Linda Ronstadt’s Secret List: The Seven Musicians She Could Never Forgive—And the Stories Behind Her Silence

At seventy-eight, Linda Ronstadt is a name that still commands respect and awe.

Her voice, once described as “pure velvet,” has echoed through decades, genres, and generations.

She’s been called the Queen of Rock, a chameleon of sound, and a trailblazer for women in music.

But beneath the accolades and the applause, there was always a silence—a silence no one dared to break.

Until now.

For years, fans and industry insiders wondered: what did it cost Linda Ronstadt to rise so high, to remain so graceful in a business notorious for its egos and betrayals?

When she finally spoke, it was not with bitterness or revenge, but with a raw honesty that stunned everyone.

She named seven musicians—seven men—who had left scars deeper than any critic’s review.

Not petty feuds or artistic disagreements, but wounds to her pride, her art, and her soul.

The first name on her list was a shock to many.

Don Henley.

Before he was an icon, before he was an Eagles hero, he was just a drummer in her band.

In the early 1970s, Linda Ronstadt was already a rising star, and she opened doors for Don Henley that would lead to his own legend.

But as the Eagles soared, something changed.

Don Henley’s humility faded, replaced by an ego that seemed to grow with every hit.

At a show at the Universal Amphitheater in 1975, he laughed at her music, dismissing her as someone who only sang “light covers.”

It wasn’t just a slight—it was a public blow to everything Linda had worked for.

From that night on, she cut him out of her life.

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No words, no confrontation—just a cold silence that spoke louder than any argument.

For Linda Ronstadt, it wasn’t the betrayal that hurt most.

It was the disrespect.

The second name was even more infamous.

Jim Morrison.

The wild frontman of The Doors was a legend in his own right, but to Linda Ronstadt, he was a memory she’d rather forget.

In 1968, at a private party near the Whisky a Go Go, Jim Morrison drunkenly dragged her onstage, tried to kiss her without warning, and nearly toppled the sound system in the process.

It was humiliating, invasive, and left her rattled for years.

He never apologized.

Instead, he mocked her on the radio, calling her “sweet but weak” and “nothing special.”

Linda Ronstadt never responded publicly, but in private, she called Jim Morrison “a wonderful killer”—a man who poisoned everything around him.

He wasn’t just a reckless artist; to her, he was the embodiment of toxic masculinity that tried to dominate and belittle women in music.

The wounds ran deep, but the next betrayal cut closer to the bone.

Neil Young.

In the summer of 1976, a benefit concert for farm workers brought together the biggest names in rock.

From the outside, Linda Ronstadt and Neil Young looked like comrades in a cause.

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But behind the scenes, things turned sour.

Neil Young questioned her artistic choices, refused to let her play certain songs, and told the press she “didn’t really get what they were going through.”

It wasn’t just criticism—it was a dismissal of her sincerity and her values.

She left the event in tears, vowing never to perform with him again.

In private, she called Neil Young “a man who pretends to fight for ideals but is really just arrogant and empty.”

The fourth name was one that surprised even her closest friends.

Frank Zappa.

Their collaboration in 1974 seemed promising—his genius, her voice.

But the studio quickly became a battleground.

Frank Zappa rejected her ideas, mocked her for making his music “too clean,” and stopped a rehearsal just to belittle her in front of the band.

“This is what happens when you let a pop star sing real music,” he sneered.

Linda Ronstadt didn’t fight back.

She simply packed her things and left, hurt and ashamed.

She would later say, “Zappa was brilliant, but he was cruel. I could never trust him again.”

The next betrayal was even more personal.

David Crosby.

The Laurel Canyon scene was built on collaboration and trust.

For years, Linda Ronstadt and David Crosby shared stages, studios, and dreams.

But in 1978, while recording together, she asked for a key change to better suit her voice.

David Crosby refused, dismissing her with, “You need to learn how to change.”

The argument spilled into the press, with Crosby calling her a “manufactured product” in Rolling Stone.

For Linda Ronstadt, who had built her career on raw talent and instinct, it was a blow to the heart.

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She responded not with words, but with action—removing his songs from her setlists, instructing her team never to mention his name.

It was as if David Crosby had never existed in her world.

The sixth name was a symbol of punk rebellion, but to Linda Ronstadt, he was something else entirely.

Elvis Costello.

In 1979, at a major music event in Cleveland, she was at the peak of her career.

Elvis Costello, then an up-and-coming star, publicly mocked her music as “brunch music.”

It was more than a jab—it was a public insult that spread like wildfire.

Backstage, she confronted him, hoping for an apology.

Instead, he doubled down, delivering another cutting remark before walking away.

To Linda Ronstadt, he was “smart but heartless, critical for the sake of cruelty, not rebellion.”

His ego overshadowed any real artistry she might have seen in him.

But the seventh and final name was perhaps the most painful.

Paul Simon.

In 1982, the idea of working with Paul Simon was a dream—two giants, two unique talents.

But the reality was a quiet war.

From the first rehearsal, Paul Simon criticized her every move, changed lyrics without asking, and treated her as if she were just another backup singer.

It wasn’t collaboration—it was domination.

The song they worked on was never finished, never released.

But the damage was lasting.

Linda Ronstadt later said she felt “like years of work meant nothing, as if my voice didn’t deserve respect.”

She swore never to work with Paul Simon again.

The list was not about petty grievances or fleeting anger.

For Linda Ronstadt, these were stories of trust broken, of dignity denied, of the cost of being a woman in a world that too often confused kindness for weakness.

Yet, she never used her pain as a weapon.

She chose silence—not out of fear, but out of strength.

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Her music spoke for her, louder and clearer than any tabloid headline.

When she finally broke her silence, it wasn’t to destroy reputations.

It was to lift the veil, to remind the world that even legends carry scars.

Behind every harmony, every perfect note, there was a story untold.

A story of survival, of resilience, of refusing to be defined by the worst moments.

Linda Ronstadt’s confession was not an act of revenge.

It was an act of liberation.

She proved that the greatest power is not in the music we sing, but in the truths we dare to tell.

And as her story spread, it inspired countless others—artists and fans alike—to break their own silences, to honor their own scars, and to find strength in vulnerability.

For in the end, the Queen of Rock was not just a voice.

She was a force.

Unbreakable.

Unforgettable.

And finally, unafraid to speak her truth.