The album was originally intended to be a double album. However, because the band could not come up with enough songs, the idea was scrapped. The recording was protracted; they started recording in 1978, and the album took 18 months to record in five different studios before it was finally released in September 1979. According to
Don Henley, the band members were "completely burned out" and "physically, emotionally, spiritually and creatively exhausted" from a long tour when they started recording the album, and they had few songs. However, they managed to put together ten songs for the album, with contribution from their friends
JD Souther and
Bob Seger who co-wrote with Frey and Henley on "
Heartache Tonight". He was replaced by
Timothy B. Schmit, who brought an unfinished song to the band, "
I Can't Tell You Why". Schmit wrote the song based loosely on his own experiences; both Henley and Frey liked the song and they completed the song together.
Joe Walsh also contributed the song "
In the City", which was first recorded by Walsh for the movie soundtrack for
The Warriors, where it was credited only to Walsh, not the Eagles. Don Felder wrote the tune for "The Disco Strangler" using a four-on-the-floor disco beat as the basis for the composition. Henley wrote the lyrics. Henley intended the song to be an antidote to disco as both he and the rest of the band disliked disco, which was the most popular musical genre at the time. The song "The Sad Cafe" was inspired by the
Troubadour nightclub in Hollywood where the Eagles once played, and also by
Dan Tana's restaurant that they frequented, while "The Greeks Don't Want No Freaks" was written as a homage to Sixties "
frat rock" such as the song "
96 Tears" by
? and the Mysterians. The album was produced by
Bill Szymczyk, although the Eagles were listed as co-producers. == Album pressing ==