Frey met drummer Don Henley in 1970. They were signed to the same label,
Amos Records, at that time and spent time at the
Troubadour. When
Linda Ronstadt needed a backup band for an upcoming tour, her manager
John Boylan hired Frey because Boylan needed someone who could play rhythm guitar and sing. Frey approached Don Henley to join Ronstadt.
Randy Meisner and
Bernie Leadon were also hired. Because the backing band personnel changed during the tour, the four played together only once: at a gig at
Disneyland. While on the tour, Frey and Henley decided to form a band together and were joined by Meisner on bass and Leadon on guitar, banjo, steel guitar, mandolin, and dobro, forming the
Eagles, with Frey playing guitar and keyboards and Henley playing drums. The band went on to become one of the
world's bestselling groups of all time. Frey wrote or co-wrote (often with Henley) many of the group's songs, and sang the lead vocals on a number of Eagles hits including "
Take It Easy", "
Peaceful Easy Feeling", "
Already Gone", "
Tequila Sunrise", "
Lyin' Eyes", "
New Kid in Town", "
Heartache Tonight" and "
How Long". The Eagles broke up around 1980 and reunited in 1994, when they released a new album,
Hell Freezes Over. The album had live tracks and four new songs. The Hell Freezes Over Tour followed. In 2012 on
The Tavis Smiley Show, Frey told Smiley, "When the Eagles broke up, people used to ask me and Don, 'When are the Eagles getting back together?' We used to answer, 'When Hell freezes over.' We thought it was a pretty good joke. People have the misconception that we were fighting a lot. It is not true. We had a lot of fun. We had a lot more fun than I think people realize." At their first live concert of 1994, Frey told the crowd, "For the record, we never broke up. We just took a 14-year vacation." The Eagles released the album
Long Road Out of Eden in 2007, and Frey participated in the Eagles'
Long Road Out of Eden Tour (2008–2011). In May 2012, Frey was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from
Berklee College of Music along with Henley,
Joe Walsh and
Timothy B. Schmit. In 2013, the two-part documentary
History of the Eagles, directed by
Alison Ellwood and co-produced by
Academy Award winner
Alex Gibney, was aired on
Showtime. The documentary won an
Emmy Award in 2013 for Outstanding Sound Mixing For Nonfiction Programming. An accompanying two-year
History of the Eagles world tour ended on July 29, 2015, at
Bossier City, Louisiana, a concert which would be Frey's final public appearance with the band. While the July 29, 2015 concert would be Frey's last public performance, he and the Eagles played a private concert two days later, on July 31, 2015, at Christian Brothers College High School,
St. Louis, for a major school donor's 59th birthday. The concert was kept secret, and even the 300 people invited didn't know they would be treated to an Eagles concert featuring nine songs. ==Solo career==