In 2007, almost thirty years after their last album, "The Long Run" (1979), The Eagles returned with a double album titled "Long Road Out of Eden". With a collection of brilliant new songs, they successfully attempted to recapture the glory of their mid-seventies era. Featuring virtually the same lineup as that album three decades earlier, with the exception of the departed Don Felder, the band included the ever-present Joe Walsh, Don Henley, Glenn Frey, and Timothy B. Schmit. For this seventh album, they enlisted the help of a large group of session musicians, including guitarist Stuart Smith, percussionists Lenny Castro and Luis Conti, keyboardists Richard Davis and Michael Thompson, and drummer Scott Crago, as well as a substantial horn section. “Long Road Out Of Eden” presents a brilliant collection of country rock fused with soft rock, featuring standout tracks like the country-rock anthem “How Long”, which evokes the band’s unmistakable style, the shimmering “Busy Being Fabulous” and “Guilty Of The Crime”, the lucid and rhythmic “Somebody”, the borderland-tinged “Center Of The Universe”, the vintage “Last Good Time In Town”, and the funky rock anthem “Frail Grasp On The Big Picture”. The subsequent reception was as triumphant as it was astonishing, released at a time when illegal internet downloads were commonplace in the music world. However, this didn’t prevent the album from achieving sales exceeding ten million copies worldwide and twenty platinum records.


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