As one of the most well-known songs of the rock era, and the 49th greatest song of all time according to Rolling Stone magazine, chances are youve heard the famous song Hotel California by the Eagles from 1977 unless youve been living under a rock. (Death). The beast is the addition to the lifestyle which is drug fueled but is socially driven to other empty excesses. This song is about the attactive qualities of worldly things but their ultimate end. The lights and then a lady draws him in. Frey and Henley were both interested in the tune after hearing the demo, and discussed the concept for the lyrics. The snake representing the devil.
(Vagina). The girl with the pretty face is basically the seduction of the drugs. Let’s start with what the song is NOT about: It is not about death and hell and Anton LaVey’s church of Satan, as many interpretations have surmised based on a nior interpretation of the lyrics and the photos on the album jacket.
It’s about the jaded and hedonistic lifestyle that characterizes southern California. There are a lot of conflicting interpretations on the web, so I went to the horse’s mouth; Frey and Henley did an interview on 60 minutes. It's easy to see once you realize it. I thought it was about Thailand's Jail. Like they stab it with their steally knives but that just can't kill the beast is the addiction to the needle and what drug is in it. Period. Three months after its first release, the single was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), representing one million copies shipped. This woman courteously welcomes th… I don't know what the hell it means. Hotel California has inspired endless debates on what the lyrics re… he sees a pretty woman in the doorway of the hotel but cannot decide if he is in heaven or hell. There is no wine as it has been replaced with drugs. I have been an Eagles super-fan for three decades now; I think Hotel California is one of the best songs of my lifetime and I have been on a journey to find out the meaning as intended by the authors (Henley, Frey and Felder). Or maybe the females that draw the men into the hotel or drugs. You can check out but you can never leave - you can leave Vietnam but it’ll never leave you!
Frey and Henley also done one-on-one interviews – all in the 90’s.I have watched all these interviews and have compiled what I think the authors were after. The lady with the pretty boys is rich and maybe once famous but is now using money to attract where beauty once did.
Now that all the pedophilia/sex trafficking/satanists are being exposed on QAnon .pub and QMap .pub sites as of the big drop on 3/20/2019, I think the song is talking about how Hollywood lures and traps them into the lifestyle, and I think the Hotel itself may be alluding to The Standard, where Ray (Rachel) Chandler is active as a front for procurement of children and young teens for the Elite, for ritual sexual abuse and torture to acquire Adrenochrome, secreted by the body when terror-induced. People laugh at him saying pretty face because they know he doesn’t know where he is. And he sees a light he dies.
I interpret this song to be about hell. He has the power to check out, but as the night man explains, no one there has the will. There goes my bubble According to the Straight Dope newsletter, there was a post on the Usenet by Thomas Dzubin of Vancouver, British Columbia, with one of the theories. Obwohl sie gastfreundlich erscheinen, sind sie Gefangene ihrer Der mehrdeutige Text hat diverse Auslegungen entstehen lassen. And later finds out he’s dead. The music intro reveals a rattle coming from a rattlesnake. the man drives along the highway (his life) and his head grows heavy and his sight grows dim, forcing him to stop for the night (he dies). Hollywood's been showing us right under our noses in movies for years. But in a nutshell, I believe it is based on a real place that had alot of partying and over indulgement have drugs which caused alot of addictions, overdoses, and or suicides, for those who did not know how to escape from all the choas that drugs had caused in their lives. Something like an episode of the Twilight Zone including fantasy, science fiction, suspense, horror, and psychological thriller, often concluding with a macabre or unexpected twist, and usually with a moral. Februar 1977. This song is so ambiguous. This is about the excesses and facades of the glamour life centered in Southern California.