Eagles Add More 2025 Concerts

· Ultimate Classic Rock

Eagles have added more show dates to their concert itinerary for 2025.

Four more shows were added to the band's Las Vegas Sphere residency in February 2025, bringing the current number of concerts on their schedule to 20. They will have played two dozen shows at the venue when the new dates conclude on Feb. 22, but seeing how shows are being added due to demand, there's a good chance even more performances will be added later.

Eagles began their concert series at the venue in late September, performing songs that spanned their career - from "Take It Easy" to "Heartache Tonight" - and included solo cuts from Don Henley ("The Boys of Summer") and Joe Walsh ("Rocky Mountain Way").

READ MORE: How Eagles Galloped Into the Old West on 'Desperado'

The new dates include Friday and Saturday performances in February at Sphere, an 18,600-seat auditorium noted for its immersive video and audio. U2 opened the venue in September 2023 with a residency.

Presales for the new Eagles concerts start on Oct. 8 at 1 p.m. EDT; the general on-sale begins on Oct. 11 at 1 p.m. EDT.

When Are Eagles Playing Shows in 2025?

Eagles' Live in Concert at Sphere residency resumes on Oct. 11 and includes weekend dates through the end of 2024 that run currently until Feb. 22. The new dates are Friday, Feb. 14, Saturday, Feb. 15, Friday, Feb. 21 and Saturday, Feb. 22.

You can see all of Eagles' current Sphere dates below. More information can be found on the band's website.

Eagles Live in Concert at Sphere
Friday, October 11
Saturday, October 12
Friday, October 18
Saturday, October 19
Friday, November 1
Saturday, November 2
Friday, November 8
Saturday, November 9
Friday, December 6
Saturday, December 7
Friday, December 13
Saturday, December 14
Friday, January 17
Saturday, January 18
Friday, January 24
Saturday, January 25
Friday, February 14, 2025
Saturday, February 15, 2025
Friday, February 21, 2025
Saturday, February 22, 2025

Asylum

7. 'Eagles' (1972)

At its best -- including the trio of hits 'Take It Easy,' 'Witchy Woman' and "Peaceful Easy Feeling' -- this is a debut that solidifies the then-emerging California country-rock sound. Dig deeper, though, and the Eagles were still rounding into shape. Tracks like 'Chug All Night' aren't on par with their later work, and there's a consistency of tone, an almost blissed-out hush, that can border on blandness. As future triumphs would make clear, there was, at this point, too much country and not enough rock.


Lost Highway Records

6. 'Long Road Out of Eden' (2007)

Even though it spawned five adult-contemporary hits and two Top 20 country songs, this long-awaited, four-man and Don Felder-less comeback album often shifts between bleak acceptance and schoolmarm scolding. And at 20 songs, it's simply too long. (Even Joe Walsh's 'Last Good Time in Town,' an admittedly fun update of 'Life in the Fast Lane,' somehow stretches out past seven minutes.) That said, its far-flung highlights -- like that momentous title track -- stand side by side with the Eagles' most celebrated work.


Asylum

5. 'The Long Run' (1979)

'The Long Run' is just as uneven as their debut album, though its high points are far higher. Glenn Frey's galloping 'Heartache Tonight,' in fact, may be the Eagles' best single. Meanwhile, the album's sadly prophetic title track, Timothy B. Schmit's 'I Can't Tell You Why,' 'Those Shoes' and 'In the City' remain radio staples. But cracks in the band's often tempestuous partnership had become impossible to ignore. ('Heartache' was Frey's only lead vocal; 'In the City' was a soundtrack remake from Joe Walsh.) Worse still, dated filler like 'Disco Strangler' confirmed they were in serious need of a break.


Asylum

4. 'On the Border' (1974)

As the Eagles struggled to free themselves of a country-rock trap of their own devising, they ditched their producer and brought in soon-to-be-member Don Felder for a turn on one song. The results are predictably transitional, but they point to everything that would soon make the Eagles superstars: 'Already Gone' rumbled with a jaundiced grit, while 'Best of My Love' -- the first of the group's five No. 1 singles -- was a masterpiece of world-weary ardor.


Asylum

3. 'One of These Nights' (1975)

For any other band, this would be a career-defining moment. There was another chart-topping song in the title track, one of the LP's three Top 5 singles; a Grammy win for 'Lyin' Eyes'; and four million in U.S. sales alone. But the Eagles' shift away from their rootsy beginnings -- confirmed here, but still incomplete -- led to the departure of founding member Bernie Leadon. Randy Meisner, who voiced 'Take It to the Limit,' would soon depart, too. All of that too often relegates 'One of These Nights' to a sort of preamble status. But that's only because we now know what came next in 'Hotel California.' It's a shame, because these remain some of the Eagles' best-realized songs.


Asylum

2. 'Desparado' (1973)

A one-topic expansion of everything they tried to do on their eponymous debut, the Old West-themed 'Desperado' is an often-overlooked project that just gets better with age. Of course, such an ambitious concept didn't exactly equal chart success. In fact, this album had no hits, despite later radio play for its title track (which was never released as a single) and 'Tequila Sunrise' (which limped to No. 64). Then there's the back cover, which shows producer Glyn Johns towering over our tied-up outlaws. That image would prove to be all too metaphorical. As satisfying as 'Desperado' no doubt was, the band quickly came to feel trapped in its cowboy clothes.


Asylum

1. 'Hotel California' (1976)

The familiar title track heralds an epic meditation on gluttony and greed, one that's eventually underscored on devastatingly frank deep cuts like 'Wasted Time' and 'The Last Resort.' The result is a concept album every bit as complete as 'Desperado,' but with a distinctly modern edge. Credit in part goes to the addition of Joe Walsh -- who acted like a final ingredient in what was becoming a combustible new era for the Eagles. He tangled brilliantly with Don Felder, while adding an every-man sensibility to Don Henley's meditations on post-modern decline amid the coke-addled hellscape that Los Angeles had become for these guys. In the end, Walsh's 'Life in the Fast Lane' would serve as the kind of winking summation they'd never been capable of before.

Next: How Eagles' 'One of These Nights' Ended and Started an Era