Eagles founder member and Take It to the Limit singer Randy Meisner has died aged 77, his band announced.
The bassist died of complications from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease on Wednesday night in Los Angeles, the Eagles said in a statement.
The legendary rock band said Randy was an “integral part” of the Eagles and “instrumental in the early success of the band.
“His vocal range was astonishing, as is evident on his signature ballad, Take It to the Limit,” they added.
Meisner, who added high harmonies to such favourites as Take It Easy and The Best of My Love joined Don Felder, Don Henley, Glenn Frey and Bernie Leadon in the early 1970s to form one of the most popular acts in history.
Evolving from country rock to hard rock, the Eagles turned out a run of hit singles and albums over the next decade, starting with Take It Easy and continuing with Desperado and Hotel California among others.
Led by singer-songwriters Henley and Frey, the Eagles were initially branded as “mellow” and “easy listening”.
More from Ents & Arts
But by their third album, the 1974 release On the Border, they had added a rock guitarist, Felder, and were turning away from country and bluegrass.
Leadon, an old-fashioned bluegrass picker, was unhappy with the new sound and left after the 1975 album One of These Nights.
Advertisement
Meisner stayed on through the 1976 release of Hotel California, the band’s most acclaimed record, but was gone soon after. His departure came shortly after the recording of the song he co-wrote and was best known for, Take It to the Limit.
The bassist had endured numerous afflictions in recent years and personal tragedy in 2016 when his wife, Lana Rae Meisner, accidentally shot and killed herself.
Meisner had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and had severe issues with alcohol, according to court records and comments made during a 2015 hearing in which a judge ordered Meisner to receive constant medical care.
He had been ill and homesick during the Hotel California tour (his first marriage was breaking up). His objections during a Knoxville, Tennessee concert in the summer of 1977 so angered Frey that the two argued backstage and Meisner left soon after.
As a solo artist, Meisner had hits with Hearts On Fire and Deep Inside My Heart.
A writer, whose “candid” and “unsparing” diaries have become the first to ever win the prestigious Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction. has told Sky News she is “delighted” to see the literary format recognised rather than dismissed.
Helen Garner, an acclaimed Australian author and diarist whose celebrity fans include singer Dua Lipa and fellow writer David Nicholls, said that diaries, often written by women, tended to be given “short shrift” in the literary industry.
She has now won the Baillie Gifford award for How To End A Story, a collection which charts 20 years of her life, from publishing her debut novel while raising a young daughter in the 1970s to the disintegration of her marriage in the 1990s.
Image: Garner accepted the award via video link from Australia. Pic: Baillie Gifford Prize
Judges hailed her as a “brilliant observer and listener” and described the diaries as a “recklessly candid, unsparing, occasionally eye-popping account of the implosion of a marriage”.
“Because they were often written by women, they used to be dismissed as just sort of verbal sludge that people… sort of lazily wrote down, but in actual fact to keep a decent diary involves as much hard work as writing a full-on book – in my experience, anyway. So I’m really glad that it’s been recognised.”
Garner was named winner of the £50,000 prize at a ceremony in London on Tuesday, and accepted her award via video link from Melbourne, Australia.
Journalist Robbie Millen, who chaired the prize jury, said her “addictive” book was the unanimous choice of the six judges.
“Garner takes the diary form, mixing the intimate, the intellectual, and the everyday, to new heights,” he said, comparing her to Virginia Woolf in the canon of great literary diarists. “There are places it’s toe-curlingly embarrassing. She puts it all out there.”
Image: How To End A Story was the judge’s unanimous choice. Pic: Baillie Gifford Prize
‘The mess my life became is not unique’
Garner, who has published novels, short stories, screenplays and true crime books, told Sky News she has been surprised to hear from so many readers who have related to her words and most intimate thoughts.
“People have said to me, ‘this could be my marriage’,” she said. “I found that rather shocking because it’s quite a painful story of a marriage collapsing, starting off with love, but then developing over the years into something painful and destructive.
“I’ve been glad to find that I’m not unique in that way, that the mess that I made in my life, the mess that my life became, it’s not unique. In fact, it’s archetypal. It’s something that’s happened to gazillions of people in the history of the world.”
Asked by Ridge if the book would have been a “difficult read” for her ex-husband, Garner replied: “I don’t know, I haven’t spoken to him for approximately 25 years. We won’t be speaking to each other again, I imagine. And if you’ve read the diary, you’ll see why.”
The other shortlisted titles
Jason Burke’s The Revolutionists: The Story Of The Extremists Who Hijacked The 1970s
Richard Holmes’s The Boundless Deep: Young Tennyson, Science And The Crisis Of Belief
Justin Marozzi’s Captives And Companions: A History Of Slavery And The Slave Trade In The Islamic World
Adam Weymouth’s Lone Wolf: Walking The Faultlines Of Europe
Frances Wilson’s Electric Spark: The Enigma Of Muriel Spark
How To End A Story is the first set of diaries to win the Baillie Gifford Prize, which was founded in 1999 and recognises English-language books in current affairs, history, politics, science, sport, travel, biography, autobiography and the arts.
It was selected from more than 350 books published between 1 November 2024 and 31 October 2025.
Becks, Goldenballs and now officially Sir David – football star David Beckham has received his knighthood from the King.
After years in the running following his OBE in 2003, the former England captain and Manchester United star has now been honoured for his services to sport and charity at an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle.
Nobel Prize-winning novelist Sir Kazuo Ishiguro and West End performer Dame Elaine Paige were also among the stars set to be recognised at the event.
Sir David, 50, who has described himself as a “huge royalist”, was last year named an ambassador for the King’s Foundation, an educational charity established by Charles in 1990.
The football star, who grew up in northeast London, made his Premier League debut for Manchester United in 1995 and was part of the team that earned a dramatic Champions League final victory in 1999 – when they beat Bayern Munich with two nail-biting late goals.
It was the year they famously won the treble, also taking home the Premier League and FA Cup silverware.
During his time with the club, Sir David scored 85 goals and collected honours including six Premier League titles and two FA Cups, before going on to play for clubs including Real Madrid, AC Milan, LA Galaxy, and Paris Saint-Germain.
He retired from the sport in 2013.
Alongside his football career, he is also known for his charity work, including serving as a goodwill ambassador for humanitarian aid organisation UNICEF since 2005.
Sir David’s wife Victoria, the Spice Girl turned fashion designer, joined him at the ceremony. The couple married in 1999 and have four children together – Brooklyn, Romeo, Cruz and Harper.
American actress and Wild at Heart star Diane Ladd has died aged 89.
Laura Dern, Ladd’s daughter who is also an actress, announced her mother’s death on Monday.
Ladd was a triple Academy Award nominee for her supporting roles in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, Wild at Heart and Rambling Rose.
She also starred in 1973 film White Lightning and HBO’s Enlightened in 2011 with her daughter. Often, they played mother and daughter together.
For the 1991 drama Rambling Rose they were the first, and only, mother and daughter duo to receive Oscar nominations for the same film in the same year.
Image: Diane Ladd pictured with daughter Laura Dern, holding her award for Enlightened in 2012. Pic: Reuters
‘She doesn’t care what anybody thinks’
Ms Dern, who starred in Jurassic Park, said of her mother in 2019: “She is just the greatest actress, ever. You don’t even use the word brave because she just shows up like that in life. She doesn’t care what anybody thinks.
“She leads with a boundarylessness.”
In 2023 they released a joint memoir together titled Honey, Baby, Mine: A Mother and Daughter Talk Life, Death, Love.
The book was based on their conversations together during daily walks after Ladd was given only months to live, after she was diagnosed with lung disease.
Ms Dern said at the time: “The more we talked and the deeper and more complicated subjects we shared, my mother got better and better and better.
“It’s been a great gift.”
Ladd was married three times and worked into her 80s.