The idea came to the band during their early days when they used to frequent their haunt of choice, Dan Tana’s, as told in their 1994 concert film, Hell Freezes Over. “The story had always been there,” Frey added. Of “Lyin’ Eyes,” the Eagles’ guitarist-vocalist Glenn Frey chimed in. “I helped out with the verses and perhaps with the melody. “Glenn’s pretty much responsible for that track and for the title, the choruses,” Henley mentioned. While a heart-wrenching song about searching and settling, the lyrics evoke images of late nights awash in bright city lights. “Lyin’ Eyes” mirrors the splendors they beheld while living in that house while surrounded on all sides by such beauty. It was at that house that several of the band’s hits, including “One of These Nights,” “Take It to the Limit,” and “After the Thrill Is Gone,” were born. “We had some great times up there,” the drummer added. Henley remembered being able to look out over “snowcapped peaks to the east,” “the blue Pacific to the west,” and see “the twinkling lights of the city below” at night. Nicknamed “the House With the Million Dollar View” and at times “The Eagles’ Nest,” the place – situated on Briarcrest Lane in the upscale Los Angeles neighborhood of Beverly Hills – had a 360-degree panoramic view.
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