1974 'Incoherent' Rock Classic, Made While the Band Was Drunk, May Never Be Played Again
In 1974, the Eagleswrote a song that even they couldn't explain.
Fifty years later, they might not ever play it again.
The album it came from showed up right after a major flop. Desperado, the record before it, was a whole concept album about lonesome outlaw cowboys, and it tanked. Glenn Frey and Don Henley needed something bigger. What they got instead was, even by their own admission, a bit of a mess, at least when it came to the title track.
"On the Border" was supposed to be about the Watergate scandal. It was supposed to sound like R&B. Neither of those things quite worked out.
"The song 'On the Border' had something to do with politics, more specifically with the Watergate scandal," Henley said years later. "But it was a pretty clumsy, incoherent attempt. It was supposed to be an R&B-type song, but we missed the mark."
It wasn't just the songwriting that they felt unsure about. "We were still learning the ropes in terms of songwriting," Henley admitted. "Our producer didn't really know what to do with it, either."
Then came the back up vocals. By the time the band got around to recording them, half the group was drunk. Nobody involved with the making of the song seemed to be taking the moment too seriously.
From 'Incoherent' to Untouchable
Fifty years later, almost nothing about this band looks the same.
Henley's the only original member left in the band. Unfortunately, his co-founder, Glenn Frey, died in 2016, and Vince Gill has been filling in on tour ever since.
The same album that gave the world "On the Border," the song its own writer called incoherent, also gave us "Already Gone" and "Best of My Love." Both of those songs ended up on Their Greatest Hits (1971-1975), and in January 2026 that album hit a number nobody else ever has, 40 million copies sold, officially making it the best-selling album in American history.
And now, the band that once couldn't explain one of its very own songs is explaining, very clearly, why it's time to stop performing.
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"I think this will probably be it," Henley told CBS Sunday Morning in early 2026. "I feel like we're getting toward the end, and that will be fine, too."
It wouldn't be the first time we thought it was the end. The Eagles broke up in 1980 swearing it was over, then got back together in 1994 for an album and tour that ended up lasting for decades.
This time, it's less about just the music and more about everything else. "I would like to spend more time with my family, and I would like to spend more time growing vegetables," Henley said. "I don't ever want to have a one-dimensional life," he added. With four children and a grandchild, "there's just lots of other things to do."
The Long Goodbye tour wrapped its Sphere residency in Las Vegas in March, then kept on going. A May date at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival turned into three more stadium shows, in Atlanta, Nashville and Arlington, with Tedeschi Trucks Band along for the ride. Asked if more shows might be coming, the band kept it vague, saying only that they'd share details as plans came together, and that they hoped to see as many fans as they could "before we finish up."
Whether "On the Border," the confused, drunk-vocals title track from 1974, makes any of those set lists is anyone's guess. Fifty years ago, the Eagles couldn't exactly figure out what they were making. Now, they know exactly what they're doing. They just haven't quite figured out how to stop.
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This story was originally published June 14, 2026 at 5:05 PM.