The Country-Rock OG Is Back
Bernie Leadon — yeah, that Bernie Leadon — founding member of the Eagles, Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, GRAMMY winner, and one of the architects of country rock — just dropped his first new album in over two decades. And trust us, it was worth the wait.
The record, Too Late To Be Cool, out now at bernieleadon.ai, marks a bold new chapter from an artist who helped shape American music as we know it. Instead of chasing trends, Leadon doubles down on what he does best: heartfelt songwriting, timeless arrangements, and musicianship that never goes out of style.
Tracked live to analog tape (yep, tape), the album was produced and engineered by Leadon’s longtime friend and collaborator Glyn Johns — the legendary studio ear behind the Stones, The Who, and more. With Tony Harrell on keys, Greg Morrow on drums, and Glenn Worf on bass, the sessions feel like a masterclass in feel-over-flash.
“Too Late to Be Cool showcases Bernie Leadon’s wide-ranging instrumental talents and his canny lyrical insights into human nature,” wrote No Depression’s Henry Carrigan. “It’s good to have Leadon back.”
Lessons, Stories, and Six Decades of Soul
This isn’t some nostalgia project — it’s a reflection. Every lyric was written by Leadon himself, stitching together memories, lessons, and moments from a six-decade career spent chasing songs across genres. Critics are already calling the album a standout in authenticity and songwriting craft.
“Too Late to Be Cool works in the now-timeless musical palettes that have defined Leadon – and, in no small way, the wider Americana movement,” says Nick DeRiso of Ultimate Classic Rock.
And Leadon isn’t just releasing new music — he’s back out there living it. He headlined AMERICANAFEST last month, appeared at the Country Music Hall of Fame, and inked a long-term publishing deal with Warner Chappell Music, setting the stage for a new era in his storied career.
The Guy Who Helped Invent the Sound
Leadon’s story is basically a blueprint for American roots music. Before co-founding the Eagles in 1971 with Glenn Frey, Don Henley, and Randy Meisner, he was already breaking new ground with The Flying Burrito Brothers and Dillard & Clark, fusing country, rock, and folk in ways that hadn’t been done before.
His fingerprints are all over some of the Eagles’ most iconic moments — from Eagles and Desperado to One of These Nights. He co-wrote “Witchy Woman” with Henley and helped shape a sound that made Eagles: Greatest Hits 1971–1975 the best-selling album in U.S. history.
After leaving the band in 1975, Leadon traded arena tours for authenticity, becoming one of the most respected collaborators in the business. He worked with Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, Stephen Stills, and Alabama, showing the same versatility that first made him a star. In 1998, he and the Eagles were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, sealing his place in music history.
Back to Basics, Forward With Fire
It’s been over 20 years since his last solo album (Mirror, 2004), but Too Late To Be Cool is no throwback — it’s a statement. Recorded without overdubs or digital fixes, it’s raw, real, and built on feel, just like the records that started it all.
Leadon has never been about chasing what’s “in.” For him, music is about truth, craftsmanship, and soul. And this record proves that none of those things ever go out of style.
Tracklist – Too Late To Be Cool
Zero Sum Game
Telescope
Just A Little
Take It As It Comes
Everyone’s Quirky
Go On Down to Mobile
Mama Didn’t Raise No Fool
Too Late To Be Cool
Fathom
Coast Highway
Too Many Memories
Bernie Leadon helped invent the sound that shaped generations — and now he’s back, reminding us why that sound still matters. Too Late To Be Cool isn’t about reliving the past. It’s about proving that real songs, real playing, and real soul never age.
💿 Listen now: Too Late To Be Cool is available at bernieleadon.ai