Swiss Journal of Research in Business and Social Sciences

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Eagles Top 40 Singles Ranked: All 17 Hits Reviewed


Key Takeaways

  • Chart Performance: The Eagles achieved 17 tracks on Billboard’s main chart, showcasing their enduring popularity.
  • Songwriting Dynamics: Don Henley and Glenn Frey emerged as the primary songwriting duo, leading the band through various hits.
  • Unexpected Omissions: Notable songs like “Desperado” and “Tequila Sunrise” did not make the Top 40 despite their significant streaming numbers.
  • Collaborative Contributions: Bandmates Randy Meisner and Joe Walsh played crucial roles in the Eagles’ success with their unique vocal and guitar contributions.

Rising to No. 1 on the list of Eagles Top 40 singles is no easy task.

A total of 17 tracks made Billboard’s main chart, with all but one arriving in the initial era of 1972-1980 that sealed their Rock & Roll Hall of Fame status. (The lone exception was Don Henley’s “Get Over It,” from the Eagles’ unlikely early ’90s reunion.)

They tell the story of a songwriting partnership that grew with each new studio album until Henley and Glenn Frey were the group’s acknowledged leaders. Lead vocals were pretty evenly split, with Henley on eight and Frey on six. Frey was the frontman on two chart-topping songs, while Henley had three. (Frey’s “Lyin’ Eyes” just missed at No. 2.)

READ MORE: Ranking Every Eagles Album

But their bandmates made key contributions along the way. Randy Meisner and his successor Timothy B. Schmit both sang their group into the Top 40 while everyone shared the mic for another charting favorite, “Seven Bridges Road.” Neither “Already Gone” nor “Life in the Fast Lane” would have become a hit without signature guitar contributions from Don Felder and Joe Walsh, respectively.

Classic-rock radio listeners might be surprised by what doesn’t appear on the following Eagles list, including 1972’s “Desperado,” 1973’s “Tequila Sunrise” and 1976’s “Victim of Love.” It’s not because they’re unworthy of inclusion.

After all, “Tequila Sunrise” has been played more than 176 million times on Spotify alone. “Victim of Love” added 49 million more listens. “Desperado” has a whopping 224 million streams on Spotify. Yet they never made the Top 40 upon original release: “Tequila Sunrise” only reached No. 64 on Billboard’s main chart. Despite earning significant radio airplay, “Desperado” and “Victim of Love” were never released as singles.

Here’s a look back at the band’s bona fide hits, with a ranking of all 17 Eagles Top 40 singles:

No. 17. “Get Over It”
Hot 100: #31
From: Hell Freezes Over (1994)

Seemingly prone to bad moods, Don Henley returned to Eagles with a glum song that draws out the worst of those tendencies. Even a scalding turn on the slide from Joe Walsh can’t get things back on track as Henley unironically calls out others for “all this bitching, moaning, pitching a fit.” Still, it had been almost 15 years since the Eagles had last released a single, so “Get Over It” reached the Top 40 anyway.

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No. 16. “Please Come Home for Christmas”
Hot 100: #18
From: 1978 single

Sessions for the follow-up to Hotel California were dragging on, and executives at Asylum had grown concerned. Everybody needed a break. Henley suggested the recently reformulated Eagles cover an old Charles Brown song he remembered as a kid growing up in east Texas. “Please Come Home for Christmas” served as an official introduction to Timothy B. Schmit, who replaced Randy Meisner after the Eagles’ most recent tour completed. It also broke the creative logjam: They completed The Long Run mere months after this holiday song hit.

No. 15. “Seven Bridges Road”
Hot 100: #21
From: Eagles Live (1980)

The band’s gorgeous harmonies on “Seven Bridges Road” belied what was really going on behind the scenes. Recorded live just days before their breakup, this tribute to an old Alabama country route written by singer-songwriter Steve Young became the Eagles’ final charting single until an unlikely early-’90s reunion. The template for their work was a remarkably similar 1973 version by Iain Matthews that was produced by Mike Nesmith of the Monkees.

No. 14. “I Can’t Tell You Why”
Hot 100: #8
From: The Long Run (1979)

Poor Timothy B. Schmit. The first Eagles song to feature Meisner’s replacement was also the first to be completed for The Long Run. Then it became a very long run indeed, as sessions dragged on from March 1978 through September 1979. “I Can’t Tell You Why,” with one of Glenn Frey’s most expressive guitar solos, wasn’t released as the LP’s third single until February 1980. By July, Eagles were in the midst of a lengthy hiatus.

No. 13. "Peaceful Easy Feeling"
Hot 100: #22
From: Eagles (1972)

Eagles had been together just a little more than a week when Frey brought in this song from buddy Jack Tempchin. Written off and on while Tempchin was girl watching around his hometown of San Diego, the third single from their debut is brought to life through sunlit backing vocals from Bernie Leadon and Randy Meisner. Its timeless message about fate did the rest: “Part of the idea is when you give up looking for something, a lot of times that’s when you find it,” Tempchin told Culture Sonar. “Your looking was getting in the way.”

No. 12. “Witchy Woman”
Hot 100: #9
From: Eagles (1972)

Henley’s only songwriting credit on the Eagles’ first album arrived courtesy of a half-finished song Leadon had been working on since his days with the Flying Burrito Brothers. “[Leadon] came over one day and started playing this strange, minor-key riff that sounded sort of like a Hollywood movie version of Indian music — you know, the kind of stuff they play when the Indians ride up on the ridge while the wagon train passes below,” Henley later told Cameron Crowe. “It had a haunting quality, and I thought it was interesting, so we put a rough version of it down on a cassette tape.” Frey completed things with a standout guitar solo.

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No. 11. “New Kid in Town”
Hot 100: #1
From: Hotel California (1976)

“New Kid in Town” returned to the issue of aging but ended up revealing deeper worries surrounding the Eagles. “We were already chronicling our own demise,” Henley said in the liner notes to The Very Best Of. “We were basically saying, ‘Look, we know we’re red hot now, but we also know that somebody’s going to come along and replace us – both in music and in love.'” Frey and Henley helped complete an idea brought to the band by J.D. Souther. When they were finished, Eagles had their third chart-topping smash.

No. 10. “Life in the Fast Lane”
Hot 100: #11
From: Hotel California (1976)

Joe Walsh was fooling around with this riff in a loose rehearsal moment when the others took notice. Henley asked, “What the hell is that? We’ve got to figure out how to make a song out of that.” Then, some time later, Frey was barreling down the Santa Monica highway with a drug dealer he called “the Count.” “I was riding shotgun in a Corvette on the way to a poker game. The next thing I knew we’re going about 90 miles an hour,” Frey later remembered. “I say, ‘Hey, man, what are you doing?’ And he looked at me and he grinned, and he goes, ‘Life in the fast lane!'” Released as the final single from Hotel California, the results shot to No. 11.

No. 9. “Lyin’ Eyes”
Hot 100: #2
From: One of These Nights (1975)

This crossover hit was written in a rush of inspiration over just two days. Yet every element of this wry narrative about a gold digger’s empty life unfolds with a writerly knack for detail. Glenn Frey shifts points of view, never wasting a word as he fills in the blanks around a real-life encounter he had while with Don Henley at their favorite ’70s-era watering hole, Dan Tana’s. They rushed back home working to get every word just right before heading directly into the studio where the Eagles displayed similar meticulousness: The song’s deeply resonant opening line – “City girls just seem to find out early” – actually represents six different tries.

No. 8. “Already Gone”
Hot 100: #32
From: On the Border (1974)

You could partly blame “Locomotive Breath” for the Eagles’ split with Glyn Johns while recording this album. “We’re taking a beating opening for Jethro Tull,” Frey said in 1973: Rock at the Crossroads, “and our feeling was, ‘We gotta have some kick-ass songs.'” Eagles started with “Already Gone,” as the band and new producer Bill Szymczyk shifted to Record Plant in Los Angeles. Newly added guitarist Don Felder then brought sharp edge to session work; Frey noted that leaving England behind contributed positively to their energy in studio.

No. 7. “Heartache Tonight”
Hot 100: #1
From: The Long Run (1979)

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This took forever to finish like everything else on The Long Run. Frey’s initial inspiration was straightforward love for old Sam Cooke records played out as loose jam with J.D Souther; however he got stuck midway through writing it until Bob Seger helped them piece together fun-sounding Grammy winner when he blurted out title line which led it become another No1 single for them.

No. 6. “The Long Run”
Not Hot 100: #8
From: The Long Run (1979)

Eagles had scaled mountain top reaching era-defining plateau with Hotel California. There was really nowhere else go but down still title track from band’s final classic-era album makes clear they intended go down swinging despite disco explosion punk rise; Henley noted press articles about how they were becoming passe served part inspiration behind writing it asking “Who is gonna make it? We’ll find out in long run.” Of course group promptly imploded but legacy grew leading them back improbable reunion during ‘90s era.

No. 5. "Best of My Love"
Hot 100: #1
From: On The Border(1974)

“Best Of My Love” remembered today breakthrough single but there controversy involved reaching goal; seems label shortened song airplay without clearing anything beforehand going from original length four minutes thirty-four seconds down three minutes twenty-five seconds AM radio edit making it first five ‘70s-era chart-toppers band which infuriated everyone leading them come up ingenious plan hacking piece out gold-painted forty-five single presenting bosses Asylum Records offices message received!

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Sarah Parker
Sarah Parker is a research analyst and content contributor with a strong interest in business strategy, organizational behavior, and social development. With a background in sociology and public policy, she focuses on exploring the intersection between research and real-world application. Sarah regularly contributes articles that bridge academic insights and practical relevance, aiming to foster critical thinking and innovation across sectors.