0:28:32# And I'm lonesome
0:28:32 > 0:28:36# Got the lovesick blues. #
0:28:36 > 0:28:37I learned a lot from Linda.
0:28:37 > 0:28:39It was a very formative experience for me.
0:28:39 > 0:28:42And she could hang with the guys, you know.
0:28:42 > 0:28:46She could drink tequila with the rest of us and hold her own.
0:28:46 > 0:28:52# Saving nickels, saving dimes... #
0:28:52 > 0:28:54It was really very ad hoc.
0:28:54 > 0:28:56We had a station wagon, put the gear in the back.
0:28:56 > 0:29:00We'd all get in it and drive to the college and play there.
0:29:00 > 0:29:03As a cost-cutting measure, band members had to share
0:29:03 > 0:29:06rooms in those days, so Glenn and I were roommates.
0:29:06 > 0:29:09- What did you guys eat? - I had a bowl of Rice Krispies.
0:29:09 > 0:29:11'Ladies and gentlemen, Linda Ronstadt.'
0:29:17 > 0:29:20It's funny. I seem to get people at a critical stage in their development
0:29:20 > 0:29:22and they build their chops.
0:29:22 > 0:29:25I mean, there's nothing that gets your chops up better than playing every single night.
0:29:25 > 0:29:29# If the same thing happened to everybody
0:29:29 > 0:29:31# That just happened to me... #
0:29:31 > 0:29:35Linda and John Boylan really like the way Henley and I play,
0:29:35 > 0:29:39really like the way we sing with her, and they start to get
0:29:39 > 0:29:43a vision of putting together a super group to back up Linda -
0:29:43 > 0:29:46the best of the new country-rock musicians,
0:29:46 > 0:29:49and we were going to be part of it.
0:29:49 > 0:29:51I remember talking with Don, and Don said,
0:29:51 > 0:29:54"Well, you know, I'd rather, like, just be in a band with you."
0:29:56 > 0:29:58And I said, "Well, yeah, me too.
0:29:58 > 0:30:00"You know, I'd rather just be in a band with you."
0:30:05 > 0:30:08So, we went to Linda and said, "You know,
0:30:08 > 0:30:11"we really appreciate everything you've done for us,
0:30:11 > 0:30:14"and it means a lot, and we love playing with you,
0:30:14 > 0:30:16"but we'd like to have our own band."
0:30:16 > 0:30:24# If you won't be with me someday... #
0:30:24 > 0:30:27Now, you know, I think a lot of people, you know,
0:30:27 > 0:30:29could get miffed by that, say, "Well, wait a second.
0:30:29 > 0:30:31"I brought you out here, you know.
0:30:31 > 0:30:33"I gave you a paying job when you couldn't afford
0:30:33 > 0:30:37"your own drinks at the Troubadour bar, and now you want to quit?"
0:30:37 > 0:30:41# Smile... #
0:30:41 > 0:30:46Linda was extremely gracious about the whole thing, as was John Boylan.
0:30:46 > 0:30:49They weren't resentful or bitter at all. They were great.
0:30:49 > 0:30:52They were supportive, as a matter of fact.
0:30:52 > 0:30:55# There you go and baby
0:30:55 > 0:30:57# Here am I
0:30:57 > 0:30:59# Well, you left me here
0:30:59 > 0:31:04# So I could sit and cry... #
0:31:04 > 0:31:07They started talking about putting a band together,
0:31:07 > 0:31:09and we told them they should get Bernie Leadon.
0:31:09 > 0:31:13I was in several bands in LA. Early on, I met Linda.
0:31:13 > 0:31:15Then I worked with Dillard & Clark -
0:31:15 > 0:31:19Doug Dillard, banjo player, and Gene Clark from the Byrds.
0:31:19 > 0:31:22And so, now I'm in an offshoot of the Byrds world,
0:31:22 > 0:31:26and then that turned into an invitation from the Burrito Brothers
0:31:26 > 0:31:30from Chris Hillman to come join them for their second album on A&M.
0:31:30 > 0:31:34# Since we got the older guys to show us how
0:31:34 > 0:31:37# I don't see why we can't stop right now... #
0:31:37 > 0:31:40And I was still in the Burritos, but they had lost Gram Parsons,
0:31:40 > 0:31:44and it had changed, and I wasn't that interested any more.
0:31:47 > 0:31:49Bernie was a very accomplished banjo player,
0:31:49 > 0:31:53and he could also play guitar in what we called the Bindi lick style.
0:31:53 > 0:31:56It was pioneered by a fellow named Clarence White.
0:31:56 > 0:31:59And then Glenn told me about this guy named Randy Meisner who
0:31:59 > 0:32:00had been in a band called Poco.
0:32:00 > 0:32:03Randy could sing really high, and he also played bass.
0:32:03 > 0:32:06# It's a good morning and I'm feeling fine... #
0:32:06 > 0:32:08So, Glenn just kind of asked me one day
0:32:08 > 0:32:11if I'd be interested in starting a group with him.
0:32:11 > 0:32:17And he had Henley and Bernie. That was the first Eagles.
0:32:19 > 0:32:22So, the plan was that Glenn and I would try to recruit Bernie
0:32:22 > 0:32:25and Randy, and then we would all go to David Geffen and see
0:32:25 > 0:32:28if he would give us a recording contract.
0:32:28 > 0:32:32In the '70s, Asylum Records was considered the LA sound -
0:32:32 > 0:32:35Joni Mitchell, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young,
0:32:35 > 0:32:36Jackson Browne.
0:32:36 > 0:32:40David Geffen, who started Asylum, is our patron, you know.
0:32:40 > 0:32:44A Medici, Medici of rock'n'roll.
0:32:44 > 0:32:49It's a very artist-oriented company, and whatever they want to do, we support them.
0:32:49 > 0:32:51If we believe in them, we'll stick with them,
0:32:51 > 0:32:52whether they make it or not.
0:32:52 > 0:32:55Jackson was our conduit to David Geffen.
0:32:55 > 0:32:57He was the first guy to get signed
0:32:57 > 0:33:00by Geffen's new Asylum Records label.
0:33:00 > 0:33:03So, we all walk in Geffen's office, and we basically said,
0:33:03 > 0:33:04"Here we are."
0:33:04 > 0:33:07Bernie Leadon just boldly says to Geffen,
0:33:07 > 0:33:10"Well, do you want us or not?"
0:33:10 > 0:33:12They were dying to sign with me.
0:33:12 > 0:33:15I think they were very ambitious, particularly Glenn.
0:33:15 > 0:33:17Glenn wanted to have a hit band.
0:33:17 > 0:33:19I loved the way Don sang.
0:33:19 > 0:33:20You know, we all had hopes for it.
0:33:20 > 0:33:23All of a sudden, we were signed to Geffen's new label.
0:33:23 > 0:33:25They sent us back to the drawing board.
0:33:25 > 0:33:27They said, "You guys need to go and rehearse some more."
0:33:27 > 0:33:31They said, "You know, you need to write some songs. You're not really ready to record yet."
0:33:34 > 0:33:37So, they packed us off to Aspen, Colorado.
0:33:37 > 0:33:38It could have been worse.
0:33:38 > 0:33:42There were people who were way higher than any of us had ever been.
0:33:44 > 0:33:47It was a Wild West wide-open town at that point.
0:33:47 > 0:33:50MUSIC: "Tryin' " by the Eagles
0:33:54 > 0:33:56We played at a club up there called The Gallery,
0:33:56 > 0:33:58which was located right at the foot of Aspen Mountain.
0:33:58 > 0:34:00# Tryin'
0:34:00 > 0:34:02# Got to keep on tryin'
0:34:04 > 0:34:06# Tryin'... #
0:34:07 > 0:34:10We didn't have a big catalogue of our own tunes at that point.
0:34:10 > 0:34:12We were just getting started.
0:34:15 > 0:34:17We needed to learn how to play together as a band, and we did.
0:34:17 > 0:34:21# The moon is a weeper
0:34:21 > 0:34:24# The sun is your clown
0:34:24 > 0:34:27# And his way of lovin'
0:34:27 > 0:34:30# Is holdin' you down... #
0:34:32 > 0:34:35And then it was like, "OK, we need to make a record.
0:34:35 > 0:34:37"Who are we going to get to produce it?"
0:34:37 > 0:34:39We wanted to shoot as high as we could.
0:34:39 > 0:34:42Glenn Frey came up with Glyn Johns as an idea.
0:34:42 > 0:34:47Glyn Johns was a name that kept popping up on records we loved.
0:34:49 > 0:34:52The first time I heard them was in Aspen.
0:34:52 > 0:34:55I was not at all impressed, really.
0:34:55 > 0:34:59THEY PLAY GUITAR DUET
0:34:59 > 0:35:02I thought they were confused.
0:35:02 > 0:35:06Glenn Frey wanted to be in a rock'n'roll band,
0:35:06 > 0:35:09and Bernie Leadon, on the other side, was one of the greatest
0:35:09 > 0:35:11acoustic players, country players, if you like.
0:35:11 > 0:35:14And there was a bit of a confusion.
0:35:14 > 0:35:17I didn't see what all the fuss was about at all.
0:35:17 > 0:35:19So I passed.
0:35:19 > 0:35:24We're like, "God dang, what?" You know, it's not what we expected.
0:35:24 > 0:35:29He had worked with Led Zeppelin, the Who, the Stones,
0:35:29 > 0:35:33so he was coming from that, and he said flat-out,
0:35:33 > 0:35:35"You're not that, man."
0:35:35 > 0:35:40It isn't always easy to spot what's hot about an artist
0:35:40 > 0:35:43if you go and see them play. You can see them on a bad night.
0:35:43 > 0:35:46You know, it's not necessarily the fairest way of doing it.
0:35:46 > 0:35:50So, I thought, "Well, the best thing to do would be for me to see them
0:35:50 > 0:35:53"in a rehearsal situation where we could converse
0:35:53 > 0:35:56"and they could play new stuff and I could stop and start."
0:35:56 > 0:35:58And they played the stuff that they played in Aspen,
0:35:58 > 0:36:00and it all sounded pretty much the same.
0:36:00 > 0:36:05Well, I was thinking, "I don't get it. I still don't get it."
0:36:05 > 0:36:10So, we decided to take a break for lunch
0:36:10 > 0:36:12and as we were leaving,
0:36:12 > 0:36:15somebody said, "Oh, why don't we play Glyn that ballad?"
0:36:15 > 0:36:21# My daddy was a handsome devil
0:36:21 > 0:36:27# He had a chain five miles long... #
0:36:27 > 0:36:30And it just completely blew me off my feet.
0:36:30 > 0:36:32I mean, there it was. That was the sound.
0:36:32 > 0:36:38# From every link a heart did dangle
0:36:38 > 0:36:41# For every maid... #
0:36:41 > 0:36:44Extraordinary blend of voices, wonderful harmony sound.
0:36:44 > 0:36:47Just stunning.
0:36:47 > 0:36:49And that was it. I was in with both feet.
0:36:49 > 0:36:56# Now I have loved you like a baby... #
0:36:56 > 0:36:57Except that Glyn Johns
0:36:57 > 0:37:00didn't want to come to the United States and work.
0:37:00 > 0:37:03He wanted to work in London in the recording studios
0:37:03 > 0:37:06that he was familiar with, and so they shipped us off to England.
0:37:06 > 0:37:09I don't think that any of us except Bernie had ever been out
0:37:09 > 0:37:12of the country, so it was a little bit like going to the moon for us.
0:37:12 > 0:37:16# I'm hanging on to my peace of mind
0:37:16 > 0:37:20# I just don't know
0:37:20 > 0:37:22# I'm hanging on to those good times... #
0:37:22 > 0:37:25And I'm stoked. You know, I'm thinking,
0:37:25 > 0:37:28"I'm going to go to Beatle country with Glyn Johns.
0:37:28 > 0:37:29"I'm going to record in the same studio
0:37:29 > 0:37:32"where Led Zeppelin did Rock And Roll.
0:37:32 > 0:37:34"Oh, my God, I can't wait."
0:37:34 > 0:37:38We were recorded at the famous Olympic studios,
0:37:38 > 0:37:41where a lot of legendary records had been made.
0:37:41 > 0:37:44Glyn Johns, he had a certain style of recording,
0:37:44 > 0:37:45which was very organic.
0:37:45 > 0:37:49He would simply place a few mics around the room, and off you go.
0:37:49 > 0:37:52You know, rather than, for example, placing a microphone on each
0:37:52 > 0:37:55and every drum, he would just put three microphones on the drum kit.
0:37:55 > 0:37:57He was accustomed to recording people
0:37:57 > 0:37:59like John Bonham with Led Zeppelin.
0:38:01 > 0:38:03And I said to Glyn, "I want the bass drum to be louder."
0:38:03 > 0:38:06And he said, "If you want it louder, hit it harder," you know?
0:38:06 > 0:38:07And I hit it as hard as I could,
0:38:07 > 0:38:10but I couldn't hit it as hard as John Bonham.
0:38:10 > 0:38:14He had a bunch of rules that really didn't suit me
0:38:14 > 0:38:16and some of the other guys, too.
0:38:16 > 0:38:20You know, no getting high in the studio, no drinking in the studio.
0:38:20 > 0:38:23I agreed wholeheartedly with Glyn Johns
0:38:23 > 0:38:25regarding drugs and alcohol in the studio -
0:38:25 > 0:38:29that we'd get more work done and that it would be better work.
0:38:29 > 0:38:32When I got the opportunity to produce and therefore
0:38:32 > 0:38:36be in the chair, I decided that I would no longer put up with that.
0:38:36 > 0:38:39Somebody said to me the other night that
0:38:39 > 0:38:44I was the designated driver in the '60s and early '70s.
0:38:45 > 0:38:49Glyn had worked with the Rolling Stones at a time when they went
0:38:49 > 0:38:53to the studio and did nothing except wait for Keith, you know, to go down
0:38:53 > 0:38:58in the basement and play his guitar until he came up with some riff.
0:38:58 > 0:39:00So, Glyn was impatient.
0:39:00 > 0:39:03The Stones had burned him out on the, you know,
0:39:03 > 0:39:07"get high in the studio and wait for something to happen" kind of thing.
0:39:07 > 0:39:08'Let's go. We're rolling.'
0:39:10 > 0:39:12'One, two, three.'
0:39:13 > 0:39:16MUSIC: "Peaceful Easy Feeling" by the Eagles
0:39:25 > 0:39:32# I like the way your sparkling earrings lay
0:39:32 > 0:39:36# Against your skin so brown
0:39:40 > 0:39:42# And I wanna sleep with you
0:39:42 > 0:39:45# In the desert tonight... #
0:39:45 > 0:39:47There were three hit singles on the first album.
0:39:47 > 0:39:50Peaceful Easy Feeling was written by Jack Tempchin,
0:39:50 > 0:39:52who is our friend and frequent collaborator.
0:39:52 > 0:39:58# Cos I got a peaceful easy feeling... #
0:39:58 > 0:40:03Peaceful Easy Feeling captures the time, captures this attitude.
0:40:03 > 0:40:06You can feel the wind blowing across the desert.
0:40:06 > 0:40:11# Oh-ohh
0:40:11 > 0:40:12# What a feeling
0:40:12 > 0:40:16# Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ohh. #
0:40:16 > 0:40:20MUSIC: "Witchy Woman" by the Eagles
0:40:23 > 0:40:26The second hit was Witchy Woman, which I wrote with Bernie.
0:40:28 > 0:40:31Witchy Woman started as a guitar figure.
0:40:31 > 0:40:34Then we were jamming it one day, and everybody was digging it.
0:40:34 > 0:40:37And then Henley came back the next day with the lyrics.
0:40:37 > 0:40:42# Raven hair and ruby lips
0:40:42 > 0:40:47# Sparks fly from her finger tips
0:40:47 > 0:40:52# Echoed voices in the night
0:40:52 > 0:40:57# She's a restless spirit on an endless flight
0:40:57 > 0:41:03# Woo hoo, witchy woman
0:41:03 > 0:41:09# See how high she flies
0:41:09 > 0:41:13# Woo hoo, witchy woman
0:41:13 > 0:41:19# She got the moon in her eye... #
0:41:19 > 0:41:22During the time that the Eagles were on the road for the first album,
0:41:22 > 0:41:26we had just come through the '60s - civil rights movement,
0:41:26 > 0:41:29'68 - all the assassinations, all the rioting.
0:41:31 > 0:41:34The Vietnam War still winding up. Nixon, Watergate.
0:41:34 > 0:41:36I welcome this kind of examination.
0:41:36 > 0:41:39I really think that part of the reason that the Eagles
0:41:39 > 0:41:42succeeded the way they did was because the country
0:41:42 > 0:41:46and people and young people needed to feel like things were OK.
0:41:46 > 0:41:49So, here comes this song Take It Easy.
0:41:49 > 0:41:51MUSIC: "Take It Easy" by the Eagles
0:41:56 > 0:41:59# Well, I'm a runnin' down the road
0:41:59 > 0:42:00# Trying to loosen my load
0:42:00 > 0:42:03# I've got seven women on my mind
0:42:03 > 0:42:06# Four that want to own me
0:42:06 > 0:42:08# Two that want to stone me
0:42:08 > 0:42:11# One says she's a friend of mine
0:42:11 > 0:42:14# Take it easy
0:42:14 > 0:42:18# Take it easy
0:42:18 > 0:42:24# Don't let the sound of your own wheels drive you crazy
0:42:24 > 0:42:28# Lighten up while you still can
0:42:28 > 0:42:31# Don't even try to understand
0:42:31 > 0:42:35# Just find a place to play your hand
0:42:35 > 0:42:38# Take it easy... #
0:42:42 > 0:42:44Jackson had this song called Take It Easy.
0:42:44 > 0:42:48He couldn't finish the song. He was stuck in the second verse.
0:42:48 > 0:42:53He had, "I'm standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona."
0:42:53 > 0:42:56And so, I filled in, "Such a fine sight to see
0:42:56 > 0:42:59"It's a girl, my Lord In a flatbed Ford
0:42:59 > 0:43:00"Slowing down to take a look at me."
0:43:00 > 0:43:05# Well, I'm a standin' on a corner in Winslow, Arizona
0:43:05 > 0:43:07# Such a fine sight to see
0:43:07 > 0:43:11# It's a girl, my Lord in a flat-bed Ford
0:43:11 > 0:43:14# Slowin' down to take a look at me... #
0:43:14 > 0:43:17Girl, Lord, Ford - I mean, all the redemption, you know -
0:43:17 > 0:43:20girls and cars and redemption all in this one line.
0:43:20 > 0:43:25I mean, he's very mercurical. You know...mercurial? Mercurial.
0:43:26 > 0:43:28And he's mercurical, too.
0:43:28 > 0:43:31# We may lose and we may win
0:43:31 > 0:43:35# But we will never be here again
0:43:35 > 0:43:38# So open up I'm climbin' in
0:43:38 > 0:43:41# So take it easy... #
0:43:41 > 0:43:42All right!
0:43:49 > 0:43:51Someone once asked Stephen Stills about the Eagles,
0:43:51 > 0:43:55and his response was, "They just wanted to be us."
0:43:55 > 0:43:58But when it came time to do our album covers,
0:43:58 > 0:44:01they suggested that we use Gary Burden and Henry Diltz.
0:44:01 > 0:44:03They had done the first Crosby, Stills, Nash cover
0:44:03 > 0:44:05and some stuff for Joni.
0:44:05 > 0:44:07The one I really remember was
0:44:07 > 0:44:10The Mamas & The Papas all sitting in the bathtub.
0:44:10 > 0:44:12That was one of their album covers.
0:44:12 > 0:44:16So, these were, like, the cool guys to have work on your album.
0:44:16 > 0:44:21Gary Burden is about 40 years old, full beard, long, greyish,
0:44:21 > 0:44:24wavy hair, crystal-blue eyes.
0:44:24 > 0:44:29Henry was a sort of magical, noninvasive photographer guy.
0:44:30 > 0:44:32For the Eagles,
0:44:32 > 0:44:36it was the peyote spirits which the American Indians, of course,
0:44:36 > 0:44:39ate peyote and had a very, very spiritual experience,
0:44:39 > 0:44:42and they would maybe meet their animal totem
0:44:42 > 0:44:46or they would get their quest for life.
0:44:46 > 0:44:50My deal was always to take the bands out of their comfort zone.
0:44:50 > 0:44:54Take them away from their girlfriends, from telephones,
0:44:54 > 0:44:57from anything, and have them under my control
0:44:57 > 0:45:02so that I could get things to happen without any interference.
0:45:02 > 0:45:04And so, we would take trips.
0:45:04 > 0:45:07Now, how this plan came about exactly,
0:45:07 > 0:45:12today you have to scratch your head, but this was the plan.
0:45:12 > 0:45:14OK, we'll all go to the Troubadour,
0:45:14 > 0:45:17and we'll stay there till closing time.
0:45:17 > 0:45:19And then we'll drive to Joshua Tree.
0:45:19 > 0:45:22# This morning I don't know... #
0:45:22 > 0:45:25We had a bag of peyote buttons, a bunch of trail mix,
0:45:25 > 0:45:28some tequila, and some water, and some blankets.
0:45:28 > 0:45:32And the seven of us set out for Joshua Tree.
0:45:32 > 0:45:35We got there probably about 4.30 in the morning, parked in this
0:45:35 > 0:45:39special place that I don't know how we found it in the dark.
0:45:44 > 0:45:49We all took one peyote button, put it in our mouths,
0:45:49 > 0:45:52and started hiking up to the place that we were supposed to go.
0:45:52 > 0:45:57So, right around the time that we're getting to the campsite
0:45:57 > 0:45:58and we're starting to build the fire
0:45:58 > 0:46:01and starting to cook some peyote tea, and the first buttons -
0:46:01 > 0:46:04everybody's chewing the first button
0:46:04 > 0:46:07and the drug starts coming on just as the sun is rising.
0:46:07 > 0:46:10MUSIC: "Earlybird" by the Eagles
0:46:25 > 0:46:28I think everybody got higher than they ever imagined
0:46:28 > 0:46:32anybody could be, and it was a good thing.
0:46:32 > 0:46:34We were after getting into life deeper
0:46:34 > 0:46:38and better and more and surrendering.
0:46:43 > 0:46:48I had to go to the bathroom, so I left the campsite,
0:46:48 > 0:46:53and I hear the guys yelling from the campfire, "Eagle! Eagle!"
0:46:53 > 0:46:57I look up, and it's soaring right above me. Huge wingspan.
0:46:57 > 0:47:01I'm, like, scuffling to get my pants back up, and I'm slipping.
0:47:01 > 0:47:04I fall down, and the bird just kind of goes,
0:47:04 > 0:47:09"Eagles, huh? Yeah, I don't think so."
0:47:11 > 0:47:15The images of the first album cover, I think,
0:47:15 > 0:47:20really set the tone for visually what Eagles are.
0:47:20 > 0:47:23Gary designed the album cover so that it would open up into a
0:47:23 > 0:47:30whole poster, and at the bottom were the Eagles around the campfire.
0:47:30 > 0:47:33And then, up at the top, it would go on up into the sky
0:47:33 > 0:47:35and the eagle up in the sky.
0:47:35 > 0:47:38But David Geffen thought that would be confusing,
0:47:38 > 0:47:42and without consulting us or consulting Gary or the Eagles
0:47:42 > 0:47:45or anybody, he told them, "Just glue it shut."
0:47:45 > 0:47:48And so, then, when they glued it shut, you would get this -
0:47:48 > 0:47:50this album, front and back, and you'd open it up,
0:47:50 > 0:47:54and it would be upside-down, which didn't make any sense to anybody.
0:48:00 > 0:48:04The fact was that the success of the first album scared the hell out of us.
0:48:04 > 0:48:07Why me instead of some guy down the street, you know?
0:48:07 > 0:48:09Why me and some friends of mine who are just as good of musicians
0:48:09 > 0:48:13as I am, you know, but it happened to me and it didn't happen to them?
0:48:13 > 0:48:15I don't know.
0:48:15 > 0:48:18Success can sometimes be just as disconcerting
0:48:18 > 0:48:21and frightening as failure, especially
0:48:21 > 0:48:24when you have questions about your own worthiness and your abilities.
0:48:24 > 0:48:27It came time to do another album.
0:48:27 > 0:48:30Don and I decided we'd try to write some songs together.
0:48:30 > 0:48:33I had been sitting over on Aqua Vista.
0:48:33 > 0:48:34I was living on the couch,
0:48:34 > 0:48:37and I'm just laying there playing the guitar, and I started going...
0:48:37 > 0:48:39# Ding-digga-ding digga...#
0:48:39 > 0:48:41You know, I'm thinking,
0:48:41 > 0:48:43"Yeah, that's pretty cool, kind of Roy Orbison, kind of Mexican.
0:48:43 > 0:48:45"Yeah, I like that."
0:48:45 > 0:48:47So, I showed him, you know, that guitar riff.
0:48:47 > 0:48:50I said, "Maybe we should write something to this."
0:48:52 > 0:48:56# It's another tequila sunrise
0:48:56 > 0:49:02# Staring slowly across the sky
0:49:04 > 0:49:06# I said goodbye
0:49:10 > 0:49:13# He was just a hired hand
0:49:15 > 0:49:20# Workin' on a dreamy plan to try...#
0:49:20 > 0:49:23Songs like Desperado and Tequila Sunrise,
0:49:23 > 0:49:28that's when Glenn and I began collaborating, and that's when we really became a song-writing team.
0:49:28 > 0:49:31# Every night when the sun goes down
0:49:33 > 0:49:36# Just another lonely boy in town
0:49:38 > 0:49:44# And she's out runnin' round. #
0:49:44 > 0:49:45Earlier that year,
0:49:45 > 0:49:49someone had given Jackson Browne the book of gunfighters.
0:49:50 > 0:49:56It had all the big outlaw groups, Frank and Jesse, the Doolin-Dalton gang.
0:49:56 > 0:49:58We were all just fascinated with those guys,
0:49:58 > 0:50:00and we thought it would make a great analogy.
0:50:00 > 0:50:05Well, for example, we live outside the laws of normality.
0:50:05 > 0:50:08Also, you usually, because of records or bank robberies,
0:50:08 > 0:50:11you usually heard about these guys before you ever saw them.
0:50:11 > 0:50:15They had posters that were wanted posters up for people.
0:50:20 > 0:50:22There just seemed to be some parallels.
0:50:27 > 0:50:29It wasn't really like we were outlaws,
0:50:29 > 0:50:33but I think they did have their nobler characteristics.
0:50:34 > 0:50:41# A life on the road is the life of an outlaw, man. #
0:50:41 > 0:50:42We started talking about it.
0:50:42 > 0:50:47Then we said, "Well, maybe we should do, like, an album all about the rebels."
0:50:47 > 0:50:48We got to doing this outlaw album,
0:50:48 > 0:50:52and we had eight songs finished, and we needed two more.
0:50:52 > 0:50:56An idea Randy came up with was how the guy became an outlaw
0:50:56 > 0:50:58and how he became a guitar player.
0:51:01 > 0:51:08# He was a poor boy Raised in a small family
0:51:10 > 0:51:17# He kinda had a craving For something no-one else could see
0:51:18 > 0:51:25# They said that he was crazy The kind that no lady should meet
0:51:26 > 0:51:33# He ran off to the city then wandered around in the street... #
0:51:33 > 0:51:36I kind of started it, and that's what usually happened.
0:51:36 > 0:51:38I'd get a verse or two, and then I'm done,
0:51:38 > 0:51:41and they would help fill in the blanks.
0:51:43 > 0:51:48# Oh, yeah. He wants to see the lights a-flashing
0:51:48 > 0:51:52# And listen to the thunder ring. #
0:51:52 > 0:51:58Nobody expected there to be a concept album with western cowboys music.
0:51:58 > 0:52:02Don Henley was from Texas. He was a cowboy.
0:52:02 > 0:52:05Glenn was from Detroit. He wanted to be a cowboy.
0:52:05 > 0:52:09Because I knew all these guys had a little cowboy inside of them,
0:52:09 > 0:52:14I took them to Western Costume and just said, "Pick out your persona."
0:52:14 > 0:52:18Their premise was that, if they had lived 100 years ago,
0:52:18 > 0:52:22in like 1872, they probably would have been gunslingers.
0:52:22 > 0:52:25Everybody's going to be firing in the direction of this building right here.
0:52:25 > 0:52:28Jackson, JD, Boyd, you all got to be in the picture more.
0:52:28 > 0:52:32- We're going to be in there. - You ready? One, two, three!
0:52:38 > 0:52:43And we fired so many blanks that it was a cloud of smoke hanging
0:52:43 > 0:52:44over this western town,
0:52:44 > 0:52:50and the fire department came Cos they thought it was a fire.
0:52:50 > 0:52:51Keep firing!
0:52:51 > 0:52:54We were just a bunch of kids. We were just playing around.
0:53:02 > 0:53:04The picture that's on the back of the album,
0:53:04 > 0:53:05there's a lot of reality in it.
0:53:05 > 0:53:09All of the agents and managers and road managers, all the guys
0:53:09 > 0:53:13who didn't play are standing up, alive with badges and guns,
0:53:13 > 0:53:17and the four Eagles at the time and Jackson and I are all dead, bound
0:53:17 > 0:53:20up the way they used to do when they'd catch outlaws in those days.
0:53:20 > 0:53:22They'd stand them up for display.
0:53:22 > 0:53:25People never tired of looking at the corpse of a bad boy.
0:53:28 > 0:53:31We all felt, when we were doing it and as it was delivered, that it
0:53:31 > 0:53:36was another really remarkable record on the part of the band.
0:53:36 > 0:53:39I mean, it was pretty extraordinary.
0:53:39 > 0:53:41The band and I were enormously thrilled with it.
0:53:41 > 0:53:44They literally carried me out of the control room.
0:53:44 > 0:53:46They chaired me out of the control room.
0:53:46 > 0:53:49# Desperado
0:53:49 > 0:53:52# Is there gonna be anything left...#
0:53:52 > 0:53:54Desperado comes out, and it bombs.
0:53:56 > 0:54:00Jerry Greenberg was the Vice President of Atlantic Records.
0:54:00 > 0:54:03They were excited to get the second Eagles album.
0:54:03 > 0:54:05We played him Desperado, and he said,
0:54:05 > 0:54:08"Hmm, that's, yeah, that's nice, that's good, that's nice."
0:54:08 > 0:54:14And turned around and said, "God, they made a fuckin' cowboy record."
0:54:14 > 0:54:18# Desperado
0:54:18 > 0:54:24# Oh, you ain't gettin' no younger. #
0:54:24 > 0:54:27I was extremely flattered that Linda recorded Desperado.
0:54:27 > 0:54:30It was really her that popularized the song.
0:54:30 > 0:54:33Her version was very poignant and beautiful.
0:54:33 > 0:54:36# And freedom, oh, freedom
0:54:36 > 0:54:40# That's just some people talkin'
0:54:40 > 0:54:49# Your prisoner is walking through this world all alone. #
0:54:49 > 0:54:54There have been a lot of articles and things that identify me with the LA sound.
0:54:54 > 0:54:56It's sort of, like, me and Jackson Browne and the Eagles.
0:54:56 > 0:55:00All of us are reaching out for other musical influences all the time.
0:55:00 > 0:55:03The so-called southern California sound was developing.
0:55:03 > 0:55:06It was fresh, it was different, it was unique.
0:55:06 > 0:55:08It was a melting pot, people moving
0:55:08 > 0:55:11here from all over the United States to pursue their dream.
0:55:11 > 0:55:16Actors, musicians, wannabe managers, agents, wannabe, you know, like me.
0:55:20 > 0:55:23I picked up the phone cold and called David Geffen,
0:55:23 > 0:55:26who was just starting Asylum Records.
0:55:26 > 0:55:29Long story short, I took a job as a manager with Asylum.
0:55:29 > 0:55:31I was intrigued.
0:55:31 > 0:55:34I wanted to know about the Eagles and meet the Eagles
0:55:34 > 0:55:36Cos I was a fan.
0:55:36 > 0:55:38Emergency?
0:55:38 > 0:55:41I get a phone call. Glenn Frey's on the phone.
0:55:41 > 0:55:44"We need money for Christmas. Can you book dates?"
0:55:44 > 0:55:45I book some dates.
0:55:45 > 0:55:47So, I get on a plane and go out to meet them.
0:55:47 > 0:55:50First of all, the show was fantastic.
0:55:50 > 0:55:54Crowd was nothing like I'd seen a year, year and a half earlier.
0:55:54 > 0:55:58- Good evening. Welcome to the Portland version of...- Spread Eagle.
0:55:58 > 0:56:03Spread Eagle. Tonight, the promoter gave us chopsticks.
0:56:03 > 0:56:05I don't think we ever checked in a hotel.
0:56:05 > 0:56:08We went from there to a party at a sorority house.
0:56:08 > 0:56:12One thing led to another, and I'd never seen anything like this.
0:56:12 > 0:56:14They wouldn't give us any booze in the bar.
0:56:14 > 0:56:16We tried to get some booze, but they fucked up,
0:56:16 > 0:56:19so we may burn the fucking place down. We're not sure.
0:56:19 > 0:56:20I don't think we went to sleep.
0:56:20 > 0:56:22It was Eagle mania.
0:56:25 > 0:56:30And then they went off to England to record On The Border with Glyn Johns.
0:56:32 > 0:56:34They were quite open to being produced.
0:56:34 > 0:56:37Understandably, that changed.
0:56:37 > 0:56:42They began to be more opinionated and less insecure, perhaps.
0:56:42 > 0:56:45We wanted to play rock'n'roll or at least a more rock'n'roll
0:56:45 > 0:56:48version of country music, and Glyn Johns
0:56:48 > 0:56:51was of the opinion that we weren't really capable of that.
0:56:51 > 0:56:54I think he had been bombarded by loud,
0:56:54 > 0:56:57aggressive rock'n'roll for many, many years.
0:56:57 > 0:57:01At that point in his life, he wanted mellow people and mellow music,
0:57:01 > 0:57:06and we weren't exactly at the same stage in life.
0:57:06 > 0:57:08Frey sort of took over more.
0:57:08 > 0:57:11He had this desire to be something that
0:57:11 > 0:57:14I didn't really feel that they were capable of doing.
0:57:14 > 0:57:20He and Glenn Frey were like oil and water. They clashed frequently.
0:57:20 > 0:57:24In the studio, Glyn Johns was pretty much a schoolmarm.
0:57:24 > 0:57:28He'd push, push, push, you know? And then he'd say, "That's it.
0:57:28 > 0:57:32"That's good enough. We're moving on. You're not a rock'n'roll band.
0:57:32 > 0:57:35"The Who is a rock'n'roll band, and you're not that."
0:57:36 > 0:57:41After each of those records, the band freaked out and said,
0:57:41 > 0:57:44"We've made a huge mistake.
0:57:44 > 0:57:45"Glyn Johns missed it."
0:57:45 > 0:57:47We actually had conversations.
0:57:47 > 0:57:50You know, Desperado hadn't done as well as the first album.
0:57:50 > 0:57:54None of them were thrilled with the way the record sounded.
0:57:54 > 0:57:58We wanted more input into how our albums were being made.
0:57:58 > 0:58:02We wanted more input into the recording process itself.
0:58:02 > 0:58:05Don and I thought that the vocals were too wet.
0:58:05 > 0:58:08There was too much echo on them.
0:58:08 > 0:58:10And he definitely told us, "Excuse me, that's my echo.
0:58:10 > 0:58:13"It's my signature. It's my bloody echo. It stays there.
0:58:13 > 0:58:14"You don't tell me what to do."
0:58:14 > 0:58:17We needed to make a change.
0:58:20 > 0:58:23I joined the Navy at the height of the Cold War.
0:58:23 > 0:58:26One of the main things they were doing was looking for Russian
0:58:26 > 0:58:28submarines, and you do that by using sonar.
0:58:29 > 0:58:34When I got out, I had a lot of electronics education, obviously.
0:58:34 > 0:58:38And I got a job in a recording studio here in New York.
0:58:39 > 0:58:42The first session I ever saw, like day one, day two,
0:58:42 > 0:58:44was a Carole King demo.
0:58:44 > 0:58:48She sat down and played piano, and it was like, "Boy, this is fun.
0:58:48 > 0:58:50"These people are having fun here."
0:58:53 > 0:58:56I worked my way up through the ranks, and then, of course,
0:58:56 > 0:58:59after engineering for four or five years, I was like,
0:58:59 > 0:59:03"Well, I can produce better than some of these guys I'm working for."
0:59:03 > 0:59:07At the time, I was managing Joe Walsh, so I played them
0:59:07 > 0:59:12Walsh music that I thought was an example of how it could be edgier.
0:59:12 > 0:59:14Joe and I had just finished an album called
0:59:14 > 0:59:17The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get.
0:59:17 > 0:59:21And they heard that and said, "That's what we want to sound like."
0:59:21 > 0:59:24So, Irving arranged for us to have a meeting with Bill Szymczyk.
0:59:24 > 0:59:27We really only had two questions that we wanted to ask him -
0:59:27 > 0:59:31do you mind if we have some input about how much echo is on the vocals?
0:59:31 > 0:59:33And we wanted somebody who would put a microphone on each
0:59:33 > 0:59:36and every drum so we could have more control over the mix.
0:59:36 > 0:59:41He said yes to every question, and so we knew he was the guy for us.
0:59:41 > 0:59:43I said, "OK, under one condition.
0:59:43 > 0:59:46"I have to call Glyn and make sure it's OK with him."
0:59:46 > 0:59:49So, I called him, and I said, you know,
0:59:49 > 0:59:52"Glyn, the Eagles want me to produce them."
0:59:52 > 0:59:54"Better you than me, mate."
0:59:54 > 0:59:56That's pretty much how I felt.
0:59:56 > 1:00:01I mean, it had come to a fairly unpleasant end.
1:00:01 > 1:00:05Well, OK, you know, so much for Beatle country with Glyn Johns.
1:00:10 > 1:00:14Let's have a warm round of applause on a hot afternoon for the Eagles!
1:00:16 > 1:00:19# James Dean, James Dean
1:00:19 > 1:00:21# So hungry and so lean
1:00:21 > 1:00:25# James Dean, James Dean
1:00:25 > 1:00:28# You said it all so clean. #
1:00:29 > 1:00:31Along about the third album,
1:00:31 > 1:00:36I was having some difficulty in communicating, I felt, in the
1:00:36 > 1:00:40band, and I was starting to think maybe I should go at some point.
1:00:40 > 1:00:44They still had this unfulfilled desire to be a mainstream
1:00:44 > 1:00:47rock band and not just a vocal band,
1:00:47 > 1:00:50but I think they wanted to go in a tougher direction.
1:00:52 > 1:00:55Bernie Leadon was a country-based guitar player, but every time
1:00:55 > 1:01:01I wanted to do a rock'n'roll song, he was the lead guitar player.
1:01:02 > 1:01:06# Cos I'm already gone. #
1:01:06 > 1:01:09Every time we wanted to do something country that Bernie sang,
1:01:09 > 1:01:11I was supposed to be the lead guitar player,
1:01:11 > 1:01:14and I wasn't a country musician by any stretch.
1:01:14 > 1:01:17It always felt like we needed a third guitar player.
1:01:19 > 1:01:23We had met this friend of Bernie's, this guy named Don Felder.
1:01:23 > 1:01:25We were playing in Boston, and he came back to visit Bernie,
1:01:25 > 1:01:28and we were jamming upstairs in the dressing room,
1:01:28 > 1:01:30and this guy was all over the neck.
1:01:36 > 1:01:38What he brought was great chops.
1:01:38 > 1:01:40I mean, we called him Fingers, Fingers Felder,
1:01:40 > 1:01:42because he was an incredible player.
1:01:50 > 1:01:52We did that session. I think it was like three hours.
1:01:52 > 1:01:55And then I packed up and went home,
1:01:55 > 1:01:58not thinking anything more about it than it was just another session.
1:01:58 > 1:02:00And the next day, Glenn called me and asked me
1:02:00 > 1:02:03if I would like to join the band.
1:02:03 > 1:02:04I said, "Absolutely."
1:02:06 > 1:02:08All right, let's do...I'm in heaven.
1:02:08 > 1:02:11- Let's go another one. - All right, do it right!
1:02:11 > 1:02:15The banter that would go on in between takes was hysterical,
1:02:15 > 1:02:20and so I took to running a two-track to pick up these silly things.
1:02:20 > 1:02:24We were young men with raging hormones and something to prove.
1:02:24 > 1:02:26In the context of the times and the profession,
1:02:26 > 1:02:29the way we behaved wasn't really all that remarkable.
1:02:29 > 1:02:32The creative impulse comes from the dark side of the personality,
1:02:32 > 1:02:35so we worked it good, you know.
1:02:35 > 1:02:39We did a lot of stupid things, said a lot of stupid things.
1:02:39 > 1:02:42It was the '70s. There were drugs everywhere.
1:02:42 > 1:02:48# Cactus sunrise was in my face Everyone was dying
1:02:48 > 1:02:51# Everyone was lying and trying
1:02:51 > 1:02:55# Well, rub your belly in the linseed oil...#
1:02:55 > 1:02:56There you go.
1:02:58 > 1:03:02Well, the heartbreak of psoriasis has once again descended upon
1:03:02 > 1:03:06the adolescent experience, and we'll see you later.
1:03:06 > 1:03:08See you at the show later on tonight.
1:03:08 > 1:03:13The question was, you know, who could handle it? Who could function?
1:03:13 > 1:03:14Who could show up?
1:03:14 > 1:03:17# One of these nights
1:03:19 > 1:03:22# One of these crazy long nights
1:03:24 > 1:03:27# We're gonna find out, pretty mama
1:03:29 > 1:03:30# What turns on your lights
1:03:33 > 1:03:36# The full moon is calling
1:03:36 > 1:03:38# The fever is high
1:03:38 > 1:03:42# And the wicked wind whispers and more
1:03:43 > 1:03:45# You got your demons
1:03:45 > 1:03:51# And you got desires But I got a few of my own
1:03:53 > 1:03:57# Ooooh, someone to be kind to
1:03:57 > 1:04:01# In between the dark and the light
1:04:01 > 1:04:06# Ooooh, comin' right behind you
1:04:06 > 1:04:09# Swear I'm gonna find you One of these nights
1:04:09 > 1:04:12# One of these days... #
1:04:12 > 1:04:14There were always girls.
1:04:20 > 1:04:24There were a lot of opportunities out on the road to entertain
1:04:24 > 1:04:26ourselves with one thing or another.
1:04:26 > 1:04:30So, we started to perfect after-show partying,
1:04:30 > 1:04:33and we invented a place called the Third Encore.
1:04:33 > 1:04:37We did two encores in our show, so the third encore was the party.
1:04:37 > 1:04:41Everybody in the band and everybody in the crew was given a bunch
1:04:41 > 1:04:45of buttons, and all we said was, "No weirdos, no strange people, OK?
1:04:45 > 1:04:48"If you're going to give a button to somebody, you know, make it count."
1:04:48 > 1:04:53Totally sick. There's some real warped shit coming on now, ladies and gentlemen.
1:04:53 > 1:04:56A member of Andy Warthog's pop-bowel movement has just tried to crash our party.
1:04:56 > 1:05:02- What the?- Welcome to Pittsburgh Spread Eagle.
1:05:02 > 1:05:06We want to just ask these girls why they think they have to leave now that it's 2:00.
1:05:06 > 1:05:09One thing, he smells like beer.
1:05:09 > 1:05:12We'd fill the bathtubs up with Budweiser,
1:05:12 > 1:05:14and we'd have a party after every show.
1:05:14 > 1:05:18- Your name, please.- Tammy Farley. - Tammy, Tammy, Tammy.
1:05:18 > 1:05:20- Here we have Karen. Karen is 20 years old. - Is that correct?
1:05:20 > 1:05:24- Yeah.- What's your name, dear? - Fuck it, man.- Pardon? Fuck it.
1:05:24 > 1:05:25Her name's "Fuck it, man."
1:05:25 > 1:05:28I want to talk about sex and drugs.
1:05:30 > 1:05:31Who wants to go first?
1:05:31 > 1:05:34I'm not lost for words on either subject.
1:05:34 > 1:05:37Sex and drugs kind of came as a big package in the '60s.
1:05:37 > 1:05:40You know, it seemed like everybody, the sexual revolution
1:05:40 > 1:05:45and the drug thing, I guess, probably started out together.
1:05:46 > 1:05:48Didn't they?
1:05:51 > 1:05:54Don and I both tried to have relationships while we were members
1:05:54 > 1:05:58of the Eagles, but it was always like the Eagles trumped everything.
1:06:00 > 1:06:04When the Eagles became successful, we challenged all the rules.
1:06:06 > 1:06:09Like when David Geffen left Asylum Records
1:06:09 > 1:06:13and sold everything to Warner Bros and started his new empire.
1:06:13 > 1:06:17Let's be frank. When we signed that contract, we were idiots.
1:06:17 > 1:06:20We knew nothing about the business.
1:06:20 > 1:06:24We had poor legal representation, nobody looking out for us.
1:06:24 > 1:06:29Remember, bands don't really get record royalties usually ever.
1:06:29 > 1:06:33So, they get money from touring, but they get publishing money.
1:06:33 > 1:06:36So, in the very beginning, one thing that Geffen did
1:06:36 > 1:06:40that I thought was great. He had us form a band publishing company.
1:06:40 > 1:06:42All the band's publishing went in that.
1:06:42 > 1:06:44The problem was Geffen had the other half.
1:06:44 > 1:06:47Half the Eagles' publishing, half of my publishing,
1:06:47 > 1:06:51half of all the artists that he signed went to Warner Bros, but
1:06:51 > 1:06:53he got them to return mine.
1:06:53 > 1:06:56Jackson turned me on to the Eagles.
1:06:56 > 1:06:58He had turned me on to a lot of artists,
1:06:58 > 1:07:00and I felt I owed him something.
1:07:00 > 1:07:05And that, not surprisingly, was not acceptable rationale to the Eagles!
1:07:05 > 1:07:09There's a certain amount of ire, like, real, you know, like,
1:07:09 > 1:07:12"What the fuck?
1:07:12 > 1:07:15"I mean, we didn't get our publishing back!"
1:07:15 > 1:07:18So, it was the publishing issue and the fact that the business managers
1:07:18 > 1:07:20and the lawyers were all shared common guys,
1:07:20 > 1:07:25and did they have a conflict when an issue came up and which side to take?
1:07:25 > 1:07:27Well, it just makes you feel like meat, you know?
1:07:27 > 1:07:30It started out as such a personal, nurturing endeavour, you know,
1:07:30 > 1:07:33with Mr Geffen saying, "Oh, I'm going to protect you guys.
1:07:33 > 1:07:35"That's why I'm calling my new label Asylum.
1:07:35 > 1:07:38"It's going to be a sanctuary for real artists."
1:07:38 > 1:07:40He once said to Irving Azoff,
1:07:40 > 1:07:43"You know, Irving, this would be a great business
1:07:43 > 1:07:47"if there weren't artists."
1:07:47 > 1:07:50Irving was the one guy who really believed in us,
1:07:50 > 1:07:52that I thought could do something to help us.
1:07:52 > 1:07:55I basically hired a lawyer and went in
1:07:55 > 1:07:58after I said, "The Eagles would like their publishing back,"
1:07:58 > 1:08:01to which the obvious response was, "No".
1:08:01 > 1:08:04He sort of drew a line in the sand and declared war,
1:08:04 > 1:08:07so I felt, for my survival, as their manager,
1:08:07 > 1:08:11I needed to prove to them that I wasn't afraid of Geffen
1:08:11 > 1:08:13and would stand up and, you know.
1:08:13 > 1:08:15The lawsuit was filed as a last resort.
1:08:15 > 1:08:18I don't think David liked reading his name in the lawsuit.
1:08:18 > 1:08:21I thought it was incredibly ungrateful
1:08:21 > 1:08:25and they misrepresented the facts, but so be it.
1:08:25 > 1:08:27Ultimately, we settled out of court,
1:08:27 > 1:08:29and I don't believe it took very long.
1:08:29 > 1:08:31He just wanted to get rid of us.
1:08:31 > 1:08:36This is our new record contract.
1:08:36 > 1:08:37Just paper!
1:08:37 > 1:08:40So, then we headed off, for parts unknown
1:08:40 > 1:08:43with Irving Azoff at the helm.
1:08:50 > 1:08:53This card game is called Eagle Poker.
1:08:53 > 1:08:55It's a bastardization of Red Dog.
1:08:55 > 1:09:00I invented it in Detroit, Michigan, in 1947...
1:09:00 > 1:09:03one year before I was born.
1:09:03 > 1:09:08We were big gamblers. We played poker all the time.
1:09:08 > 1:09:12Oh, boy. They should have never given me money!
1:09:12 > 1:09:15So, we decided we'd go to the Bahamas to gamble.
1:09:15 > 1:09:18Everybody but Don was holding.
1:09:18 > 1:09:20I had like four joints in a baggie,
1:09:20 > 1:09:23stuffed down my sock in my cowboy boot.
1:09:23 > 1:09:25Durkin, the pilot, has a joint.
1:09:25 > 1:09:28Irving had about 30 Valiums in a sugar pack.
1:09:28 > 1:09:32There was a couple of customs officials there
1:09:32 > 1:09:35that asked us to collect all our luggage and come over,
1:09:35 > 1:09:37and they wanted to search us cos we looked terrible.
1:09:37 > 1:09:40We had really long hair and patches on our jeans
1:09:40 > 1:09:42and a beard and not slept.
1:09:42 > 1:09:45Now, I'm freaking out.
1:09:45 > 1:09:48Bernie's freaking out. Irving's freaking out.
1:09:48 > 1:09:50Henley's pissed off.
1:09:50 > 1:09:51Don't touch me.
1:09:51 > 1:09:54Well, the guy proceeds to put us all in a room together,
1:09:54 > 1:09:57and they start searching us one by one.
1:09:57 > 1:10:01My greatest fear is that I'm going to be locked in a jail cell
1:10:01 > 1:10:03with Bernie Leadon.
1:10:03 > 1:10:07So, at this point, Irving steps in and takes
1:10:07 > 1:10:09one of the Bahamian customs guys over to the side
1:10:09 > 1:10:11and has a chat with him.
1:10:11 > 1:10:14I'm not sure, to this day, what Irving said to him.
1:10:18 > 1:10:21The next thing I knew, they let us pass with no problem.
1:10:21 > 1:10:24It was sort of miraculous, really, it was,
1:10:24 > 1:10:27because I thought for sure we were going to be in the slammer.
1:10:27 > 1:10:29It was dumb luck that this guy bought my line
1:10:29 > 1:10:30and didn't search them.
1:10:30 > 1:10:32That was the day I decided, Irving Azoff
1:10:32 > 1:10:34was the greatest manager in rock'n'roll
1:10:34 > 1:10:37and I would never do anything without him by my side.
1:10:39 > 1:10:42I had the only seat in a major championship fight...
1:10:42 > 1:10:47to be sitting there when, you know, when a lyric was thrown out
1:10:47 > 1:10:49and then hear a track.
1:10:50 > 1:10:55# My, oh, my, you sure know how to arrange things... #
1:10:55 > 1:10:57I've watched the creative process with lots of people,
1:10:57 > 1:11:00but I've never seen it the way it fell in place with them.
1:11:00 > 1:11:03I remember watching Lyin' Eyes written.
1:11:03 > 1:11:06Glenn just had a way of coming up with a phrase, you know?
1:11:06 > 1:11:09He had written some kind of a tune, and they were sitting in Tana's
1:11:09 > 1:11:13one night and looking at some young girl with an older guy at the bar,
1:11:13 > 1:11:15and Glenn said, "Look at those lyin' eyes."
1:11:15 > 1:11:18And just...just like that, wow, there's the song.
1:11:18 > 1:11:25# You can't hide your lyin' eyes
1:11:25 > 1:11:31# And your smile is a thin disguise
1:11:31 > 1:11:39# I thought by now you'd realise
1:11:39 > 1:11:44# There ain't no way to hide your lyin' eyes... #
1:11:44 > 1:11:48It was just about all these girls who would come down to Dan Tana's
1:11:48 > 1:11:51looking beautiful, and they'd be there from 8:00pm to midnight
1:11:51 > 1:11:54and have dinner and drinks with all of us rockers,
1:11:54 > 1:11:57and then they'd go home because they were kept women.
1:11:57 > 1:12:02# On the other side of town a boy is waiting
1:12:04 > 1:12:12# With fiery eyes and dreams no-one could steal
1:12:12 > 1:12:18# She drives on through the night anticipating
1:12:18 > 1:12:23# Cos he makes her feel the way she used to feel... #
1:12:23 > 1:12:25You know, when we were doing the One Of These Nights album,
1:12:25 > 1:12:27we'd gone through three albums,
1:12:27 > 1:12:31and the only people who'd sung on any hit records were Don and myself.
1:12:31 > 1:12:35And Randy always felt like, you know, he was a lead singer, too.
1:12:35 > 1:12:37And I actually felt that way, too. I liked his voice.
1:12:37 > 1:12:40So, he brought in the beginnings of Take It To The Limit,
1:12:40 > 1:12:44and it became the Eagles' first number-one single.
1:12:44 > 1:12:47# Take it to the limit, come on
1:12:47 > 1:12:50# And take it to the limit
1:12:50 > 1:12:55# One more time
1:12:55 > 1:12:58# Take it to the limit... #
1:12:58 > 1:13:02The line Take It To The Limit was to keep trying
1:13:02 > 1:13:07before you reach a point in your life where you feel, you know,
1:13:07 > 1:13:10you've done everything and seen everything sort of feeling.
1:13:10 > 1:13:13You know, a part of getting old, and just to take it to the limit
1:13:13 > 1:13:18one more time, like every day, just keep punching away at it.
1:13:18 > 1:13:20And that's all that I really... that was the line,
1:13:20 > 1:13:24and from there, the song took a different, you know, course.
1:13:24 > 1:13:27# Take it to the limit
1:13:27 > 1:13:28# Ah
1:13:28 > 1:13:32# Take it to the limit. #
1:13:35 > 1:13:40I think everybody in the Eagles did the level best we could.
1:13:40 > 1:13:43You have to remember how young we were,
1:13:43 > 1:13:46the fact that nobody had anything when we started,
1:13:46 > 1:13:48and you got all this stuff coming at you.
1:13:48 > 1:13:52Meanwhile, you're touring all the time. It's a lot.
1:13:52 > 1:13:57To Bernie, success on any scale was synonymous with selling out.
1:13:57 > 1:14:00He wanted us to remain sort of an underground band.
1:14:00 > 1:14:04We had our problems with Bernie, and Bernie had his problems with us.
1:14:04 > 1:14:08Some of it was based on him being able to have a voice in the Eagles
1:14:08 > 1:14:12and record the songs he wanted to, the way he wanted to.
1:14:12 > 1:14:15We were getting more and more rocked out,
1:14:15 > 1:14:19and I think Bernie was less and less happy about that...
1:14:19 > 1:14:23to the point that, one time, we had worked on a track all night.
1:14:23 > 1:14:25I mean, it was a rocked-out track,
1:14:25 > 1:14:27and we're all sitting behind the board the next day,
1:14:27 > 1:14:29listening to the various takes of it, trying to decide
1:14:29 > 1:14:33which take we liked the best. Bernie hadn't said a word.
1:14:33 > 1:14:36So, I asked him over the board, I said, "Bernie, what do you think?"
1:14:36 > 1:14:39There's a long pause, and he gets up, and he stretches,
1:14:39 > 1:14:42and he says, "I think I'm going surfing."
1:14:42 > 1:14:44And he left.
1:14:52 > 1:14:54I was caught in the middle a lot of times.
1:14:54 > 1:14:56And sometimes I would agree with Bernie,
1:14:56 > 1:14:58but most of the time, I would agree with Glenn.
1:14:58 > 1:15:01Glenn and I always wanted the band to be a hybrid,
1:15:01 > 1:15:05to encompass bluegrass and country and rock'n'roll.
1:15:05 > 1:15:07There was a part of Bernie that really resisted that.
1:15:07 > 1:15:09After a while, it became a real problem,
1:15:09 > 1:15:13particularly between Bernie and Glenn.
1:15:13 > 1:15:16Finally, we were at the Orange Bowl in Miami.
1:15:16 > 1:15:20We were backstage, and we were talking about what our next move
1:15:20 > 1:15:22was going to be, what our plans were supposed to be,
1:15:22 > 1:15:28and I was animated and adamant about what we needed to do next
1:15:28 > 1:15:31here, there, and everywhere, and Bernie comes over
1:15:31 > 1:15:35and pours a beer on my head and says, "You need to chill out, man."
1:15:36 > 1:15:39I have no idea. It was a spontaneous thing.
1:15:39 > 1:15:43I mean, I take that incident now quite seriously.
1:15:43 > 1:15:46That was a very disrespectful thing to do.
1:15:46 > 1:15:50Obviously, it was intended to be humiliating to him,
1:15:50 > 1:15:56I would say, and is something I'm really not proud of.
1:15:56 > 1:15:59It did illustrate a breaking point.
1:16:06 > 1:16:09During that time, we got a couple shows
1:16:09 > 1:16:13opening for the Rolling Stones, and Irving was managing Joe Walsh.
1:16:13 > 1:16:18Joe Walsh was a bona fide rock'n'roll guitar player.
1:16:23 > 1:16:26So, for a couple of those shows, just for our encores,
1:16:26 > 1:16:28we'd put Joe Walsh in a road box,
1:16:28 > 1:16:32and we'd come back to do an encore, and we'd roll the road box out,
1:16:32 > 1:16:36and just like the model jumping out of a cake,
1:16:36 > 1:16:40we'd open the guitar case, and there would be Joe Walsh
1:16:40 > 1:16:44with his Les Paul, and he'd climb out of the box and plug in,
1:16:44 > 1:16:47and the Eagles...we would play Rocky Mountain Way.
1:16:55 > 1:16:56I loved the way he played.
1:16:56 > 1:17:00I'd loved the James Gang when I was growing up in Detroit.
1:17:00 > 1:17:05Now I started thinking, "Joe Walsh for Bernie Leadon."
1:17:06 > 1:17:11# Spent the last year Rocky Mountain Way
1:17:11 > 1:17:17# Couldn't get much higher... #
1:17:17 > 1:17:20OK, maybe the vocals won't be quite as good,
1:17:20 > 1:17:23but, boy, are we going to kick some ass!
1:17:23 > 1:17:26# Time to open fire
1:17:26 > 1:17:31# And we don't need the ladies cryin'
1:17:31 > 1:17:36# Cos the story's sad... #
1:17:36 > 1:17:38I think one of the things that I brought into the band
1:17:38 > 1:17:42that was good for the band was
1:17:42 > 1:17:45to bring it up a notch when we played live.
1:17:45 > 1:17:49Just keep kicking it in the butt a little bit, you know?
1:18:17 > 1:18:21All right, DC, come on, give it up!
1:18:21 > 1:18:25I went to a show, maybe eight months later,
1:18:25 > 1:18:28and the band are interacting with each other
1:18:28 > 1:18:32exactly like we did with me onstage, except instead of me,
1:18:32 > 1:18:37Walsh was up there, and it just was, like, really, really odd, you know,
1:18:37 > 1:18:40to be watching it and not be part of it.
1:18:40 > 1:18:42So, I actually left that show. I was just like,
1:18:42 > 1:18:44"This is, like, too weird."
1:18:44 > 1:18:49So, we got Joe Walsh in the band. That's another adventure,
1:18:49 > 1:18:51because Joe was an interesting bunch of guys.
1:18:51 > 1:18:54Hey, I tell you what. If you got firecrackers,
1:18:54 > 1:18:56just wait until you get home, lock yourself in the closet,
1:18:56 > 1:18:58and light everything you got, OK?
1:18:58 > 1:19:01APPLAUSE
1:19:01 > 1:19:03Thank you, Joe.
1:19:03 > 1:19:06He brought a lot of levity to just about everything that happened,
1:19:06 > 1:19:09which was needed at that time.
1:19:09 > 1:19:12- Heads or tails?- Heads.
1:19:12 > 1:19:15Well, I could use a little head myself.
1:19:15 > 1:19:18In those days, you didn't know what he was going to do next.
1:19:18 > 1:19:21It was fun most of the time, although not all the time.
1:19:21 > 1:19:24It was fun, depending on how much you'd had to drink,
1:19:24 > 1:19:27to see a television go sailing off the 14th-floor balcony
1:19:27 > 1:19:30and into the pool, as long as nobody got hurt.
1:19:36 > 1:19:40Joe Walsh was the American King of room trash.
1:19:40 > 1:19:43He had studied under some of the best.
1:19:43 > 1:19:45One of the most terrifying things that ever happened to me
1:19:45 > 1:19:49was that Keith Moon decided he liked me.
1:19:49 > 1:19:52All those Keith Moon stories are true.
1:19:53 > 1:20:00This guy was full-blown nuts, and you never knew what was coming next.
1:20:07 > 1:20:12Keith was my mentor at chaos, getting arrested,
1:20:12 > 1:20:15practical jokes, pranks, room damage.
1:20:15 > 1:20:20# I live in hotels tear out the walls
1:20:20 > 1:20:26# I have accountants pay for it all
1:20:26 > 1:20:31# They say I'm crazy but I have a good time... #
1:20:36 > 1:20:40One year, we gave him a chainsaw for his birthday as a joke.
1:20:40 > 1:20:45# Life's been good to me so far
1:20:45 > 1:20:48# Yeah, yeah, yeah... #
1:20:48 > 1:20:51By this time, we were eating in nice restaurants
1:20:51 > 1:20:56and buying expensive wine and staying in great hotel rooms.
1:20:56 > 1:20:59There were a lot of hotels that we weren't allowed to go back to.
1:20:59 > 1:21:03We were in Chicago, and we were staying at the Astor Towers.
1:21:03 > 1:21:05In Chicago, here's what happened.
1:21:05 > 1:21:09There was a knock on the door, and in walked John Belushi.
1:21:11 > 1:21:16John wanted to show me the finer restaurants of Chicago.
1:21:16 > 1:21:18So, we went to the restaurant,
1:21:18 > 1:21:21and they wouldn't let us in because we had jeans, and he got
1:21:21 > 1:21:24the maitre d' up to like a 300 bribe
1:21:24 > 1:21:27and still they would not let us in.
1:21:27 > 1:21:30And John said, "I know what to do. I know what to do."
1:21:31 > 1:21:34And the next thing I knew, we were standing in the alley,
1:21:34 > 1:21:40and he spray-painted my jeans black and made me do his,
1:21:40 > 1:21:42and we went back, and we got in.
1:21:44 > 1:21:48We were sitting in these Queen Anne-period chairs that had
1:21:48 > 1:21:52needlepoint, and when we stood up, that was all black,
1:21:52 > 1:21:55and the butts of our pants were jeans again,
1:21:55 > 1:21:59so, we had to kind of back out of there and leave fast.
1:22:00 > 1:22:03But that was the beginning of it.
1:22:03 > 1:22:07And so that night, with much glee,
1:22:07 > 1:22:11Joe set about to set the world record for room trash.
1:22:13 > 1:22:16John and I did 28,000 of room damage.
1:22:20 > 1:22:24Glenn and Don didn't really ever approve of the room trashing,
1:22:24 > 1:22:25but they understood it.
1:22:25 > 1:22:28They wanted respect as rock'n'rollers,
1:22:28 > 1:22:30and Joe brought that respect.
1:22:30 > 1:22:33I was insecure always and afraid,
1:22:33 > 1:22:40so I hid behind all of my hang-ups with humour.
1:22:40 > 1:22:46I was totally in awe of Don and Glenn.
1:22:46 > 1:22:52I was intimidated by Don and Glenn because they sang so good,
1:22:52 > 1:22:57and they were writing stuff I could never come close to writing.
1:22:59 > 1:23:03After we've just had a bunch of hit records on One Of These Nights,
1:23:03 > 1:23:07we were under the microscope. Everybody was going to look at
1:23:07 > 1:23:09the next record we made and pass judgment.
1:23:09 > 1:23:12Don and I were going, "Man, this better be good."
1:23:14 > 1:23:17- Look at that.- It's going to be quite a nice guitar.
1:23:17 > 1:23:22- Felder, you see this? - Who, uh, who tuned this?
1:23:22 > 1:23:24Well, it has no nut.
1:23:24 > 1:23:28With Joe in the band with me, I wanted to write something,
1:23:28 > 1:23:31musically, that would fit two guitar players, that we
1:23:31 > 1:23:34could play off of each other.
1:23:34 > 1:23:37So, I was sitting on a sofa in Malibu at this rental house
1:23:37 > 1:23:40that I had on the beach. I was playing this acoustic guitar
1:23:40 > 1:23:43and this introduction came out, that progression.
1:23:43 > 1:23:45I kept playing it three or four times.
1:23:45 > 1:23:48I had an old reel-to-reel tape recorder,
1:23:48 > 1:23:52so I went back and recorded that introduction to that song and
1:23:52 > 1:23:56laid down that progression, made a mix of it, and put it on a cassette
1:23:56 > 1:24:01with, I don't know, the other 14 or 15 pieces of music that I had
1:24:01 > 1:24:05assembled, and I gave a copy of the cassette to Don, one to Glenn.
1:24:05 > 1:24:11Don Felder used to send Henley and I instrumental tapes, song ideas.
1:24:11 > 1:24:1495% of them were cluttered with guitar licks,
1:24:14 > 1:24:18and we would listen to these things and go, "Well, where do you sing?"
1:24:18 > 1:24:22As Don and I were listening through one of the Felder cassettes and this
1:24:22 > 1:24:27song came up, we both sort of said, "Hmm. Now, this is interesting."
1:24:28 > 1:24:31The music sounded to me like some sort of a cross between
1:24:31 > 1:24:36Spanish music and reggae music, and that one really jumped out at me.
1:24:37 > 1:24:40So, we set out to write a song to that progression.
1:24:42 > 1:24:45I'm pretty sure it was Henley's idea to have a song called
1:24:45 > 1:24:47Hotel California.
1:24:51 > 1:24:55I think Henley's and Glenn's lyric writing really came to a head.
1:24:55 > 1:24:58They became real honest-to-God songwriters then.
1:25:01 > 1:25:03During the recording of it, I thought that we
1:25:03 > 1:25:06were on to something. I knew we were on to something.
1:25:08 > 1:25:12We were in a really creative phase,
1:25:12 > 1:25:16and it just so happened that Bill Szymczyk pushed record.
1:25:19 > 1:25:20Thank God!
1:25:21 > 1:25:25# On a dark desert highway
1:25:25 > 1:25:28# Cool wind in my hair
1:25:28 > 1:25:32# Warm smell of colitas
1:25:32 > 1:25:35# Rising up through the air
1:25:35 > 1:25:38# Up ahead in the distance
1:25:38 > 1:25:42# I saw a shimmering light
1:25:42 > 1:25:44# My head grew heavy and my sight grew dim
1:25:44 > 1:25:47# I had to stop for the night
1:25:47 > 1:25:51# There she stood in the doorway
1:25:51 > 1:25:55# I heard the mission bell
1:25:55 > 1:25:57# And I was thinkin' to myself
1:25:57 > 1:26:01# This could be heaven or this could be hell
1:26:01 > 1:26:04# Then she lit up a candle
1:26:04 > 1:26:07# And she showed me the way
1:26:07 > 1:26:11# There were voices down the corridor
1:26:11 > 1:26:14# I thought I heard them say
1:26:14 > 1:26:18# Welcome to the Hotel California
1:26:20 > 1:26:23- # Such a lovely place - Such a lovely place
1:26:23 > 1:26:26# Such a lovely face
1:26:26 > 1:26:29# Plenty of room at the Hotel... #
1:26:29 > 1:26:33We've been asked a million times, "What does that song mean?"
1:26:33 > 1:26:36Don and I were big fans of hidden, deeper meaning.
1:26:36 > 1:26:40You know, you write songs and you send them out to the world.
1:26:40 > 1:26:43# So I called up the Captain
1:26:43 > 1:26:46# Please bring me my wine
1:26:46 > 1:26:47# He said
1:26:47 > 1:26:52# We haven't had that spirit here since 1969... #
1:26:52 > 1:26:56And maybe somewhere in that song is some stuff that's just yours,
1:26:56 > 1:26:58that they're never going to figure out.
1:26:58 > 1:26:59# Far away
1:26:59 > 1:27:03# Wake you up in the middle of the night
1:27:03 > 1:27:05# Just to hear them say... #
1:27:05 > 1:27:07There has been a great deal of ridiculous
1:27:07 > 1:27:09speculation about that song over the years.
1:27:09 > 1:27:12I mean, it's really taken on a life or a mythology of its own.
1:27:12 > 1:27:16It's sort of like the "Paul is dead" thing, or "Who was the walrus?"
1:27:16 > 1:27:20# Bring your alibis... #
1:27:20 > 1:27:23It's been denounced by Evangelicals.
1:27:23 > 1:27:25We've been accused of all kinds of wacky things,
1:27:25 > 1:27:27like being members of the Church of Satan.
1:27:27 > 1:27:31People see images on the album cover that aren't there.
1:27:31 > 1:27:32Just lunatic stuff.
1:27:32 > 1:27:39# And in the master's chambers They gathered for the feast
1:27:39 > 1:27:43# They stabbed it with their steely knives
1:27:43 > 1:27:46# But they just can't kill the beast
1:27:46 > 1:27:49# Last thing I remember
1:27:49 > 1:27:52# I was running for the door
1:27:52 > 1:27:58# I had to find the passage back to the place I was before... #
1:27:58 > 1:28:02My simple explanation is it's a song about a journey from innocence
1:28:02 > 1:28:06to experience. That's all.
1:28:06 > 1:28:09# You can check out any time you like
1:28:09 > 1:28:11# But you can never leave... #
1:28:30 > 1:28:35Whereas Felder was technically very, very good, Walsh brought spontaneity
1:28:35 > 1:28:39to it, and the two of them playing off each other was just brilliant.
1:28:58 > 1:29:02Out of great respect for each other, there was always a little
1:29:02 > 1:29:04competition between Felder and I.
1:29:04 > 1:29:07We always tried to kind of one-up each other, you know?
1:29:13 > 1:29:16And that's really healthy.
1:29:16 > 1:29:20It always made the song better when we were kind of,
1:29:20 > 1:29:22"Oh, yeah? Listen to this."
1:29:31 > 1:29:34We got to the end, where now is the harmony guitars that are
1:29:34 > 1:29:37playing together, and Joe said, "We should do something that's like...
1:29:37 > 1:29:40" # Da-da-da-da-da-da-da. # "
1:29:57 > 1:29:59The ending of Hotel California -
1:29:59 > 1:30:02that's one of my high points of my entire recording career.
1:30:11 > 1:30:16To have a seven-minute single be number one - that was unheard of.
1:30:16 > 1:30:19The record company said, "You got to do an edit. You got to do an edit."
1:30:19 > 1:30:22And we all said, "No. Take it or leave it." And they took it.
1:30:24 > 1:30:28We had no idea that that song would affect as many
1:30:28 > 1:30:30people on the planet as it did.
1:30:33 > 1:30:34Thank you.
1:30:36 > 1:30:40The rest of the album kind of developed around that song.
1:30:40 > 1:30:44The album, you could loosely say, is a thematic album, a concept album.
1:30:46 > 1:30:49Not unlike Desperado, Hotel California
1:30:49 > 1:30:52was our reaction to what was happening to us.
1:30:54 > 1:30:57On just about every album we made, there was some kind of a
1:30:57 > 1:31:02commentary on the music business and on American culture in general.
1:31:02 > 1:31:05The hotel itself could be taken as a metaphor not
1:31:05 > 1:31:08only for the myth-making of Southern California,
1:31:08 > 1:31:11but for the myth-making that is the American dream because it's a
1:31:11 > 1:31:15fine line between the American dream and the American nightmare.
1:31:15 > 1:31:21# When you're out there on your own Where your memories... #
1:31:21 > 1:31:26All the songs we write for this album can fit inside this concept.
1:31:29 > 1:31:34# You were lost until you found out what it all comes down to... #
1:31:34 > 1:31:37Once the rest of the guys in the band understood what the song
1:31:37 > 1:31:41Hotel California was about, it became kind of a theme,
1:31:41 > 1:31:44and they started to customise their writing to fit in with it.
1:31:46 > 1:31:53# Day by day It's only fair to wait... #
1:31:53 > 1:31:55I think that the Eagles started breaking up
1:31:55 > 1:31:58during the recording of Hotel California.
1:31:58 > 1:32:02There were creative tensions, but there was always tension tensions.
1:32:02 > 1:32:05By the time we got to recording Hotel California,
1:32:05 > 1:32:07if the song wasn't good enough to survive the amount of time
1:32:07 > 1:32:10we were working on the record, it didn't make it on the record.
1:32:10 > 1:32:13Perfection is not an accident.
1:32:13 > 1:32:15'Our goal was just to be the best we could be.
1:32:15 > 1:32:17'We wanted to get better as songwriters'
1:32:17 > 1:32:20and as performers, and we worked on it.
1:32:22 > 1:32:26Don and I felt like there was no space now for filler, and
1:32:26 > 1:32:31Don Felder, for all of his talents as a guitar player, is not a singer.
1:32:33 > 1:32:37Felder wanted to write more, sing more, and Felder had kind of
1:32:37 > 1:32:41demanded that, "I'm going to sing two songs on Hotel California."
1:32:47 > 1:32:49We were all alphas,
1:32:49 > 1:32:54and we were all very assertive and powerful in our own way.
1:32:54 > 1:32:59You could bring in a great track to Don and Glenn
1:32:59 > 1:33:02and be really excited about it.
1:33:02 > 1:33:03This happened to Felder.
1:33:08 > 1:33:10I wrote the track for Victim Of Love.
1:33:10 > 1:33:14It was going to be a follow-up song on the Hotel California
1:33:14 > 1:33:17record for me to sing.
1:33:17 > 1:33:19# Victim of love... #
1:33:19 > 1:33:23I have no recollection of anybody being promised anything.
1:33:23 > 1:33:26Victim Of Love was not brought to the band as a complete song.
1:33:26 > 1:33:30It was simply another chord progression that Don Felder brought in.
1:33:30 > 1:33:33It had no title, no lyrics, and no melody.
1:33:33 > 1:33:35Glenn and I and JD Souther
1:33:35 > 1:33:39all sat down and hammered out the rest of it.
1:33:39 > 1:33:40We did let Mr Felder sing it.
1:33:40 > 1:33:44He sang it dozens of times over the span of a week, over and over
1:33:44 > 1:33:45and over again.
1:33:45 > 1:33:47It simply didn't come up to band standards.
1:33:50 > 1:33:53Victim Of Love had been recorded with Felder as the lead vocalist,
1:33:53 > 1:33:57and my job was to take Don Felder out to lunch or dinner
1:33:57 > 1:34:00while they went in the studio and put Henley's vocal on it.
1:34:00 > 1:34:04# What kind of love have you got? #
1:34:06 > 1:34:11Irving took me out and said that everybody in the band
1:34:11 > 1:34:13thought that it was better if Don sang that.
1:34:13 > 1:34:16And it was a little bit of a bitter pill to swallow.
1:34:16 > 1:34:19I felt like Don was taking that song from me.
1:34:19 > 1:34:23I'd been promised a song on the next record.
1:34:23 > 1:34:26But there was no real way to argue with my vocal versus
1:34:26 > 1:34:27Don Henley's vocal.
1:34:27 > 1:34:30There was no way to argue with anybody's vocal in the band
1:34:30 > 1:34:32compared to Don Henley.
1:34:39 > 1:34:42Felder demanding to sing that song would be the equivalent of me
1:34:42 > 1:34:45demanding to play lead guitar on Hotel California.
1:34:45 > 1:34:47It just didn't make sense.
1:34:51 > 1:34:54If you look at my vocal participation in the Eagles
1:34:54 > 1:34:59over the course of the 1970s, I sang less and less.
1:34:59 > 1:35:03It was intentional. We had Don Henley.
1:35:08 > 1:35:15Don and Glenn's position was, "This is the best thing for the Eagles."
1:35:15 > 1:35:18And Don Felder never forgot that.
1:35:19 > 1:35:24# What kind of love have you got? #
1:35:30 > 1:35:32Get it! Get it! Run! Run! Run!
1:35:32 > 1:35:34Shit!
1:35:36 > 1:35:37This is a real healthy thing.
1:35:37 > 1:35:42It promotes good feelings, you know, among...the guys,
1:35:42 > 1:35:44and it keeps us from killing each other.
1:35:44 > 1:35:47Where's my glove? Who's got my glove?
1:35:47 > 1:35:49If we can yell at each other on a baseball field,
1:35:49 > 1:35:53then we don't have to yell at each other when we're working.
1:35:53 > 1:35:56- Get all my frustrations out. - What frustrations?
1:35:56 > 1:35:58I haven't been getting laid.
1:35:58 > 1:36:02We try to get out and play softball with the crew if we have a day off.
1:36:02 > 1:36:06- Swing, batter!- Oh, it's gone, it's gone. It's gone.
1:36:06 > 1:36:09'Something to help release the tension.'
1:36:09 > 1:36:12That's really what I do to keep from going crazy.
1:36:12 > 1:36:15How do you keep from going crazy, Joe?
1:36:17 > 1:36:18Well...
1:36:22 > 1:36:24I tell you, I just, uh...
1:36:26 > 1:36:30'In the press and the media, it was presented that we were
1:36:30 > 1:36:36'constantly at war, and I can't say that's exactly the case.
1:36:40 > 1:36:45'We were interacting and we were all intense.
1:36:45 > 1:36:47'Glenn said to me one time,'
1:36:47 > 1:36:51"I get nuts sometimes and I'm sorry."
1:36:51 > 1:36:52Hey, Joe.
1:36:52 > 1:36:56'But that tension had a lot to do with'
1:36:56 > 1:36:59fanning the artistic fire.
1:37:00 > 1:37:07Having that dynamic was important in making the music.
1:37:09 > 1:37:12Well, we're rehearsing now, and before we're even playing
1:37:12 > 1:37:14and guys are just noodling around and getting their amps going
1:37:14 > 1:37:16and stuff, we hear Joe go...
1:37:19 > 1:37:21..# Do-do-do-do-do. #
1:37:21 > 1:37:25You know, and everyone would kind of go, "What did you play?
1:37:25 > 1:37:27"Play that again."
1:37:27 > 1:37:31That was an exercise I was doing because it's a coordination thing.
1:37:31 > 1:37:33You know, it's like one of these deals.
1:37:34 > 1:37:38So, I was doing that to warm up, and they said, "Well, what is that?"
1:37:38 > 1:37:42And I said, "Well, that's just something I have, you know?
1:37:43 > 1:37:44There you go.
1:37:44 > 1:37:46That's the lick.
1:37:46 > 1:37:49That's what we should build the song around.
1:37:55 > 1:37:59I was riding shotgun in a Corvette with a drug dealer on the way
1:37:59 > 1:38:01to a poker game, and the next thing I knew,
1:38:01 > 1:38:05we were going about 90 miles an hour, holding big time.
1:38:05 > 1:38:08I was like, "Hey, man. What are you doing?"
1:38:08 > 1:38:10You know, and he looked at me, and he grinned.
1:38:10 > 1:38:12He goes, "Life in the fast lane."
1:38:14 > 1:38:18And I thought, immediately, "Now, there's a song title."
1:38:18 > 1:38:23# Life in the fast lane Surely make you lose your mind
1:38:23 > 1:38:25# Life in the fast lane... #
1:38:30 > 1:38:31Then they put out the greatest hits.
1:38:31 > 1:38:34There was a period where we sold a million records
1:38:34 > 1:38:36a month for 18 months.
1:38:36 > 1:38:40It's a little-known fact that the Eagles had the biggest-selling
1:38:40 > 1:38:43album of the 20th century.
1:38:43 > 1:38:49But the music business never ever got honest of its own volition.
1:38:49 > 1:38:52No record company ever went to an artist and said,
1:38:52 > 1:38:53"You've done a great job.
1:38:53 > 1:38:56"We're going to increase your royalties."
1:38:56 > 1:38:59So we created our own promotion company.
1:38:59 > 1:39:01We created our own management company.
1:39:01 > 1:39:03We had our own booking agency.
1:39:03 > 1:39:05Stop any time.
1:39:06 > 1:39:09# Take it to the limit... #
1:39:11 > 1:39:18We achieved an amount of success beyond our wildest imagination,
1:39:18 > 1:39:22and Randy really had trouble with it.
1:39:22 > 1:39:24Bam! Bam!
1:39:24 > 1:39:28'Randy used to have trouble singing the high note at the end of Take It To The Limit.'
1:39:28 > 1:39:32# ..Come on and take it to the limit
1:39:32 > 1:39:34# One more time
1:39:36 > 1:39:39# Take it to the limit... #
1:39:39 > 1:39:42Oh, yeah, I was always kind of scared, basically.
1:39:42 > 1:39:45"What if I don't hit it right?" It was a pretty high note.
1:39:51 > 1:39:56And in the middle of the fade, you crank the volume knob and go, "What?!"
1:39:56 > 1:40:04Randy could do it, but if you made him do it, "Oh, no, man, I, uh..."
1:40:04 > 1:40:11# One more time. #
1:40:11 > 1:40:14- Thank you.- Randy Meisner.
1:40:15 > 1:40:17He'd call the road manager and say,
1:40:17 > 1:40:19"Tell Glenn I don't want to do Take It To The Limit any more.
1:40:19 > 1:40:22"Take it out of the set." I confronted him about this.
1:40:22 > 1:40:23I called him up, and I said,
1:40:23 > 1:40:27"Randy, there's thousands of people waiting to hear you sing that song.
1:40:27 > 1:40:30"You just can't say, 'Fuck them. I don't feel like it.'
1:40:30 > 1:40:31"Do you think I like singing Take It Easy
1:40:31 > 1:40:33"and Peaceful Easy Feeling every night?
1:40:33 > 1:40:34"I'm tired of those songs,
1:40:34 > 1:40:37"but there's people in the audience who've been waiting
1:40:37 > 1:40:40"years to see us do those songs."
1:40:40 > 1:40:44We just got fed up with that and just said, "OK, don't sing it.
1:40:44 > 1:40:49"Why don't you just quit? You say you are unhappy, quit."
1:40:49 > 1:40:54Randy never knew how great he was. He wasn't alpha.
1:40:56 > 1:41:00Confrontations were really hard for him.
1:41:00 > 1:41:03All I want to see is five guys happy playing together, you know,
1:41:03 > 1:41:05and that's what makes the music.
1:41:10 > 1:41:12We were backstage and the crowd was going wild.
1:41:12 > 1:41:15And our encore number was Take It To The Limit.
1:41:15 > 1:41:19People loved that song, they went crazy when Randy hit those high notes.
1:41:19 > 1:41:21But Randy didn't want to do the song that night.
1:41:21 > 1:41:23He'd been up partying all night with a couple of girls
1:41:23 > 1:41:26and a bottle of vodka, and Glenn kept trying to talk him into it.
1:41:26 > 1:41:30He said, "Man, the people want to hear that song. You've got to do it."
1:41:30 > 1:41:32And Randy kept saying no.
1:41:32 > 1:41:34So after about the third or fourth time that Randy refused, Glenn
1:41:34 > 1:41:37just backed up a couple of steps and said, "Well, fuck you then!"
1:41:39 > 1:41:43There were police officers standing backstage and when they saw us
1:41:43 > 1:41:45about to go at it, they started to move in
1:41:45 > 1:41:50and Henley turned right to the cops and said, "Stay out of this!
1:41:50 > 1:41:54"This is personal and it is private, real fucking private!"
1:41:56 > 1:41:59The writing was on the wall and Randy was going to leave.
1:42:03 > 1:42:07There was only one person to ever replace Randy Meisner in the Eagles
1:42:07 > 1:42:10and in my mind it was Timothy B Schmit.
1:42:12 > 1:42:17He replaced him in Poco, and plugged in and sang the same parts.
1:42:19 > 1:42:22And I remember sitting with Irving and saying, "Irving, I think
1:42:22 > 1:42:26"we should get Timothy Schmit." He said, "Well, I just saw Timothy.
1:42:26 > 1:42:29"I was out on the road when the guys in Poco were in the hotel bar
1:42:29 > 1:42:33"and Timothy was smashed out of his mind, he was jacked up.
1:42:33 > 1:42:34"You sure about this?"
1:42:34 > 1:42:37I said, "Irving, if you had been in a band for 11 years
1:42:37 > 1:42:41"and you were still making 250 a week working 40 weeks a year,
1:42:41 > 1:42:44"maybe you would be a little smashed up yourself."
1:42:44 > 1:42:49They asked me to join their band before I had even played
1:42:49 > 1:42:51a note of music with them.
1:42:51 > 1:42:54I just said, you know, "Where do you want me? When?
1:42:54 > 1:42:56"I am definitely in."
1:42:56 > 1:43:00We want to introduce you to the newest member of our band.
1:43:00 > 1:43:04He is our new bass player and we got him from a really fine band, Poco.
1:43:04 > 1:43:07Please give a nice Houston, Texas welcome to Timothy Schmidt.
1:43:07 > 1:43:08CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
1:43:12 > 1:43:15I went on the road with them in 1978 as the new guy.
1:43:15 > 1:43:20# Your smile is a thin disguise... #
1:43:22 > 1:43:25And I heard a few, "Where is Randy?" From the audience.
1:43:25 > 1:43:29But I knew it was a good move for them and me.
1:43:35 > 1:43:40There were a lot of decisions business-wise that needed to be made
1:43:40 > 1:43:44in a secret session, Glenn and Don and Irving in the back of the plane.
1:43:44 > 1:43:46I didn't like that I wasn't part of that,
1:43:46 > 1:43:51but I knew that it was good for the Eagles.
1:43:51 > 1:43:55Don Felder REALLY did not like it.
1:43:57 > 1:43:59Glenn and I saw ourselves as the leaders of the band
1:43:59 > 1:44:02but other people saw us dictators.
1:44:02 > 1:44:06You just cannot have five leaders in a band. It does not work.
1:44:06 > 1:44:09People have to do what they do best.
1:44:09 > 1:44:15There is all this undercurrent and resentment and plotting
1:44:15 > 1:44:20and complaining and I'm sure Timothy thought, "What have I got myself into?"
1:44:20 > 1:44:24I was just really happy to be there and all these tensions, it is
1:44:24 > 1:44:27not that I did not feel it, but I had no idea how deep it was.
1:44:27 > 1:44:31In my experience, all rock'n'roll bands are on the verge of
1:44:31 > 1:44:33breaking up at all times.
1:44:35 > 1:44:38The band at that point had begun to split up into factions.
1:44:38 > 1:44:43Don Felder, in an effort to gain more control, had co-opted Joe Walsh,
1:44:43 > 1:44:47so much of the time it was Felder and Walsh against me and Glenn.
1:44:47 > 1:44:51And at that point, even Glenn and I were beginning to have our differences.
1:44:51 > 1:44:52It was tearing the band apart.
1:44:54 > 1:44:57The magic ingredient that made the band successful was
1:44:57 > 1:44:59the relationship between Don and Glenn.
1:44:59 > 1:45:03Through years of touring, years in the studio, all of that
1:45:03 > 1:45:08friction really started driving a wedge in between that relationship.
1:45:11 > 1:45:14It reached a point where we were just tired of each other.
1:45:14 > 1:45:19Tired of the hoopla, tired of touring, tired of pretty much everything.
1:45:19 > 1:45:23At that point, song-writing was becoming very difficult.
1:45:23 > 1:45:26How much sleep did you guys get? When did you get finished loading up?
1:45:26 > 1:45:30- Two o'clock?- 5.30. - 530 this morning?- Yeah.- OK.
1:45:30 > 1:45:35After the success of Hotel California - Grammy winner, mega sales -
1:45:35 > 1:45:40top that, and we show up at the studio and nobody has one song done.
1:45:44 > 1:45:46I don't know what we will do first but...
1:45:48 > 1:45:52I had enough of a piece where they both went "That's great.
1:45:52 > 1:45:55"Let's develop that," and I was really pleased that they wanted to
1:45:55 > 1:45:59develop that one because it came out more as an R&B song.
1:46:02 > 1:46:04And it is very simple.
1:46:04 > 1:46:09Very simple instrumentation, very simple arrangement.
1:46:12 > 1:46:15There's a lot of air in it.
1:46:17 > 1:46:20That's why it works.
1:46:22 > 1:46:27# Look at us baby Up all night
1:46:27 > 1:46:32# Tearing our love apart
1:46:33 > 1:46:38# Aren't we the same two people who live... #
1:46:38 > 1:46:43About halfway through, Don comes up to me and says, "There's your hit."
1:46:45 > 1:46:51# Every time I try to walk away
1:46:51 > 1:46:55# Something makes me turn around and stay
1:46:55 > 1:47:00# And I can't tell you why... #
1:47:02 > 1:47:09We are on top of the world. We are young. We were overdoing everything.
1:47:18 > 1:47:21There was a lot of chemical dependency going on within
1:47:21 > 1:47:22the band and that was rough.
1:47:24 > 1:47:28During all of that time of writing and recording The Long Run,
1:47:28 > 1:47:30and all the time on the road that we were on the road doing
1:47:30 > 1:47:33The Long Run, we were all using cocaine.
1:47:34 > 1:47:38When we first started snorting coke it was like a writing tool.
1:47:38 > 1:47:41Do a couple of bumps and kind of get started talking about stuff,
1:47:41 > 1:47:47get yourself going and launch into some sort of idea for a song.
1:47:47 > 1:47:51But in the end, cocaine brought out the worst in everybody.
1:47:52 > 1:47:55Yes, this half hour of the show is brought to you by cocaine,
1:47:55 > 1:47:57the makers of hits.
1:48:00 > 1:48:03# In the long run
1:48:03 > 1:48:07# Ooh, I want to tell you it's a long run... #
1:48:07 > 1:48:11Making that album was excruciating. We were just completely burned out.
1:48:11 > 1:48:15We had driven ourselves really hard for almost a decade
1:48:15 > 1:48:16and we were just fried.
1:48:18 > 1:48:21It was long too. I mean, the days and hours would drag on, it would
1:48:21 > 1:48:24feel like we were not getting anything done.
1:48:31 > 1:48:33It was more painful than Hotel California.
1:48:33 > 1:48:36It was more of a painful birth,
1:48:36 > 1:48:40because all the stuff was going on and we were getting pretty frazzled.
1:48:43 > 1:48:48And the record company didn't care if we farted and burped.
1:48:50 > 1:48:55They would put that out. They didn't care.
1:48:55 > 1:48:59"When can we have it?" Because that was their whole corporate quarter.
1:48:59 > 1:49:02# Who can go the distance?
1:49:02 > 1:49:07# We will find out in the long run
1:49:07 > 1:49:09# In the long run... #
1:49:09 > 1:49:14At that point, we inked in The Long Run as the title.
1:49:14 > 1:49:19I think Henley said, "I know what to call this one. Look at us."
1:49:19 > 1:49:21# We can handle some resistance... #
1:49:21 > 1:49:23MUSIC STOPS
1:49:23 > 1:49:25Hold it. Stop.
1:49:25 > 1:49:27That is it.
1:49:29 > 1:49:33Eagles, The Long Run, song two, take one.
1:49:33 > 1:49:36It was a struggle, an endless start, stop, start, stop.
1:49:36 > 1:49:38We called it The Long One.
1:49:40 > 1:49:42It was the beginning of the end.
1:49:42 > 1:49:45Even though I don't think I saw it right then.
1:49:49 > 1:49:51There were a lot of things building up
1:49:51 > 1:49:54and a lot of things I tried to overlook for the good of the band,
1:49:54 > 1:49:58and ultimately I just couldn't look past some of this any more.
1:49:58 > 1:50:02And it festered because we didn't talk about these things.
1:50:03 > 1:50:05It finally came to a head in Long Beach.
1:50:05 > 1:50:09We were doing a benefit for Senator Alan Cranston.
1:50:09 > 1:50:11He was concerned about a lot of some of the same issues
1:50:11 > 1:50:14we were concerned about, including environmental destruction
1:50:14 > 1:50:17and the war, so we wanted to support him.
1:50:17 > 1:50:19Felder didn't like us doing benefits,
1:50:19 > 1:50:22he just thought that was money that should be going into his pocket.
1:50:22 > 1:50:25"Why are we doing it for Jerry Brown or anti-nukes?"
1:50:27 > 1:50:31# Are you willing to sacrifice? #
1:50:31 > 1:50:36Alan Cranston and his wife are coming around to personally thank
1:50:36 > 1:50:38every member of the Eagles for doing this.
1:50:38 > 1:50:43I was very uninformed about politics, I could care less
1:50:43 > 1:50:47about politics, I didn't even know or care who Alan Cranston was.
1:50:48 > 1:50:50Senator Cranston went up to Felder and said,
1:50:50 > 1:50:53"I want to thank you," and Felder looked at the Senator and said,
1:50:53 > 1:50:57"You're welcome," and then as he was turning away he said, "I guess."
1:50:57 > 1:50:58"I guess."
1:50:58 > 1:51:01"I guess." And Glenn heard it.
1:51:01 > 1:51:05And I just...got really mad.
1:51:05 > 1:51:08I was drinking a long-necked Bud and walked into the tuning room
1:51:08 > 1:51:10while Walsh and Felder was and took the beer bottle
1:51:10 > 1:51:14and threw it against the wall and smashed it.
1:51:14 > 1:51:16I stormed out.
1:51:16 > 1:51:22I got more mad and more mad. By the time we went on stage, I was seething.
1:51:22 > 1:51:24I wanted to kill Felder.
1:51:24 > 1:51:26Thank you again very much from all the Eagles,
1:51:26 > 1:51:29and for Senator Cranston for coming out here and checking it out.
1:51:31 > 1:51:32One, two, three, four.
1:51:38 > 1:51:42A lot of tensions between Glenn and Felder
1:51:42 > 1:51:48and the real manifestation of it came that night.
1:51:48 > 1:51:54# Somebody is going to hurt someone before the night is through... #
1:51:54 > 1:51:56So now we are playing the show
1:51:56 > 1:52:00and trying to act like everything is OK and we get through the songs,
1:52:00 > 1:52:05and I just keep looking over at him, "You ungrateful son of a bitch."
1:52:05 > 1:52:08# There's going to be a heartache tonight
1:52:08 > 1:52:11# A heartache tonight, I know... #
1:52:12 > 1:52:16Just seeing that, I really saw how serious it was at that show.
1:52:16 > 1:52:19They were fighting on stage, there's audio of it.
1:52:19 > 1:52:21You are a real pro, Don, all the way.
1:52:21 > 1:52:25Yeah, you are too, the way you handle people, except for the people you pay.
1:52:25 > 1:52:26Nobody gives a shit about it.
1:52:26 > 1:52:29Fuck you, I have been paying you for seven years, you fuckhead.
1:52:30 > 1:52:33So it starts getting towards the end of the set
1:52:33 > 1:52:36and I am looking at him going, "Three more songs, asshole."
1:52:36 > 1:52:39And I am looking at him and I am ready to go.
1:52:39 > 1:52:42I can't wait to get my hands on him.
1:52:43 > 1:52:46"When we get off the stage, I am going to kick your ass."
1:52:46 > 1:52:49Fucking kill you. I can't wait.
1:52:52 > 1:52:56Whoa! When that kind of stuff is on stage and you're in front of people,
1:52:56 > 1:52:58you've got problems.
1:53:04 > 1:53:05Thank you very much.
1:53:06 > 1:53:11We got through the show and it just, all hell broke loose backstage.
1:53:12 > 1:53:16When the set ended, he was out ahead of me, took his cheapest guitar...
1:53:23 > 1:53:27..busted it in a million pieces, jumped into his limousine and drove off.
1:53:29 > 1:53:33And that was it. That was really the straw that broke the camel's back.
1:53:35 > 1:53:36# Well, baby, there you stand... #
1:53:42 > 1:53:46Someone wrote the Eagles went out with a whimper not a bang,
1:53:46 > 1:53:48which was true.
1:53:50 > 1:53:56# Oh, my God, I can't believe it is happening again... #
1:53:56 > 1:54:01I didn't want to hear it. This was like my super dream had come true.
1:54:01 > 1:54:04# And it looks like the end... #
1:54:05 > 1:54:09So I called Glen and I said, "What is the status? What is going on?
1:54:09 > 1:54:12"Is this thing really broken up?" He said, "Yeah, it is over."
1:54:15 > 1:54:21We were beat and it was really affecting the foundational core,
1:54:21 > 1:54:25the soul of the band. We hit the wall.
1:54:25 > 1:54:28You work, work, work, you get up to a peak
1:54:28 > 1:54:36and then it is almost invariably people head-butt and, "Whose band is it?"
1:54:36 > 1:54:39And, "I am in charge." And, "No, you are not." And there you go.
1:54:39 > 1:54:48# You never thought you'd be alone this far down the line... #
1:54:48 > 1:54:51We had always said that we wanted to step off the wave just before it
1:54:51 > 1:54:53crashed into the beach and we did.
1:54:56 > 1:55:02# You're afraid it's all been wasted time...
1:55:07 > 1:55:11# The autumn leaves have got you thinking... #
1:55:13 > 1:55:17The Beatle guys say they never thought, McCartney never thought that
1:55:17 > 1:55:22band was going to last more than two years, because no pop band did.
1:55:22 > 1:55:24I think it's part of it. It comes together, it's magic
1:55:24 > 1:55:26and it falls apart.
1:55:26 > 1:55:33But how cool... that it even happens at all.
1:55:33 > 1:55:36# I could have done so many things, baby... #
1:55:36 > 1:55:37It was magical.
1:55:37 > 1:55:40# If I could only stop my mind... #
1:55:40 > 1:55:44They wrote a lot of great, great songs that will be celebrated
1:55:44 > 1:55:46and listened to and loved for a long time.
1:55:48 > 1:55:54We managed to represent that period of time in the '70s,
1:55:54 > 1:56:00Southern California, which was very artistically creative.
1:56:01 > 1:56:08I hope that is remembered like the roaring '20s are, you know?
1:56:08 > 1:56:10Our generation and what we did.
1:56:13 > 1:56:17# ..You can get on with your search, baby
1:56:17 > 1:56:22# And I can get on with mine
1:56:22 > 1:56:28# And maybe some day we will find
1:56:31 > 1:56:36# That it wasn't really wasted time. #
1:56:42 > 1:56:47We set out to become a band for our time, but sometimes
1:56:47 > 1:56:51if you do a good enough job, you become a band for all time.
2:00:00 > 2:00:08# One of these nights One of these crazy old nights
2:00:09 > 2:00:12# We're going to find out, pretty mama... #
2:00:12 > 2:00:15A funny thing happened right when we broke up.
2:00:15 > 2:00:211980 is when the format "classic rock" hit American radio.
2:00:21 > 2:00:23So, even though the band broke up,
2:00:23 > 2:00:26they kept playing our songs all the time.
2:00:27 > 2:00:29It was like we never went away.
2:00:29 > 2:00:30We were still on the radio.
2:00:32 > 2:00:35# Well, I'm a-running down the road Trying to loosen my load
2:00:35 > 2:00:39# I got seven women on my mind... #
2:00:39 > 2:00:42Somebody once told me people didn't just listen to the Eagles.
2:00:42 > 2:00:44They did things to the Eagles.
2:00:44 > 2:00:45They went on fandangos
2:00:45 > 2:00:48and drove across the country with three of their high-school buddies.
2:00:48 > 2:00:52# Take it easy... #
2:00:52 > 2:00:54People broke up with their girlfriends.
2:00:54 > 2:00:57# Every time I try to walk away
2:00:59 > 2:01:03# Something makes me turn around and stay...
2:01:03 > 2:01:08# Cos I'm al-l-l-lready gone
2:01:10 > 2:01:15# And I'm fee-e-e-eling strong... #
2:01:15 > 2:01:18People quit their jobs or changed their lives.
2:01:18 > 2:01:21They did things to the Eagles.
2:01:23 > 2:01:25# Hey there, how are you?
2:01:25 > 2:01:28# It's been a long time... #
2:01:28 > 2:01:31Songs from that album have even been played in outer space.
2:01:31 > 2:01:34And they used to pipe the music up to the space shuttle to wake
2:01:34 > 2:01:36the astronauts up in the morning.
2:01:36 > 2:01:39'Shortly after having a breakfast of steak and eggs and toast,
2:01:39 > 2:01:41'he then put on his space suit...'
2:01:44 > 2:01:47# And heroes, they come and they go... #
2:01:59 > 2:02:03# He was a hard-headed man, he was brutally handsome
2:02:04 > 2:02:06# She was terminally pretty...
2:02:14 > 2:02:17# On a dark desert highway
2:02:18 > 2:02:20# Cool wind in my hair... #
2:02:22 > 2:02:25That song has really gotten around.
2:02:25 > 2:02:27# ..Rising up through the air
2:02:27 > 2:02:30# Up ahead in the distance
2:02:31 > 2:02:33# Saw a shimmering light
2:02:33 > 2:02:36# Head grew heavy and my sight grew dim
2:02:36 > 2:02:39# I had to stop for the night... #
2:02:39 > 2:02:41There's been a lot of conjecture about how
2:02:41 > 2:02:43and why we got back together.
2:02:43 > 2:02:45We began to realise that we'd been away for 14 years.
2:02:45 > 2:02:49Maybe we could have that rarest of things in American life,
2:02:49 > 2:02:51which is a second act.
2:02:51 > 2:02:53You know, a second chance.
2:02:55 > 2:02:57CHEERING
2:03:03 > 2:03:05Thank you.
2:03:10 > 2:03:13When we stopped, I was really sad.
2:03:13 > 2:03:16Like, "What are we going to do?"
2:03:16 > 2:03:18# I sleep all day, out all night
2:03:18 > 2:03:21# I know where you're going
2:03:21 > 2:03:24# I don't know, you act that way
2:03:24 > 2:03:26# You don't think it's showing... #
2:03:28 > 2:03:30I was pretty devastated.
2:03:30 > 2:03:33I had only been part of it for barely three years,
2:03:33 > 2:03:36and I'd loved it.
2:03:36 > 2:03:42# When we're hungry Love will keep us alive... #
2:03:44 > 2:03:47We created this monster, and it took its toll on all of our lives.
2:03:49 > 2:03:55# Maybe some day we will find
2:03:57 > 2:04:03# That it wasn't really wasted time... #
2:04:06 > 2:04:09Somebody was quoted as saying the Eagles would get back together
2:04:09 > 2:04:11when hell freezes over.
2:04:11 > 2:04:13So, hell froze over.
2:04:13 > 2:04:20# Mmm-m-m-mmm mm-mm-mmm. #
2:04:25 > 2:04:29- WOMAN:- We're all ready. The gentleman in blue over there.
2:04:29 > 2:04:31After the acrimony and the bitterness that marked
2:04:31 > 2:04:35the demise of the band, it must have been a long road to reunion.
2:04:35 > 2:04:37Can you just take us through the steps that you went through
2:04:37 > 2:04:39on the road to reunification?
2:04:42 > 2:04:44No.
2:04:44 > 2:04:46LAUGHTER
2:04:49 > 2:04:51SCATTERED APPLAUSE
2:04:51 > 2:04:53Anybody want that one?
2:04:53 > 2:04:55No, really, it's a fair question.
2:04:55 > 2:04:58From the time that we disbanded in 1980,
2:04:58 > 2:05:02there were always offers on the table for us to get back together.
2:05:02 > 2:05:04It started with the first US Festival,
2:05:04 > 2:05:07and Steve Wozniak wanted to pay us a million dollars.
2:05:07 > 2:05:09I said no.
2:05:13 > 2:05:15I needed to do something else.
2:05:15 > 2:05:18# The heat is on
2:05:18 > 2:05:21# It's on the street
2:05:22 > 2:05:25# The heat is... on! #
2:05:26 > 2:05:29I called my first solo album No Fun Aloud because I was having
2:05:29 > 2:05:31so much fun.
2:05:31 > 2:05:33It was so liberating to know that whatever I did
2:05:33 > 2:05:36was going to be more fun than what I just did for the last three years on
2:05:36 > 2:05:38The Long Run album.
2:05:40 > 2:05:42I knew I wanted to have a songwriting partner, so I
2:05:42 > 2:05:46asked my friend Jack Tempchin if he wanted to write some songs together.
2:05:46 > 2:05:49And Jack's a very bright guy lyrically,
2:05:49 > 2:05:51and so I started working with him.
2:05:52 > 2:05:55He had become a disciplined co-writer with Don Henley,
2:05:55 > 2:05:58and when the Eagles broke up, he just wanted to let go
2:05:58 > 2:06:00and have some fun with music, you know?
2:06:00 > 2:06:03So we were fiddling around with some grooves, and one of us said,
2:06:03 > 2:06:05"You belong to the city."
2:06:05 > 2:06:07And then we're going, "Oh, yeah, yeah. That's it."
2:06:07 > 2:06:10# Cos you belong to the city
2:06:12 > 2:06:15# You belong to the night... #
2:06:18 > 2:06:21You just show up and good things happen.
2:06:22 > 2:06:26# I make my living off the evening news... #
2:06:26 > 2:06:30Henley's solo career was really, really successful.
2:06:32 > 2:06:35Going solo was the scariest part of my life.
2:06:35 > 2:06:39# All she wants to do is dance, dance... #
2:06:39 > 2:06:42The whole MTV thing was a difficult transition for me to make.
2:06:42 > 2:06:44You know, the Eagles, at one point,
2:06:44 > 2:06:48had been accused by some critic of loitering onstage.
2:06:48 > 2:06:51So it was difficult for us loiterers to make
2:06:51 > 2:06:56the transition to the world of choreography and costume and acting.
2:06:56 > 2:07:00# She wants to party She wants to get down... #
2:07:00 > 2:07:02Did I benefit from MTV? Yes, I did.
2:07:02 > 2:07:05You know, I made a couple of videos that won some MTV awards.
2:07:05 > 2:07:08Nevertheless, I would just as soon have skipped the whole thing,
2:07:08 > 2:07:12because I considered myself, first and foremost, a songwriter
2:07:12 > 2:07:13and a recording artist.
2:07:15 > 2:07:17I didn't really want to be an actor, too.
2:07:18 > 2:07:20Nice, huh?
2:07:20 > 2:07:22The guy who sold it to me said it was a lemon.
2:07:22 > 2:07:25But I'm telling you, it may look like a cow,
2:07:25 > 2:07:26but she runs like a stallion.
2:07:28 > 2:07:32I always like to take a good-bye look at America.
2:07:34 > 2:07:36Just in case it's my last.
2:07:39 > 2:07:41I acted in television, in movies.
2:07:41 > 2:07:44I wasn't thinking about getting back together with the Eagles.
2:07:44 > 2:07:45The guy's got an attitude problem.
2:07:45 > 2:07:48Yeah, well, he listens to me. I can help you with that.
2:07:48 > 2:07:50'Cameron would call me up and say,
2:07:50 > 2:07:52'"Glenn, I gotta find somebody that's not going to take'
2:07:52 > 2:07:54"any shit off Tom Cruise, and I think you're the guy."
2:07:54 > 2:07:56We have history, Dennis.
2:07:56 > 2:07:58Oh, yeah. We got history all right, Jerry.
2:07:58 > 2:08:01No, no, no. No, no, no. Dennis! Dennis! Dennis! Don't! Don't!
2:08:03 > 2:08:05# Nobody on the road
2:08:05 > 2:08:07# Nobody on the beach
2:08:07 > 2:08:09# I feel it in the air
2:08:09 > 2:08:12# The summer's out of reach... #
2:08:12 > 2:08:15I signed Don Henley to Geffen Records.
2:08:15 > 2:08:18Now, you might say, since the Eagles sued me
2:08:18 > 2:08:20at Asylum Records, why he did come with me at Geffen Records?
2:08:20 > 2:08:23Well, David uses the same pick up lines
2:08:23 > 2:08:24every time he comes a-courtin'.
2:08:24 > 2:08:27"You know how much I care about you as an artist.
2:08:27 > 2:08:28"You know what a big fan I am of yours."
2:08:28 > 2:08:31And so I bought it a second time and I signed with him.
2:08:31 > 2:08:33And then things started to fall apart.
2:08:34 > 2:08:39I produced several hits, but I could feel the support somehow waning.
2:08:39 > 2:08:44Don got into arguments with them over things like budgets,
2:08:44 > 2:08:47videos, artwork, things like that.
2:08:47 > 2:08:49I recall Don starting to write letters to them
2:08:49 > 2:08:52referring to them as "Nickel and Dime Records".
2:08:52 > 2:08:54When you feel like your label is not supporting you,
2:08:54 > 2:08:56it's completely deflating.
2:08:56 > 2:08:57I used to call him "Golden Throat".
2:08:57 > 2:08:59I thought he was an incredible singer.
2:08:59 > 2:09:05But, by nature, he's a malcontent. He's always been a malcontent.
2:09:05 > 2:09:07And, you know, that's just life.
2:09:07 > 2:09:10So I just said one day, "I'm not going to record for you anymore.
2:09:10 > 2:09:13"I'm leaving." And so he sued me for 30 million.
2:09:13 > 2:09:17# Happily ever after fails
2:09:17 > 2:09:22# We've been poisoned by these fairy tales
2:09:22 > 2:09:26# The lawyers dwell on small details... #
2:09:26 > 2:09:28My wife has MS, and they deposed her,
2:09:28 > 2:09:29dragged her all the way from Texas
2:09:29 > 2:09:33to Los Angeles to sit her down in front of his attorneys and ask her
2:09:33 > 2:09:37a bunch of pointless questions, because she didn't know anything.
2:09:37 > 2:09:39I thought that was really low.
2:09:39 > 2:09:42I said to Irving over the Henley contract,
2:09:42 > 2:09:45"I'd sooner die than let you fuck me.
2:09:45 > 2:09:47"You'd better win this case."
2:09:47 > 2:09:51It was settled, you know, and that was the end of that relationship.
2:09:51 > 2:09:55# Offer up your best defence
2:09:55 > 2:09:58# This is the end...
2:09:59 > 2:10:02# This is the end
2:10:02 > 2:10:05# Of the innocence. #
2:10:05 > 2:10:08I've realised now that we have adult rock stars.
2:10:11 > 2:10:15You don't have to give this up when you turn 30 or 35 or 40.
2:10:18 > 2:10:21I'll always make records and write songs. I've got to do them.
2:10:21 > 2:10:22Otherwise, I'd go nuts.
2:10:35 > 2:10:39This is a tune that was written with my new friend Mike Campbell
2:10:39 > 2:10:41and my old friend John David Souther.
2:10:41 > 2:10:43'When the band broke up,
2:10:43 > 2:10:46'Glenn started writing songs with Jack Tempchin.
2:10:46 > 2:10:48'I guess the rift between Henley
2:10:48 > 2:10:52'and Frey probably spread to between Frey and me.'
2:10:52 > 2:10:55Glenn and I had had some outrageously fun times together.
2:10:55 > 2:10:58And then Don and I did for a decade or so.
2:10:58 > 2:11:02# Been trying to get down to the heart of the matter
2:11:04 > 2:11:09# But my will gets weak and my thoughts seem to scatter
2:11:09 > 2:11:12# But I think it's about forgiveness
2:11:14 > 2:11:21# Forgiveness, even if, even if, you don't love me anymore. #
2:11:21 > 2:11:25How have you changed as musicians over the years,
2:11:25 > 2:11:27both as a group and individually?
2:11:28 > 2:11:31Well, your whole mandate is just to improve.
2:11:31 > 2:11:33You know, life is about improvement,
2:11:33 > 2:11:36whether it's as a musician or as a singer or as a songwriter or
2:11:36 > 2:11:40just, you know, all the other different hats we all wear.
2:11:40 > 2:11:42So, hopefully, we're just getting better.
2:11:42 > 2:11:44We've been doing this quite a long time now on and off,
2:11:44 > 2:11:47and we feel like we've got it down pretty good.
2:11:47 > 2:11:51And, in fact, we've had five days off, and we're ready to go now.
2:11:53 > 2:11:55When the Eagles first broke up,
2:11:55 > 2:11:58I wasn't quite sure what I was going to do with myself.
2:11:58 > 2:12:00So I just hustled.
2:12:00 > 2:12:02I went just as a singer with Toto,
2:12:02 > 2:12:05I played bass for Jimmy Buffett, I went out with Warren Zevon
2:12:05 > 2:12:08and Dan Fogelberg, and stuff I wouldn't have necessarily done.
2:12:08 > 2:12:10I sang on Poison records and Twisted Sister,
2:12:10 > 2:12:13although you'll never see my name.
2:12:13 > 2:12:14They never gave me credit.
2:12:14 > 2:12:16That was more like yelling.
2:12:18 > 2:12:21It's not all going to be the greatest thing in the world.
2:12:21 > 2:12:25But if you can work and support yourself and your family, it's good.
2:12:25 > 2:12:29- WOMAN:- OK, next question. Gentleman in the front here, Richard.
2:12:29 > 2:12:32What position do you think rock'n'roll takes now about drugs?
2:12:32 > 2:12:33Oooh.
2:12:33 > 2:12:35SCATTERED TITTERS
2:12:35 > 2:12:40We came from a generation that experimented with all kinds
2:12:40 > 2:12:43of substances, of course.
2:12:43 > 2:12:47I think our message is that... you can be a damn good rock band
2:12:47 > 2:12:49without all that stuff.
2:12:49 > 2:12:56I'd like to propose a toast to dedicate this song to you, to us.
2:12:58 > 2:13:01The drinking man's musician, Joe Walsh!
2:13:01 > 2:13:03CHEERING
2:13:14 > 2:13:17I ended up an alcoholic.
2:13:20 > 2:13:23And very fond of cocaine.
2:13:27 > 2:13:30If I was awake, I was...
2:13:30 > 2:13:32I was doing that stuff.
2:13:34 > 2:13:36Good morning, rock fans.
2:13:36 > 2:13:41'In the very early years, it had briefly worked.'
2:13:45 > 2:13:51And then you chase it when it doesn't work anymore.
2:13:51 > 2:13:53And I chased it for years and years.
2:14:00 > 2:14:03# If you look at your reflection
2:14:03 > 2:14:07# In the bottom of the well
2:14:08 > 2:14:13# What you see is only on the surface... #
2:14:13 > 2:14:17"Could Hemingway have written like that if he was sober,
2:14:17 > 2:14:20"or could Hendrix have played like that
2:14:20 > 2:14:23"if he didn't experiment with hallucinogenics?
2:14:23 > 2:14:25"Well, probably not."
2:14:25 > 2:14:30I used that one for years and years, and it never occurred to me
2:14:30 > 2:14:32that all those people are dead.
2:14:32 > 2:14:35They got further and further away from reality.
2:14:37 > 2:14:40- Should I look at you or the camera? - Look at me.
2:14:44 > 2:14:48I ended up...in bad shape.
2:14:48 > 2:14:52# I wanna live with a cinnamon girl
2:14:53 > 2:14:57# I could be happy the rest of my life
2:14:57 > 2:15:00# With a cinnamon girl
2:15:03 > 2:15:07# A dreamer of pictures I run in the night... #
2:15:09 > 2:15:10'I had hit bottom.'
2:15:12 > 2:15:16And I knew that I was done and that...
2:15:19 > 2:15:22..I would probably die if I kept going.
2:15:22 > 2:15:27# Mom, send me money right now I'm gonna make it somehow
2:15:27 > 2:15:30# I need another chance... #
2:15:30 > 2:15:32Joe was a mess.
2:15:32 > 2:15:37He was around a bunch of people that were really just enablers.
2:15:37 > 2:15:38Nobody wanted to intervene.
2:15:38 > 2:15:42Nobody wanted to tell him he had a drug problem or a drinking problem.
2:15:42 > 2:15:46Everybody was just going along with Joe.
2:15:46 > 2:15:51I remember what we all did when it was an art form, you know?
2:15:51 > 2:15:57And I'd like to fight to get it back to that.
2:15:57 > 2:16:00And I was very, very happy in the Eagles.
2:16:00 > 2:16:03I was just going to say I'm sorry we broke up, but we didn't break up.
2:16:03 > 2:16:04We just stopped, I think.
2:16:04 > 2:16:07We just said, you know, "The heck with the '80s."
2:16:09 > 2:16:11Song three, take six.
2:16:11 > 2:16:15In 1990, we tried to get together to refuel it.
2:16:15 > 2:16:19Everybody was in on that, but Glenn wasn't involved yet.
2:16:22 > 2:16:26Irving got us together - Timothy, Joe, myself, and Don Henley.
2:16:26 > 2:16:29Glenn was supposed to join us in the studio,
2:16:29 > 2:16:31and he was going to bring some songs in,
2:16:31 > 2:16:33and we were going to start making another record.
2:16:33 > 2:16:36So, we started rehearsing, the four of us, then we got a call,
2:16:36 > 2:16:40I think about the third or fourth day in the studio, saying that
2:16:40 > 2:16:46Glenn had refused to come be part of it, to join the party.
2:16:46 > 2:16:47So we just stopped.
2:16:49 > 2:16:51He was still, "I'm not doing this."
2:16:51 > 2:16:52Well, you know, to tell you the truth,
2:16:52 > 2:16:55I was having a fine time doing what I was doing.
2:16:55 > 2:16:57I mean, there's more to life than being in the Eagles.
2:16:57 > 2:16:59The moment was always going to be kind of
2:16:59 > 2:17:01when Glenn was ready to do it again.
2:17:01 > 2:17:04I think Henley would have been more willing than Glenn.
2:17:04 > 2:17:07For me, personally, I think that I had proved pretty much
2:17:07 > 2:17:10everything that I needed to prove in my solo career.
2:17:10 > 2:17:12I had won a couple of Grammys and had a few hits
2:17:12 > 2:17:14and some successful tours.
2:17:14 > 2:17:17And I had founded the Walden Woods Project.
2:17:17 > 2:17:19When you're a solo artist, you have to take responsibility
2:17:19 > 2:17:24for everything - every mistake, every bad record, every sour note.
2:17:24 > 2:17:25But when you're in a band,
2:17:25 > 2:17:28you get to share the praise and the blame with your bandmates.
2:17:28 > 2:17:30So, I was OK with the notion of maybe going back
2:17:30 > 2:17:32and being in a band again.
2:17:35 > 2:17:37The thing that sort of turned my head
2:17:37 > 2:17:40was the release of the Common Thread album.
2:17:40 > 2:17:42Irving and Don went to Nashville
2:17:42 > 2:17:45and they talked a bunch of people into recording some Eagles songs,
2:17:45 > 2:17:48with the royalties going to the Walden Woods Project.
2:17:48 > 2:17:51# Well, I'm a-running down the road trying to loosen my load... #
2:17:51 > 2:17:53I don't know who asked me, but they said,
2:17:53 > 2:17:55"Travis Tritt's going to do a video of Take It Easy
2:17:55 > 2:17:59"and he wants to know if you guys will be in the video."
2:17:59 > 2:18:01I said, "Well, OK."
2:18:01 > 2:18:05# Take it easy
2:18:05 > 2:18:07# Take it easy... #
2:18:07 > 2:18:10Never really talked to Travis about whose idea it was.
2:18:10 > 2:18:14I think Irving probably had a hand in that whole thing.
2:18:14 > 2:18:17Was I trying to put the band back together by doing Common Thread?
2:18:17 > 2:18:18No.
2:18:18 > 2:18:20Was I waiting for the moment? Yeah.
2:18:20 > 2:18:25# ..Understand, just find a place to make your stand
2:18:25 > 2:18:29# Take it easy... #
2:18:31 > 2:18:34In the Travis Tritt video, there was a little bandstand scene
2:18:34 > 2:18:37and we all picked up our instruments and started playing.
2:18:37 > 2:18:41I was thinking, "Guys, come on!" You know?
2:18:41 > 2:18:44'You know, it's interesting - after years pass, you know,
2:18:44 > 2:18:48'you really sort of remember that you were friends first.
2:18:48 > 2:18:50'You have a lot of common history together
2:18:50 > 2:18:53'and a lot of shared experiences.'
2:18:53 > 2:18:56I remembered mostly the good stuff.
2:18:56 > 2:18:58I didn't really think about the bad stuff.
2:18:58 > 2:19:01I just remembered how much we genuinely had liked each other
2:19:01 > 2:19:03and how much fun we'd had.
2:19:05 > 2:19:08We realised, after the success of the Common Thread album
2:19:08 > 2:19:11that there were still a lot of people out there -
2:19:11 > 2:19:14a whole lot of people - who wanted to see us play again.
2:19:14 > 2:19:16You know, sometimes there's a little bit of serendipity
2:19:16 > 2:19:20involved in this, and I think what happened is everybody's life
2:19:20 > 2:19:26started to line up in a way that now it made sense for all of us.
2:19:26 > 2:19:29And we discussed it.
2:19:29 > 2:19:33Joe and Don came up and sat in at a benefit that I did in Aspen.
2:19:33 > 2:19:35'We had a meeting in Aspen.'
2:19:35 > 2:19:40I was one of the first guys that they wanted to try it out on.
2:19:40 > 2:19:44You know, Joe was buzzed. It was 1.00 in the afternoon.
2:19:44 > 2:19:48You know, and he would say, "Hey, I'm there, man. I'm fine.
2:19:48 > 2:19:50"Don't worry about me."
2:19:51 > 2:19:56But Don and I could both tell that he wasn't fine, and we were worried.
2:19:56 > 2:19:58They said what they wanted to do.
2:19:58 > 2:20:01They wanted to try it, get back together again.
2:20:01 > 2:20:04They didn't know what I would say, but I said,
2:20:04 > 2:20:09"I understand, and, yeah, I can get sober."
2:20:11 > 2:20:16# Somewhere along the way I found the meaning
2:20:16 > 2:20:19# Woke up dreaming
2:20:19 > 2:20:23# Along the way
2:20:25 > 2:20:30# Never quite seems the same when you awaken
2:20:32 > 2:20:38# And making up for the time is such a price to pay
2:20:39 > 2:20:44# Then they take the dream away and it just ain't fair... #
2:20:47 > 2:20:49We had to get Joe into some sort of rehab,
2:20:49 > 2:20:52and we couldn't be sure it was going to work.
2:20:52 > 2:20:54So we'd better have Felder.
2:20:54 > 2:20:57The Eagles reunion had better have at least one of the two of them,
2:20:57 > 2:20:59and hopefully both.
2:20:59 > 2:21:01Irving called me up and said that Don and Glenn
2:21:01 > 2:21:05and Joe had gotten together, and they were talking about doing
2:21:05 > 2:21:07something, and would I be interested in doing it?
2:21:07 > 2:21:09I said, "Absolutely."
2:21:11 > 2:21:14One thing led to another, and finally Irving
2:21:14 > 2:21:17and Don Felder picked him up and drove him to rehab.
2:21:19 > 2:21:23I made a commitment to them that I would clean up...
2:21:24 > 2:21:29..and that I would be in the band...
2:21:31 > 2:21:33..if that's what they wanted to do.
2:21:33 > 2:21:36# So help me through the night
2:21:36 > 2:21:41# Help me to ease the pain... #
2:21:41 > 2:21:45I'm really, really grateful to those three guys...
2:21:45 > 2:21:48# Tell me it's all right... #
2:21:48 > 2:21:55..because I had... a really good reason to get sober.
2:21:57 > 2:22:03And as soon as I got sober, we started rehearsals.
2:22:20 > 2:22:24# He was a hard-headed man He was brutally handsome
2:22:26 > 2:22:28# She was terminally pretty
2:22:29 > 2:22:34# She held him up, and he held her for ransom
2:22:34 > 2:22:38# In the heart of the cold, cold city
2:22:39 > 2:22:43# He had a nasty reputation as a cruel dude
2:22:43 > 2:22:46# They said he was ruthless, they said he was crude... #
2:22:46 > 2:22:49From that first phone call from Irving
2:22:49 > 2:22:52to showing up on a rehearsal stage to start putting together
2:22:52 > 2:22:56a show for MTV was only a matter of weeks, if not a month.
2:22:56 > 2:23:01# Life in the fast lane Surely make you lose your mind... #
2:23:02 > 2:23:06'It was a little scary rehearsing for the MTV thing.
2:23:06 > 2:23:10'Normally, I think people would have their act down a few weeks,
2:23:10 > 2:23:13'at least, before entering into something like that,
2:23:13 > 2:23:17'but we just dove in headfirst.'
2:23:26 > 2:23:29'Well, even though we had rehearsed really well,
2:23:29 > 2:23:31'for the first time to walk out on stage and actually
2:23:31 > 2:23:35'play as a band in public and kind of put the key back into the ignition
2:23:35 > 2:23:39'and turn it over for the first time, it was really a lot of nerves.'
2:23:42 > 2:23:44- Are we going the right way?- Glenn.
2:23:44 > 2:23:47'Not having played as a group in 14 years, the first night,
2:23:47 > 2:23:49'there was a lot of terror.'
2:23:50 > 2:23:53Gentlemen, good to be with ya. Hope I'm with ya all night!
2:23:53 > 2:23:54LAUGHTER
2:23:54 > 2:23:58- Have a good one, OK? OK. - Showtime! Showtime! Showtime!
2:23:58 > 2:24:00CHEERING
2:24:07 > 2:24:11'The audience was very kind, and they were with us.
2:24:11 > 2:24:15'And that was good, but it was rough.'
2:24:16 > 2:24:18# Just another day in paradise
2:24:20 > 2:24:23# You stumble to your bed
2:24:26 > 2:24:28# You'd give anything to silence
2:24:30 > 2:24:33# Those voices ringing in your head
2:24:36 > 2:24:39# You thought you could find happiness
2:24:41 > 2:24:43# Just over that green hill
2:24:45 > 2:24:49# You thought you would be satisfied
2:24:51 > 2:24:53# But you never will. #
2:24:53 > 2:24:57'Even when we went onstage, we were definitely a little tight.
2:24:57 > 2:24:59'Until, I think, Henley forgot the words
2:24:59 > 2:25:02'to one of the new songs...'
2:25:12 > 2:25:14You want to start again?
2:25:14 > 2:25:16I'll tell you what.
2:25:16 > 2:25:21This is television, so we get to do this till we're happy.
2:25:21 > 2:25:25I thought... Now, I thought you didn't remember the third verse.
2:25:25 > 2:25:27- That was only the second verse! - I know.
2:25:27 > 2:25:30I know the third verse.
2:25:30 > 2:25:31'That was sort of the icebreaker, though.
2:25:31 > 2:25:33'That was a good thing, ultimately.'
2:25:33 > 2:25:35I feel like Tommy Smothers.
2:25:35 > 2:25:37LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE
2:25:40 > 2:25:44We didn't think getting back together was quite as legitimate
2:25:44 > 2:25:45unless we had some new material,
2:25:45 > 2:25:49so we're going to put forth several new songs for you this evening.
2:25:49 > 2:25:51APPLAUSE AND CHEERING
2:25:51 > 2:25:54This first one Timothy B Schmit is going to sing for you.
2:25:54 > 2:25:57This is called Love Will Keep Us Alive.
2:25:57 > 2:25:59# I was standing
2:25:59 > 2:26:05# All alone against the world outside
2:26:07 > 2:26:10# You were searching
2:26:11 > 2:26:15# For a place to hide
2:26:17 > 2:26:19# Lost and lonely
2:26:19 > 2:26:24# Now you've given me the will to survive
2:26:27 > 2:26:33# When we're hungry, love will keep us alive... #
2:26:36 > 2:26:39After selling 100 million records worldwide, was it real pressure
2:26:39 > 2:26:43on you to write the new material for the Hell Freezes Over album?
2:26:46 > 2:26:48We didn't really look at it as a body of new work.
2:26:48 > 2:26:52It was more of a retrospective piece of material.
2:26:52 > 2:26:55And we look forward to writing some new material, perhaps in the future.
2:26:55 > 2:26:58We can't keep recycling this material,
2:26:58 > 2:27:00although it seems to be working just fine.
2:27:00 > 2:27:02LAUGHTER
2:27:04 > 2:27:09Don and I were trying to figure out how to write another song,
2:27:09 > 2:27:11and, I mean, really, if we could.
2:27:11 > 2:27:14We hadn't written anything together since, like, '78.
2:27:14 > 2:27:17So it was a little awkward at first, just getting back into the groove.
2:27:17 > 2:27:20Yeah. So, we go, one...
2:27:20 > 2:27:23OK, here we are starting out at one, two...
2:27:23 > 2:27:24During The Long Run album,
2:27:24 > 2:27:28there were a lot of sessions with Don and I where nothing got done.
2:27:28 > 2:27:30We were both a little bit reticent to introduce
2:27:30 > 2:27:32our ideas for fear that they weren't good enough.
2:27:32 > 2:27:37So when we sat down to do it again in '94, my first worry was,
2:27:37 > 2:27:40"Is it going to be as hard as it was in 1978?"
2:27:42 > 2:27:45We were sitting around, "What are we going to write about?" and stuff.
2:27:45 > 2:27:48And he said, "Well, I've got this one title, Get Over It."
2:27:48 > 2:27:51And he sort of proceeded to tell me what it was that was
2:27:51 > 2:27:55pissing him off - all these people going on television
2:27:55 > 2:27:58and everything that's wrong with them is somebody else's fault.
2:27:58 > 2:28:01"I'm just sick of all this whining,
2:28:01 > 2:28:03"and so I'm going to write a song called Get Over It."
2:28:03 > 2:28:09The intro, straight Chuck Berry. Never play a seventh, right?
2:28:12 > 2:28:13So, then I said, "I think
2:28:13 > 2:28:17"maybe a Chuck Berry riff would be a good way to tell that story."
2:28:17 > 2:28:20Time out. Do you want to play the...?
2:28:20 > 2:28:22You want to do it on slide?
2:28:22 > 2:28:25And then Felder and I will just play power chords low and high.
2:28:25 > 2:28:27And those guys will play Chuck Berry low and high.
2:28:27 > 2:28:30And we can do # Get over it. #
2:28:30 > 2:28:33A couple little of them slide answer licks is cool.
2:28:33 > 2:28:38My favourite thing is when Don and Glenn co-write stuff.
2:28:38 > 2:28:40I like to play guitar to that.
2:29:01 > 2:29:03- You want me to sing it, or do you want to wait?- It's ten to six.
2:29:03 > 2:29:07You can sing it at ten to six or five to six.
2:29:07 > 2:29:09- Do it again?- Yeah, we'll do it twice.
2:29:09 > 2:29:12Yeah, you could write it in to the mic.
2:29:12 > 2:29:14LAUGHTER
2:29:14 > 2:29:16Captioned for hard of hearing.
2:29:22 > 2:29:24'It was really liberating.'
2:29:24 > 2:29:29We both walked out of the session and went, "God, we can still do it.
2:29:29 > 2:29:31"I can't believe it. We just wrote a song together.
2:29:31 > 2:29:32"Maybe we can write some more."
2:29:32 > 2:29:34# Turn on the tube and what do I see?
2:29:34 > 2:29:37# A whole lotta people crying, "Don't blame me"... #
2:29:37 > 2:29:39That was a really good feeling.
2:29:39 > 2:29:43It was a great sort of artistic reconciliation for us
2:29:43 > 2:29:46to have been able to sit down and write that song together.
2:29:49 > 2:29:50# Get over it!
2:29:52 > 2:29:54# Get over it!
2:29:54 > 2:29:58# All this bitching and moaning and pitching a fit
2:29:58 > 2:30:00# Get over it! Get over it! #
2:30:18 > 2:30:19Get over it!
2:30:19 > 2:30:21APPLAUSE
2:30:24 > 2:30:28We did Hell Freezes Over, and then we went out on the road.
2:30:32 > 2:30:35That was the question on everyone's mind -
2:30:35 > 2:30:38what if we got back together, and no one showed up?
2:30:43 > 2:30:47# What kind of love have you got?
2:30:49 > 2:30:53# You should be home but you're not
2:30:54 > 2:30:58# A room full of noise and dangerous boys
2:31:00 > 2:31:04# Still make you thirsty and hot... #
2:31:04 > 2:31:07'We set it up to be a three-month reunion.
2:31:07 > 2:31:10'I went back to my wife, and I had two young kids at the time.'
2:31:10 > 2:31:13I said, "I don't know if you're going to recognise me.
2:31:13 > 2:31:16"I don't know what this is going to do to me.
2:31:16 > 2:31:20"But I hope I don't change too much. Hang in there with me."
2:31:20 > 2:31:23# Tell all your girlfriends
2:31:23 > 2:31:26# Your "been around the world" friends
2:31:26 > 2:31:29# Talk is for losers and fools
2:31:31 > 2:31:36# Victim of love, I see a broken heart
2:31:38 > 2:31:41# I could be wrong but I'm not
2:31:42 > 2:31:47# Victim of love, we're not so far apart
2:31:47 > 2:31:51# What kind of love have you got? #
2:31:53 > 2:31:56I was on the side of the stage once at one of their shows
2:31:56 > 2:32:00when they first got back together, and Jack Nicholson was
2:32:00 > 2:32:04euphoric listening to this band play again, you know?
2:32:04 > 2:32:09And he said... "Repertoire."
2:32:11 > 2:32:12What do you want to hear?
2:32:12 > 2:32:15# One of these nights
2:32:15 > 2:32:18ALL: # One of these crazy old nights! #
2:32:20 > 2:32:23# One of these nights... #
2:32:25 > 2:32:27We didn't know how many people were going to show up for us
2:32:27 > 2:32:30to reunite, but people came out in droves.
2:32:37 > 2:32:40# Somebody's gonna hurt someone
2:32:40 > 2:32:42# Before the night is through... #
2:32:42 > 2:32:45We were sold out everywhere.
2:32:45 > 2:32:48Audiences were having a fabulous time.
2:32:48 > 2:32:49We were having a good time, too.
2:32:49 > 2:32:52# There's gonna be a heartache tonight
2:32:52 > 2:32:55# A heartache tonight, I know
2:32:58 > 2:33:00# Gonna be a heartache tonight
2:33:00 > 2:33:03# A heartache tonight, I know
2:33:04 > 2:33:06# Oh, I know. #
2:33:24 > 2:33:25Heartache, baby!
2:33:30 > 2:33:33I listened to the guys, and Joe Walsh, for example,
2:33:33 > 2:33:36is playing better and singing better than I've ever heard him
2:33:36 > 2:33:38play in his life since I've known him.
2:33:39 > 2:33:42# Hi there, how are ya?
2:33:42 > 2:33:45# It's been a long time
2:33:45 > 2:33:48I didn't have time to really sit around
2:33:48 > 2:33:55and miss alcohol or cold turkey for more cocaine or anything.
2:33:55 > 2:33:58And I had to go in front of people
2:33:58 > 2:34:03and play and sing sober,
2:34:03 > 2:34:05which I hated, at first.
2:34:05 > 2:34:07Ooh, that was scary.
2:34:07 > 2:34:14# Why do we give up our hearts to the past?
2:34:14 > 2:34:15# Yeah
2:34:15 > 2:34:21# And why must we grow up so fast?
2:34:23 > 2:34:28# Oooh-oooh ooh-h
2:34:39 > 2:34:47# And all you wishing well fools with your fortunes
2:34:49 > 2:34:54# Someone should send you a rose
2:34:56 > 2:34:59# With love from a friend
2:34:59 > 2:35:02# Nice to hear from you again
2:35:02 > 2:35:08# And the storybook comes to a close
2:35:11 > 2:35:16# Gone are the ribbons and bows
2:35:19 > 2:35:25# Things to remember, places to go
2:35:26 > 2:35:30# Pretty maids all in a row
2:35:31 > 2:35:35# All in a row. #
2:35:39 > 2:35:43When Joe first got out of rehab and we started rehearsing,
2:35:43 > 2:35:45he was still pretty dark.
2:35:45 > 2:35:48But over the course of that first year getting sober, I think
2:35:48 > 2:35:51he found happiness again.
2:35:51 > 2:35:52He found a way to be happy.
2:35:59 > 2:36:02You look very pretty.
2:36:02 > 2:36:05It's OK. Once more. Oh, now, are you ready?
2:36:05 > 2:36:07Father, daughter, take one.
2:36:08 > 2:36:11We got that family thing to ground us all now.
2:36:11 > 2:36:15It's really sort of our common thread. We've all got kids.
2:36:15 > 2:36:20It changes your life and your perspective on your work, as well.
2:36:32 > 2:36:35So, the tour was so enormously successful that we sort of
2:36:35 > 2:36:38didn't want to give that up, you know?
2:36:38 > 2:36:41It's like, "OK, this is good. I could do this for a while."
2:36:41 > 2:36:43# Harry got up
2:36:45 > 2:36:47# Dressed all in black
2:36:49 > 2:36:51# Went down to the station
2:36:52 > 2:36:54# And he never came back
2:36:55 > 2:36:58# They found his clothing
2:36:58 > 2:37:01# Scattered somewhere down the track
2:37:03 > 2:37:08# And he won't be down on Wall Street in the morning
2:37:09 > 2:37:11# In a New York minute
2:37:14 > 2:37:16# Ooh-h-h-h
2:37:16 > 2:37:19- # Everything can change - In a New York minute
2:37:20 > 2:37:22# Ooh-h-h-h
2:37:22 > 2:37:24# Things can get pretty strange... #
2:37:24 > 2:37:26Doing a concert is a strange combination of conscious
2:37:26 > 2:37:28and subconscious acts.
2:37:28 > 2:37:30You're not really thinking about what you're doing
2:37:30 > 2:37:32because you know it so well, you're just doing it.
2:37:32 > 2:37:35On the other hand, you have to put some emotion into it.
2:37:35 > 2:37:37When you've got a crowd that's cheering you on,
2:37:37 > 2:37:40doesn't matter how many times you've sung the song. You just do it.
2:37:40 > 2:37:43# Lying in the darkness
2:37:43 > 2:37:45# Hear the sirens wail
2:37:45 > 2:37:50# Somebody's going to emergency
2:37:50 > 2:37:52# Somebody's going to jail
2:37:52 > 2:37:57# If you find somebody to love in this world
2:37:57 > 2:37:59# You better hang on tooth and nail
2:38:02 > 2:38:06# The wolf is always at the door
2:38:08 > 2:38:10# In a New York minute
2:38:12 > 2:38:13# Ooh-ohh-ohh
2:38:13 > 2:38:17- # Everything can change - In a New York minute
2:38:18 > 2:38:20# Ooh-ohh-ohh
2:38:20 > 2:38:24- # Things can get a little strange - In a New York minute
2:38:25 > 2:38:27# Ooh-ohh-ohh... #
2:38:27 > 2:38:30We've played all over the world, and, probably,
2:38:30 > 2:38:33if we could write the script, it was probably a genius move.
2:38:33 > 2:38:35Cos when we come back, it's bigger than ever.
2:38:35 > 2:38:39How much money do you expect to gross with this European tour?
2:38:39 > 2:38:41Irving?
2:38:41 > 2:38:45- I actually haven't added it up, but I will tell you that...- Good answer.
2:38:45 > 2:38:46LAUGHTER
2:38:46 > 2:38:51One thing, the costs of being a touring rock'n'roll band
2:38:51 > 2:38:55in Europe are beyond our wildest imaginations, but this
2:38:55 > 2:38:59band is here in Europe because there was demand for us to be here.
2:38:59 > 2:39:03And it's not nearly as lucrative as anything we've done before.
2:39:05 > 2:39:07It isn't?
2:39:07 > 2:39:09LAUGHTER
2:39:13 > 2:39:16Offers started coming in for us to do more shows,
2:39:16 > 2:39:18and I just sort of said, "Well, book some more.
2:39:18 > 2:39:20"It doesn't have to end now. Book some more.
2:39:20 > 2:39:23"Where else can we play?" "Well, you haven't been in Europe."
2:39:23 > 2:39:24"Well, let's go there."
2:39:24 > 2:39:28# Well, I heard some people talking just the other day
2:39:30 > 2:39:35# And they said you were gonna put me on a shelf
2:39:37 > 2:39:40# Let me tell you I got some news for you
2:39:41 > 2:39:43# And you'll soon find out it's true
2:39:44 > 2:39:48# Then you'll have to eat your lunch all by yourself
2:39:50 > 2:39:55# Cos I'm al-l-l-lready gone
2:39:57 > 2:40:01# And I'm fee-e-eling strong
2:40:03 > 2:40:07# I will si-i-i-ng this victory song... #
2:40:07 > 2:40:09How's it go?
2:40:09 > 2:40:15# Hoo-hoo-hoo! My, my, hoo-hoo-hoo
2:40:15 > 2:40:16GUITAR SOLO
2:40:30 > 2:40:34# Well, I know it wasn't you who held me down... #
2:40:34 > 2:40:37'We had drawn a line in the sand and said,'
2:40:37 > 2:40:39"No drugs or alcohol during any band activities."
2:40:39 > 2:40:44And, as a result, we're playing and singing pretty damn good.
2:40:44 > 2:40:49# So often times it happens that we live our lives in chains... #
2:40:49 > 2:40:52'I think the thing that brings them together is the harmony.'
2:40:52 > 2:40:56When they start hearing that and how seamless and how perfect, they
2:40:56 > 2:40:59get as thrilled as the audiences do, that, "We can still do this."
2:40:59 > 2:41:02THEY HARMONISE
2:41:07 > 2:41:12# Ooh-ooh-ooh
2:41:15 > 2:41:21# Ooh-ooh-ooh... #
2:41:22 > 2:41:25We can't really understand it. It's just the chemistry that works.
2:41:25 > 2:41:29And we gave up trying to understand it. It just works.
2:41:29 > 2:41:32We're just going to do one verse of New Kid.
2:41:32 > 2:41:35One verse of New Kid. OK. Joe's singing Smuggler's Blues.
2:41:35 > 2:41:38- OK.- I'll just do the beginning of Funk 49.
2:41:38 > 2:41:42- And then I'm going to go pee. - Yeah.- Then I'll go pee.
2:41:42 > 2:41:44One, two, three.
2:41:45 > 2:41:47CHEERING
2:42:00 > 2:42:04# Well, I'm a-running down the road trying to loosen my load
2:42:04 > 2:42:06# I got seven women on my mind
2:42:07 > 2:42:11# Four that want to own me, two that want to stone me
2:42:11 > 2:42:13# One says she's a friend of mine
2:42:13 > 2:42:16# Take it easy
2:42:17 > 2:42:20# Take it easy
2:42:20 > 2:42:26# Don't let the sound of your own wheels drive you crazy
2:42:28 > 2:42:31# Lighten up while you still can
2:42:31 > 2:42:34# Don't even try to understand
2:42:34 > 2:42:37# Just find a place to make your stand
2:42:37 > 2:42:40# And take it easy
2:42:45 > 2:42:48# Well, I'm a-standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona
2:42:48 > 2:42:51# Such a fine sight to see
2:42:51 > 2:42:55# It's a girl, my Lord, in a flat-bed Ford
2:42:55 > 2:42:58# Slowin' down to take a look at me
2:42:58 > 2:43:01# Well, come on, baby
2:43:01 > 2:43:03# Don't say maybe
2:43:05 > 2:43:10# I've gotta know if your sweet love is gonna save me
2:43:12 > 2:43:14# We may lose and we may win
2:43:14 > 2:43:18# Though we will never be here again
2:43:18 > 2:43:21# So open up, I'm climbing in
2:43:21 > 2:43:25# So take it easy... #
2:43:25 > 2:43:27All right, boys!
2:43:27 > 2:43:30'We ended up going all around the world in about two years
2:43:30 > 2:43:32'and nine months.'
2:43:32 > 2:43:37# Well, you know we got it ea-a-a-asy
2:43:39 > 2:43:44# We oughta take it ea-a-a-a-asy. #
2:43:50 > 2:43:53Thank you, Dublin!
2:43:53 > 2:43:55APPLAUSE AND CHEERING
2:43:59 > 2:44:04We've learned not to make career decisions at the end of long tours.
2:44:04 > 2:44:06If we break up again, though, you won't hear about it.
2:44:06 > 2:44:10- We'll just go quietly.- And we'll say we're still together.- Yeah!
2:44:10 > 2:44:13LAUGHTER
2:44:13 > 2:44:16They've laughed, cried, fought, but, most of all,
2:44:16 > 2:44:20they have beaten the odds and are as popular today
2:44:20 > 2:44:24as they were in that incredible summer back in 1972.
2:44:24 > 2:44:28It is an honour and a pleasure to introduce the Eagles.
2:44:28 > 2:44:30APPLAUSE
2:44:33 > 2:44:36A lot has been talked about and speculated about over
2:44:36 > 2:44:40the last 27 years about whether or not we got along.
2:44:40 > 2:44:43We got along fine. We just disagreed a lot.
2:44:44 > 2:44:48I was not in the trenches with this particular band,
2:44:48 > 2:44:52so I'd like to thank my predecessor, Randy Meisner, for being there.
2:44:52 > 2:44:56'I'm glad that Randy and Bernie got recognised.'
2:44:56 > 2:44:58I think that's appropriate.
2:45:00 > 2:45:02Hey, how you doin'?
2:45:02 > 2:45:05It's a good feeling. Looks good on my resume.
2:45:07 > 2:45:09HE CHUCKLES
2:45:09 > 2:45:12I'd really like to thank Don and Glenn for writing those songs.
2:45:12 > 2:45:17Thank you, guys. It makes my job real easy. Thank you!
2:45:17 > 2:45:19APPLAUSE
2:45:20 > 2:45:22Charming outfit, Joe.
2:45:22 > 2:45:24I'd like to, again,
2:45:24 > 2:45:28thank Don Henley and Glenn Frey for writing an incredible body of work
2:45:28 > 2:45:32that's propelled this band through 20-some-odd years' worth of life.
2:45:32 > 2:45:33Thank you, guys.
2:45:33 > 2:45:36When a kid first picks up a guitar or a drumstick,
2:45:36 > 2:45:38it's not really to be famous.
2:45:38 > 2:45:40It's because that kid wants to fit in somewhere,
2:45:40 > 2:45:46he wants to be accepted, and he wants to be understood, even.
2:45:46 > 2:45:51And so, I like to think of this award as something that is
2:45:51 > 2:45:55acknowledging us not for being famous, but for doing the work.
2:45:55 > 2:45:59And I appreciate all the work that all these guys behind me have done.
2:45:59 > 2:46:01I want to thank Irving Azoff,
2:46:01 > 2:46:03without whom we wouldn't be here today.
2:46:03 > 2:46:05APPLAUSE
2:46:05 > 2:46:09As I've said before, he may be Satan, but he's our Satan.
2:46:10 > 2:46:13We're in a dog-eat-dog business.
2:46:13 > 2:46:16Show me anybody that's going to be responsible for guiding or
2:46:16 > 2:46:19managing an artist's career that's made too many friends,
2:46:19 > 2:46:21and I'm going to show you somebody
2:46:21 > 2:46:24that's sold out their artist and done a crappy job.
2:46:24 > 2:46:29So, I was quite proud of Henley's reference of what he said.
2:46:29 > 2:46:33It was more or less, for me, a validation of a job well done.
2:46:33 > 2:46:36A lot of my job was trying to keep the band from breaking up.
2:46:36 > 2:46:41In the '70s, we formed a corporation called Eagles, Limited.
2:46:41 > 2:46:43And that was all-for-one and one-for-all.
2:46:44 > 2:46:46Well, it wasn't the three musketeers.
2:46:46 > 2:46:51As our friend JD Souther used to say, "Time passes, things change."
2:46:51 > 2:46:54In talking with Irving about putting the Eagles back
2:46:54 > 2:46:58together in 1994, I said, "Irving, I'm not going to do it
2:46:58 > 2:47:01"unless Don and I make more money than the other guys."
2:47:02 > 2:47:04"We're the only guys who have done anything
2:47:04 > 2:47:06"career-wise in the last 14 years.
2:47:06 > 2:47:10"We're the guys that have kept the Eagles' name alive on radio,
2:47:10 > 2:47:12"television and in concert halls."
2:47:12 > 2:47:15So we came up with a deal that I was happy with,
2:47:15 > 2:47:18and Don was happy with, Timothy was happy with,
2:47:18 > 2:47:21Joe was happy with, and Don Felder was not happy with.
2:47:21 > 2:47:23And I called Felder's representative.
2:47:23 > 2:47:26And I said, "Hello, Barry. This is Glenn Frey.
2:47:26 > 2:47:29"I'm sorry you happen to represent the only asshole in the band,
2:47:29 > 2:47:31"but let me tell you something.
2:47:31 > 2:47:35"You either sign this agreement before the sun goes down today,
2:47:35 > 2:47:37"or we're replacing Don Felder.
2:47:37 > 2:47:38"That's the final deal.
2:47:38 > 2:47:41"He signs by sunset, or he's out of the fucking band."
2:47:42 > 2:47:43Hung up.
2:47:43 > 2:47:47So, he signed the deal, and we started out on the tour.
2:47:48 > 2:47:52I didn't sense a great deal of camaraderie.
2:47:52 > 2:47:53You hardly saw anybody
2:47:53 > 2:47:57if it wasn't walking on the plane or walking onto the stage.
2:47:57 > 2:47:59Everyone thought, "Well, if we don't get together,
2:47:59 > 2:48:01"we won't have problems."
2:48:01 > 2:48:04And I think instead of being able to sit down and have a beer and talk
2:48:04 > 2:48:09about stuff and renew a relationship with everyone, that independent
2:48:09 > 2:48:15isolation really didn't add the comfort necessary to make it work.
2:48:15 > 2:48:21Don Felder was never, ever satisfied, never, ever happy.
2:48:24 > 2:48:27A rock band is not a perfect democracy.
2:48:27 > 2:48:28It's more like a sports team.
2:48:28 > 2:48:31No one can do anything without the other guys,
2:48:31 > 2:48:34but everybody doesn't get to touch the ball all the time.
2:48:34 > 2:48:39Time went on, and time went on, and Felder became more and more unhappy.
2:48:39 > 2:48:42Couldn't appreciate the amount of money he was making,
2:48:42 > 2:48:45more concerned about how much money I was making.
2:48:51 > 2:48:54If Don Felder really thought about it,
2:48:54 > 2:48:57it really was he wanted it to be a "band" band in the purest
2:48:57 > 2:49:01sense of the words, you know, we're all going to get equal songwriting,
2:49:01 > 2:49:05singing, expression stuff, and this was not a hippie commune.
2:49:05 > 2:49:07You know, and everything for them
2:49:07 > 2:49:09really goes back to those two words - song power.
2:49:11 > 2:49:16We finally made the decision that we won't be working with him anymore.
2:49:17 > 2:49:21It just broke my heart. It's not just playing with Joe.
2:49:21 > 2:49:24I miss these guys.
2:49:24 > 2:49:27But I really missed the friendship and the music.
2:49:30 > 2:49:32OK.
2:49:34 > 2:49:38Glenn and I, when it comes time to make band decisions,
2:49:38 > 2:49:40usually stick together.
2:49:40 > 2:49:43It's difficult for four or five people to have an equal say.
2:49:43 > 2:49:47Here we are 40 years later, and we're doing OK.
2:49:47 > 2:49:50We're one of the few bands that can say that.
2:49:51 > 2:49:55The novelty of the Eagles being back together and those few new songs
2:49:55 > 2:49:57that we had on the Hell Freezes Over album is one thing.
2:49:57 > 2:50:00But we needed to make a record.
2:50:02 > 2:50:05Considering that we haven't made a record in so long,
2:50:05 > 2:50:11we spent a good two-and-a-half years making Long Road Out Of Eden.
2:50:11 > 2:50:14We finally figured out that we just needed to do what we do.
2:50:14 > 2:50:16This really goes back to the essence of what we do best,
2:50:16 > 2:50:19which is singing and songwriting.
2:50:19 > 2:50:21A lot of harmony singing on this album.
2:50:21 > 2:50:25ALL: # There's a hole in the world tonight
2:50:25 > 2:50:31# Don't let there be a hole in the world tomorrow... #
2:50:32 > 2:50:35Big tragedies like that make you think, as a parent,
2:50:35 > 2:50:37what kind of world is coming up?
2:50:37 > 2:50:39What's going to happen next?
2:50:39 > 2:50:41What's the world going to be like when my kids are grown?
2:50:44 > 2:50:47After September 11th, our immediate visceral reaction,
2:50:47 > 2:50:51our gut reaction, resulted in Hole In The World.
2:50:54 > 2:50:59# Don't let there be a hole in the world tomorrow... #
2:50:59 > 2:51:02The Eagles have written and sung plenty of love songs
2:51:02 > 2:51:05over the years, but we've also written and sung songs
2:51:05 > 2:51:07that have to do with what's going on in the wider world.
2:51:07 > 2:51:10We've never shied away from social commentary.
2:51:10 > 2:51:12We think it's part of a rich tradition that dates all
2:51:12 > 2:51:14the way back to medieval times.
2:51:14 > 2:51:16And so we still engage in it.
2:51:18 > 2:51:21# No more walks in the wood
2:51:22 > 2:51:26# The trees have all been cut down
2:51:28 > 2:51:30# And where once they stood
2:51:32 > 2:51:37# Not even a wagon rut appears along the path... #
2:51:39 > 2:51:43The writings and the ideas of Henry David Thoreau
2:51:43 > 2:51:45and Ralph Waldo Emerson had a huge impact on me.
2:51:45 > 2:51:48They got me through some very difficult times in my life,
2:51:48 > 2:51:52one being when my father was stricken with heart disease,
2:51:52 > 2:51:55and provided a lot of spiritual support for me.
2:51:55 > 2:51:59When I found out in 1980 that part of Walden was going to be
2:51:59 > 2:52:01destroyed by commercial development,
2:52:01 > 2:52:05I decided that was something I needed to help fight.
2:52:05 > 2:52:08So I ended up founding the Walden Woods Project.
2:52:08 > 2:52:11And we are in our 27th year now, and we've accomplished a great deal.
2:52:11 > 2:52:15It's been one of the most rewarding things that I've ever done.
2:52:15 > 2:52:19# We and the trees and the way
2:52:21 > 2:52:24# Back from the fields of play... #
2:52:26 > 2:52:29The lyrics to that song were originally a poem
2:52:29 > 2:52:32written by a great American poet named John Hollander.
2:52:32 > 2:52:35# No more walks in the wood. #
2:52:48 > 2:52:52Don had this title, Long Road Out Of Eden.
2:52:52 > 2:52:54Timothy goes over, and he picks up an acoustic guitar.
2:52:54 > 2:52:58And I go over to the keyboards and Joe grabs a guitar
2:52:58 > 2:52:59and Don goes on the drums.
2:52:59 > 2:53:03And we start making up this sort of musical story called
2:53:03 > 2:53:08Long Road Out Of Eden, a story of, really, the war in Iraq.
2:53:09 > 2:53:13# Moon shining down through the palms
2:53:14 > 2:53:18# Shadows moving on the sand... #
2:53:18 > 2:53:21And it was, like, the last resort.
2:53:21 > 2:53:25It was another opus, another David Lean movie.
2:53:25 > 2:53:32# And it's a long road out of Eden. #
2:53:33 > 2:53:35We finally got through,
2:53:35 > 2:53:37and we finally made Long Road Out Of Eden.
2:53:37 > 2:53:39And we didn't give it to a record company.
2:53:39 > 2:53:42We made a deal with Walmart.
2:53:42 > 2:53:46This was the first major artist to do a direct-to-retail release
2:53:46 > 2:53:48and bypass the major record companies.
2:53:48 > 2:53:50It was phenomenally successful.
2:53:50 > 2:53:51The album entered at number one.
2:53:51 > 2:53:55It gave, I think, the whole industry hope that it could find a new
2:53:55 > 2:53:57and different way to reach its fans.
2:53:57 > 2:53:59They're becoming a much greener company,
2:53:59 > 2:54:00and that was important to me.
2:54:00 > 2:54:04And the other good thing was that our fans got 20 songs for 12 bucks.
2:54:04 > 2:54:07It was basically a double album, and they weren't charged double for it.
2:54:10 > 2:54:14Don said, "I got a title for a song - Busy Being Fabulous."
2:54:14 > 2:54:16And I thought, "What a great title."
2:54:16 > 2:54:20# I came home to an empty house
2:54:21 > 2:54:24# And I found your little note... #
2:54:24 > 2:54:26And then Don wrote, "Don't wait up for me tonight,
2:54:26 > 2:54:28"that was all she wrote."
2:54:28 > 2:54:30# Don't wait up for me tonight
2:54:30 > 2:54:33# And that was all she wrote... #
2:54:33 > 2:54:35And then we were off on the story.
2:54:35 > 2:54:39# You were just too busy being fabulous
2:54:41 > 2:54:44# Too busy to think about us... #
2:54:47 > 2:54:49Busy Being Fabulous, Don and Glenn had gotten it
2:54:49 > 2:54:52to a certain state, and I came up with some stuff for the bridge
2:54:52 > 2:54:55and tweaked what already existed.
2:54:55 > 2:54:58I was very involved in the Long Road record.
2:54:58 > 2:55:01I've always been a lot happier getting into the entire project,
2:55:01 > 2:55:05arranging stuff, producing the stuff, co-writing the stuff.
2:55:05 > 2:55:08Like, Waiting In The Weeds and Business As Usual
2:55:08 > 2:55:10were co-writes with Don.
2:55:10 > 2:55:15Getting Steuart Smith in the band was a real shot in the arm.
2:55:15 > 2:55:18He's such a terrific musician.
2:55:24 > 2:55:25It's a great solo.
2:55:25 > 2:55:27It's like stepping into a space suit.
2:55:29 > 2:55:32It is strange to be playing that song.
2:55:32 > 2:55:36The reaction is terrific, and you bask in that excitement.
2:55:36 > 2:55:37But I didn't write it.
2:55:44 > 2:55:47I'm one part hired gun, but also one part collaborator.
2:55:47 > 2:55:51I'm one of the guitar players. But I'm not an Eagle.
2:55:52 > 2:55:55I don't know what it's like to be one of those guys.
2:55:55 > 2:55:56Three, four!
2:55:59 > 2:56:01My kids were looking on the Internet,
2:56:01 > 2:56:06and they found this show that the Eagles had done in 1974.
2:56:10 > 2:56:14I was in my office watching TV, and my kids come in and say,
2:56:14 > 2:56:16"Hey, Dad, come here.
2:56:16 > 2:56:18"You got to take a look at your hair."
2:56:18 > 2:56:20And one of the songs was How Long.
2:56:20 > 2:56:23# But if I never see the good old days
2:56:23 > 2:56:26# Shining in the sun
2:56:27 > 2:56:30# I'll be doing fine and then some
2:56:33 > 2:56:36# Tell me how long... #
2:56:36 > 2:56:39How Long was from my first solo album.
2:56:39 > 2:56:41They found that cos Cindy saw it on YouTube and said,
2:56:41 > 2:56:42"Glenn, what's this?"
2:56:42 > 2:56:45And he said, "Oh, it's a song of JD's."
2:56:45 > 2:56:47She said, "Well, you didn't cut it, did you?"
2:56:47 > 2:56:51# How long, how long Rock yourself to sleep
2:56:52 > 2:56:55GUITAR SOLO
2:56:59 > 2:57:03JD wanted it on his solo album, so we never recorded it.
2:57:03 > 2:57:07My wife said, "Hey, that sounds like a hit Eagles song."
2:57:07 > 2:57:11# Everybody feels all right you know I heard some poor fool say
2:57:11 > 2:57:13# Somebody
2:57:13 > 2:57:17# Everyone is out there on the loose
2:57:19 > 2:57:25# Well, I wish I lived in the land of fools, and no one knew my name
2:57:26 > 2:57:31# But what you get is not quite what you choose
2:57:33 > 2:57:36# Tell me, how long, how long
2:57:36 > 2:57:39# Woman will you weep? #
2:57:39 > 2:57:41They are the American band.
2:57:41 > 2:57:45Yeah, they pretty much encompassed the '70s, didn't they?
2:57:45 > 2:57:46And took it all in.
2:57:46 > 2:57:50That's a long time to still have a musical impact,
2:57:50 > 2:57:54and it's due to this incredibly crisp, tight,
2:57:54 > 2:57:59extraordinarily good record-making band and the presence of good songs.
2:57:59 > 2:58:01But it's also now taken on this other thing, too,
2:58:01 > 2:58:05where it's everybody through the band wants to remember a
2:58:05 > 2:58:07'70s that they may or may not have had.
2:58:07 > 2:58:11# Good night, baby, rock yourself to sleep
2:58:11 > 2:58:14# Sleep tight, baby, rock yourself to sleep
2:58:14 > 2:58:20# B-B-B-Bye-bye, baby, rock yourself to slee-e-e-ep. #
2:58:32 > 2:58:35This band could go play stadiums all over the country,
2:58:35 > 2:58:38and people know these songs so intimately.
2:58:44 > 2:58:48They last. The songs last.
2:58:50 > 2:58:52I have one small plaque on my wall.
2:58:52 > 2:58:56It says, "Presented to the Eagles to commemorate the best-selling
2:58:56 > 2:58:58"album of the 20th century,
2:58:58 > 2:59:01"with sales in excess of 26 million units."
2:59:01 > 2:59:05That century's gone, so nobody's going to top that.
2:59:08 > 2:59:10What's it like to be an Eagle now?
2:59:10 > 2:59:13It's just part of my life. I do normal things.
2:59:13 > 2:59:18I go to the market, and once in a while, somebody comes up to me.
2:59:18 > 2:59:20I don't walk around being an Eagle.
2:59:20 > 2:59:23I'm an Eagle when it's time for me to be.
2:59:23 > 2:59:27I made sure the dishes were done before you guys came today.
2:59:27 > 2:59:29You know?
2:59:45 > 2:59:47# He was a hard-headed man
2:59:47 > 2:59:51# And he was brutally handsome
2:59:51 > 2:59:53# She was terminally pretty
2:59:55 > 2:59:58# She held him up and he held her for ransom
2:59:58 > 3:00:02# In the heart of the cold, cold city
3:00:03 > 3:00:07# He had a nasty reputation as a cruel dude
3:00:07 > 3:00:11# They said he was ruthless, they said he was crude
3:00:11 > 3:00:15# They had one thing in common, they were good in bed
3:00:15 > 3:00:20# She'd say, "Faster, faster, the lights are turnin' red"
3:00:20 > 3:00:23# Life in the fast lane
3:00:23 > 3:00:25# Surely make you lose your mind
3:00:25 > 3:00:27# Life in the fast lane... #
3:00:29 > 3:00:31I love everybody in the band like a brother.
3:00:31 > 3:00:36To be part of a real band -
3:00:36 > 3:00:38a REAL band -
3:00:38 > 3:00:43is something that not all musicians get to do in their life.
3:00:45 > 3:00:50And I'm real lucky to have that chapter in my book.
3:00:57 > 3:01:01Rock'n'roll saved my life. It changed my life tremendously.
3:01:04 > 3:01:08And as Mick Jagger so famously and eloquently said,
3:01:08 > 3:01:11"It's only rock'n'roll, but I like it."
3:01:11 > 3:01:13I think that one of the reasons that Glenn and I
3:01:13 > 3:01:16wanted to write songs is because rock'n'roll music got us
3:01:16 > 3:01:19through junior high and through high school and those difficult
3:01:19 > 3:01:21times when you're searching for your identity
3:01:21 > 3:01:23and wondering who the heck you are,
3:01:23 > 3:01:26trying to get girls to notice you, and wondering why
3:01:26 > 3:01:29the football players are doing so much better than you are.
3:01:30 > 3:01:35At the end of the day, it was and still is about the music.
3:01:36 > 3:01:40# You know, I've always been a dreamer... #
3:01:40 > 3:01:44I regret that I didn't handle some of the adversity
3:01:44 > 3:01:46that the Eagles faced in the late '70s better.
3:01:46 > 3:01:48Fortunately, for me,
3:01:48 > 3:01:52I've had another chance to be the leader of the Eagles, another
3:01:52 > 3:01:57chance to be Don's partner and do this work again and play this music.
3:01:57 > 3:02:01And in this second run, I think I've done a pretty good job
3:02:01 > 3:02:07of keeping the peace and keep the band together, keep everybody happy.
3:02:07 > 3:02:09So here we are.
3:02:10 > 3:02:12Still doing it.
3:02:12 > 3:02:17# You gotta take it to the limit
3:02:17 > 3:02:20# One more time. #
3:02:23 > 3:02:26APPLAUSE AND CHEERING
3:02:29 > 3:02:31Thank you.
3:02:36 > 3:02:38That's it! That's it!
3:02:40 > 3:02:41Bye-bye.
3:02:43 > 3:02:45'We wanted longevity.
3:02:45 > 3:02:48'It wasn't a hobby for us. It wasn't a game.
3:02:48 > 3:02:52'It wasn't a pleasant diversion. It was a life.
3:02:52 > 3:02:54'It was a calling. It was a career.'
3:02:54 > 3:02:56It was worth it.
3:03:00 > 3:03:02We went to China last year.
3:03:02 > 3:03:05We're still breaking new ground 40 years later.
3:03:07 > 3:03:08Back in the late '70s,
3:03:08 > 3:03:11Neil Young sang a song about the emerging punk ethic.
3:03:11 > 3:03:13And the pivotal line in that song was,
3:03:13 > 3:03:16"It's better to burn out than it is to rust."
3:03:16 > 3:03:18And I'm not sure that even Neil himself
3:03:18 > 3:03:21subscribed to that sentiment, but I don't see rust as a bad thing.
3:03:21 > 3:03:27I have an old 1962 John Deere tractor that's covered with rust,
3:03:27 > 3:03:28but it runs like a top.
3:03:28 > 3:03:31You know, the inner workings are just fine.
3:03:31 > 3:03:34# You better let somebody love you
3:03:36 > 3:03:39# Let somebody love you
3:03:39 > 3:03:45# You better let somebody love... #
3:03:45 > 3:03:48'To me, that rust symbolises all the miles driven
3:03:48 > 3:03:53'and all the good work done and all the experiences gained.'
3:03:56 > 3:04:01# Before it's too-o-o-o
3:04:03 > 3:04:07# Late. #
3:04:07 > 3:04:09CHEERING
3:04:13 > 3:04:17'From where I sit, the rust looks pretty good.'
3:04:56 > 3:04:59When somebody is around 40 years, it means they've got something,
3:04:59 > 3:05:01something that people want. And the Eagles have that.
3:05:01 > 3:05:04To me, the Eagles really expressed a mood.
3:05:04 > 3:05:06California was the place of dreams.
3:05:06 > 3:05:09It was a time of limitless possibilities.
3:05:09 > 3:05:13I think they were a defining moment in the rock'n'roll world
3:05:13 > 3:05:14that I love.
3:05:14 > 3:05:18You couldn't really love the Eagles music and be an Eagles fan
3:05:18 > 3:05:22and actually know them and not aspire to greatness yourself.
3:05:22 > 3:05:25I'm not really into legacies. People talk to me, "What's your legacy?"
3:05:25 > 3:05:27I'm here now.
3:05:27 > 3:05:31I'm doing what I want to do, and I'm trying to make stuff happen.
3:05:31 > 3:05:33I see the Eagles in the same way.
3:05:33 > 3:05:36They're not in the '70s.
3:05:36 > 3:05:38They're in 2012 and 2013.
3:05:38 > 3:05:40And whatever they're doing now artistically,
3:05:40 > 3:05:42that's what's important.
3:05:42 > 3:05:47- # In the long run - In the long run
3:05:47 > 3:05:53# We can handle some resistance If our love is a strong one
3:05:53 > 3:05:56# Is a strong one
3:05:57 > 3:06:01# People talkin' about us They got nothin' else to do
3:06:01 > 3:06:06# When it all comes down we will still come through
3:06:06 > 3:06:11- # In the long run - Ooh, I want to tell you
3:06:11 > 3:06:13# It's a long run
3:06:16 > 3:06:20# You know I don't understand why you don't treat yourself better
3:06:20 > 3:06:24# Do the crazy things that you do
3:06:26 > 3:06:28# Cos all the debutantes... #
3:06:28 > 3:06:31Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd