![]() ![]() One more record, 1979's The Long Run, appeared before the band split, with Henley and Frey achieving considerable solo success during the '80s. By that point, the band's lineup had shifted - Leadon and Meisner were out, as was Leadon's replacement Don Felder guitarist Joe Walsh and bassist Timothy B Schmit were in - and the group turned out to be ill-equipped to handle their mega-stardom. Soon afterward, Their Greatest Hits (1971-1975) turned their early years into canon and then came 1976's Hotel California, a record that defined all manners of '70s excess. ![]() Hits came swiftly but stardom didn't settle in until the latter half of the decade, after 1975's One of These Nights became a smash. The chemistry was evident on-stage and in the studio, so the quartet decided to form a band, releasing their debut in 1972. For all four, one of those gigs was supporting Linda Ronstadt in 1971. Every one of the original members - Henley, Frey, Bernie Leadon, and Randy Meisner - had headed toward LA with different bands and once those groups fell apart, they stuck around town, playing whatever gig that happened to show up. This was not a group of teenage friends who played local dances together. Co-leaders Don Henley and Glenn Frey didn't seem like brothers, but rather partners who made a pact to lead a coolly professional outfit designed to maximize their impact. Not only did they sell more records and concert tickets than their peers - Their Greatest Hits (1971-1975) and Hotel California are two of the biggest-selling albums of all time - but they captured the shifting zeitgeist of the '70s, riding the country-rock hippie hangover at the end of the '60s until it reached the slick, expensive, and expansive pop/rock of Southern California in the late '70s. The Eagles were unquestionably the biggest mainstream American rock band to emerge in the 1970s. ![]()
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