“I love the song,” Eagles’ Glenn Frey said of Tequila Sunrise. “I think the goal of any songwriter is to make a song appear seamless, to never show the struggle. Nothing should sound forced. Tequila Sunrise was written fairly quickly, and I don’t think there’s a single chord out of place.”
Released as the first single from Eagles’ second album, Desperado, Tequila Sunrise was the sound of a band who – having established their commercial potential with their debut album – now explored a more conceptual bent to their music and lyrics. Riffing on themes of outlaws, Eagles created a song that fused louche Californian drinking culture with ghosts of rebel ancestors.
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Who wrote Tequila Sunrise?
Eagles’ songwriters Don Henley and Glenn Frey wrote Tequila Sunrise together. This was different from the approach taken on Eagles’ self-titled debut album, where, although the pair had been bandmates, they were not yet a songwriting partnership. For Desperado, things changed, with Frey and Henley collaborating on the title track and Tequila Sunrise, writing both within a week.
Tequila Sunrise began with a Glenn Frey guitar riff (“kinda Roy Orbison, kinda Mexican”, as Frey described it), and the pair worked on the song from there. “I was a terrible songwriter when I got in this band,” Henley freely admitted in 2013. “I learned from Glenn and JD Souther and Jackson Browne.” Since future Henley-Frey compositions included Lyin’ Eyes and Hotel California, it’s fair to say that Henley learned well; and it all began with Tequila Sunrise and Desperado.