Lyin' Eyes

Lyin' Eyes

Eagles

From the album

One of These Nights (1975)

Written by

Don Henley, Glenn Frey

Key:G major
Duration:6:22

Listen to the Song

Summary

Written by Don Henley and Glenn Frey in 1975, "Lyin' Eyes" is a narrative-driven country-rock ballad that tells the tale of a woman trapped in a loveless marriage with a wealthy older man. Reaching #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and winning the Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Performance, it showcases the Eagles at the peak of their storytelling craft with lush harmonies and a pedal steel-laced arrangement.

country-rockEagles70s-classicstorytellingGrammy-winner

Musical Analysis

The harmony of 'Lyin' Eyes' is deceptively simple on the surface — rooted in standard country-rock diatonic progressions in G major — but the inclusion of the Gmaj7 as a passing chord elevates it beyond typical three-chord country fare. The major seventh creat…

Chords

verse:G - Gmaj7 - C - Am - D - G
chorus:Am - D - G - C - Am - D - G

History

The song was born during an evening at Dan Tana's, a popular Los Angeles restaurant and bar. Glenn Frey and Don Henley were people-watching when they noticed a beautiful young woman sitting with a much older, wealthy man. Frey remarked, 'She can't even hide th…

“The opening line was comped from six different takes across four recording days”

Full Musical Analysis

The harmony of 'Lyin' Eyes' is deceptively simple on the surface — rooted in standard country-rock diatonic progressions in G major — but the inclusion of the Gmaj7 as a passing chord elevates it beyond typical three-chord country fare. The major seventh creates a sophisticated, bittersweet color that perfectly serves the narrative's emotional undercurrent. The consistent ii–V–I resolutions throughout provide a sense of inevitability, while the pedal steel guitar weaves additional harmonic interest through bends and chromatic passing tones, bridging the gap between rock and country traditions.

The song was born during an evening at Dan Tana's, a popular Los Angeles restaurant and bar. Glenn Frey and Don Henley were people-watching when they noticed a beautiful young woman sitting with a much older, wealthy man. Frey remarked, 'She can't even hide those lyin' eyes,' and the line became the foundation of the song. According to Henley, Frey was the primary writer, though Henley contributed verses and musical ideas. The song flowed naturally during their writing sessions — Frey later said, 'The story had always been there. I don't want to say it wrote itself, but once we started working on it, there were no sticking points. Lyrics just kept coming out.'

Written by Don Henley and Glenn Frey in 1975, "Lyin' Eyes" is a narrative-driven country-rock ballad that tells the tale of a woman trapped in a loveless marriage with a wealthy older man. Reaching #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and winning the Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Performance, it showcases the Eagles at the peak of their storytelling craft with lush harmonies and a pedal steel-laced arrangement.

Deep Analysis Available

Detailed analysis of this section is not yet available for this song.

Song DNA

Genre

Rock

Era

70s

Mood

Nostalgic

Tempo

Mid-tempo

Key

Major

Texture

Full Band

Sound

Acoustic

Feel

Straight

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Listen & Learn

Statistics

943K

Plays

192K

Listeners

250K

Genius Views

18

Annotations

100%

Popularity

6:22

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

Don HenleyGlenn Frey

Produced by

Bill Szymczyk

From the album One of These Nights