
‘Life in the Fast Lane’: Joe Walsh’s favourite Eagles song
The Eagles are the world’s least mysterious mystery. They are the only act with two records that rank in the ten best-selling albums of all time list, and yet there has never been a firm consensus regarding whether their name is prefixed with ‘the’ or they’re simply Eagles. The consensus on whether they’re America’s defining rock band or a middle-of-the-road aberration is even more contested.
The band seemed to typify the 1970s, but what exactly they embodied beyond the ‘country rock forefathers’ tag that often befalls them remains unclear. Hell, even the meaning behind their biggest hit, ‘Hotel California’, is as obfuscated as they come, and the track weirdly took two months before it hit the top of the charts for a solitary week before going on to be one of the biggest songs of all time.
Even the band themselves failed to agree on many things. This left the firm buddies squabbling and eventually embarking on an onstage brawl that brought things to an end. But during that time, they achieved great things beyond their commercial acclaim. Bob Dylan saying that ‘Pretty Maids All in a Row’ “could be one of the best songs ever” is achievement enough, though.
However, anyone about to conclude that perhaps this upheaval injected a degree of magic into their mix is set to be upended by Joe Walsh’s favourite song by the band—the product of a rare moment of harmony. As it happens, it is partly this harmonious origin story that endears the song to Walsh, a man who has more than a few regrets over how things in the band unfurled.
Often, for artists, it can be hard to separate the inception of the song from the end result. When it comes to Walsh’s favourite during his time in the band, the backstory provides a rare moment of brotherly warmth amid a swathe of brotherly bickering. “We were looking for input from me – Joe Walsh, rocker – that could be the foundation for an Eagles song,” he told Rolling Stone. “We had a couple false starts on stuff and hadn’t really found anything.”
“But one night, I was in my dressing room getting ready for a show, and I had this one lick I’d play over and over as part of warming up. Because it’s really a hard lick to play. And that’s ‘Life in the Fast Lane’,” he recalled. At that moment, Henley entered the room agog and demanded that they make it into an Eagles song right away. He was fired up with inspiration from the get-go, and they pretty much worked it into an anthem on the spot.
“So it’s a Walsh/Henley/Frey tune, and I’m really proud of it,” Walsh humbly concluded. Alas, it still doesn’t size up to what he claims is the best song he ever wrote, the solo effort, ‘Rocky Mountain Way’. But that is perhaps also tied to the issues he faced in the Eagles moving forward.
Once again, almost comically, the band disavow that it captures their lifestyle but rather the high-flying ways of their fellow sunny city denizens. As Glenn Frey told the BBC: “’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.“
He added: “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. For instance, disco almost turned into a lifestyle, and it’s such a non-meaningful thing on which to base one’s life.“
In truth, disco was once as pointed as punk, but by the time it reached LA, it had arrived in the fast lane of sanitised commercialisation, and it’s not without irony that the Eagles would be the band to put their finger on that.