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Eagles add two dates at Kia Forum to its The Long Goodbye Final Tour

Tickets to the pair of hometown shows go on sale next week.

The Eagles will headline Kia Forum in Inglewood on its The Long Goodbye Final Tour in January 2024.  (Photo by Ethan Miller, Getty Images)
The Eagles will headline Kia Forum in Inglewood on its The Long Goodbye Final Tour in January 2024. (Photo by Ethan Miller, Getty Images)
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Los Angeles-based rock band the Eagles have added two additional shows to their The Long Goodbye Final Tour.

The evenings, dubbed The California Concerts, will take place at Kia Forum in Inglewood on Friday, Jan. 5 and Saturday, Jan. 6.

The shows will also mark the 10th anniversary of the six Eagles’ concerts that reopened Forum after it underwent a $100 million renovation back in 2014.

A special presale begins at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 11 and runs through 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12. Remaining tickets go on sale to the general public starting at 10 a.m. Friday, Oct. 13 at Ticketmaster.com. Both California shows will be opened by fellow Rock and Roll Hall of Fame band Steely Dan, which is out commemorating its own 50-plus year career.

The Eagles tour is called The Long Goodbye because band members Don Henley, Joe Walsh, Timothy B. Schmit, with Vince Gill and Deacon Frey have previously stated that they’d perform as many shows in each market as the audience demands and the jaunt is expected to continue well into 2025.

But the Kia Forum dates are hometown gigs for the Eagles, who first played the venue back in 1975 on their One of These Nights Tour. The band returned in 1976 and recorded its three-night stand, delivering the “Live at the Forum ’76” album just before the release of “Hotel California.”

They played several more times throughout the decades, but when the Eagles returned to open the reopen the venue in 2014 on its History of the Eagles Tour, there was a recreation of the band’s “Hotel California” vinyl record spinning atop of the roof, which was made of real vinyl and measured 407 feet in diameter and covered 5.7 acres, according to a press release. It also spun at 17 miles per hour and was visible to the planes flying into and out of the nearby Los Angeles International Airport.