

Jennifur Sun from RamonaWillie that was Smugglers Blues.Turning 69 this year puts a smile on my face that I lived during the time they created most of my happiness. Their songs make everyone the same age loving the same music with smiles on their faces. Tammie Sunday from Lawton, OklahomaLove the group, love the memories.Anonymousit should be "right in the back, slain".AnonymousThe lyrics say terminally pretty but clearly it's terminally ugly.When reminded that his Eagles bandmates may have exhibited some symptoms described in this song, Walsh replied: "Yeah, that's probably true, and I think it was healthy, though, that we realized that running around and parties and fast cars are really not the answer – it's kind of a shallow way to approach why we're on this planet, and it probably came as a band consciousness." For instance, disco almost turned into a lifestyle, and it's such a non-meaningful thing on which to base one's life." It wasn't really a statement about the guys in the band, or about anybody in particular – just it's kind of disturbing to see the extremes that the bourgeois jet set will involve themselves in. In a 1981 interview with the BBC, Frey explained: "Life In The Fast Lane' kind of expressed the stereotyped LA 'run around in your Porsche' 24 hour boogie mode that unfortunately is too true for a lot of people. Hotel California was the Eagles' first album with their new guitarist Joe Walsh, who helped write this song with Don Henley and Glenn Frey. This song describes a man and woman who had everything but lost it because of their lifestyles.
