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Fly Like an Eagle — Steve Miller Band & Cannabis Culture

"Fly Like an Eagle" is a 1976 song by the Steve Miller Band that became one of the defining tracks of 70s rock — and one of the most-played songs in cannabis culture. The track appeared on the album of the same name, peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100, and has been streamed over 500 million times on Spotify as of 2026. Its hypnotic synthesiser intro, looping "time keeps on slipping" refrain, and spacey production made it a staple of smoke sessions long before streaming playlists existed. Steve Miller didn't write it as a weed song — but cannabis culture adopted it anyway, and for good reason.
What Does "Fly Like an Eagle" Mean? — The Song Behind the Sound
"Fly Like an Eagle" is a song about social justice — wanting to "feed the babies who don't have enough to eat" and "shoe the children with no shoes on their feet." Steve Miller wrote it as a protest song wrapped in psychedelic production, released during the tail end of the Vietnam era when counterculture and activism were inseparable. The "fly like an eagle" metaphor is about rising above — transcending the problems of the world, if only for the length of the song.

But the way it sounds matters as much as what it says. The opening 90 seconds are pure atmosphere: a pulsing Moog synthesiser, phased guitars, and Miller's voice floating over the top like it's coming from another room. The production was ahead of its time — recorded at CBS Studios in San Francisco in 1976, engineered to sound like the inside of someone's head. That sonic quality is why "Fly Like an Eagle" became a smoking song. It wasn't the lyrics. It was the feeling.
Steve Miller knew exactly what he was doing with the sound. In interviews, he described the album as "headphone music" — designed to be listened to closely, in a state of focused attention. Whether that focus came from meditation, concentration, or a joint on the couch was left to the listener. The cannabis community chose door number three, and the song never left the rotation.
Steve Miller Band and Cannabis — "I'm a Midnight Toker"
Steve Miller's connection to cannabis culture goes beyond "Fly Like an Eagle." His biggest hit, "The Joker" (1973), contains one of the most famous weed references in rock history: "I'm a joker, I'm a smoker, I'm a midnight toker." That single line turned the Steve Miller Band into permanent fixtures on every stoner playlist from the 70s to today. The word "toker" — slang for someone who smokes cannabis — entered mainstream vocabulary partly through this song.

"The Joker" also introduced the word "pompatus," which Miller borrowed from an obscure 1954 doo-wop track by The Medallions. Nobody knew what it meant then, and nobody knows now — but it sounds right when you're high, which is arguably the point. The Steve Miller Band built a catalogue of songs that reward a relaxed, altered state of attention: "Jet Airliner," "Take the Money and Run," "Abracadabra," "Rock'n Me." Every album from 1973 to 1982 produced at least one track that ended up on smoke-session playlists.
The band formed in San Francisco in 1966 — ground zero for psychedelic culture. Miller played alongside Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and Janis Joplin at the Fillmore and Winterland. San Francisco in the late 60s was where rock music and cannabis culture fused permanently, and the Steve Miller Band was in the room when it happened.
"Fly Like an Eagle" and the Best Music for a Smoke Session
The best smoking songs share specific qualities that "Fly Like an Eagle" exemplifies: a slow build, layered production that reveals new details on repeated listens, a tempo that matches a resting heart rate (roughly 60-80 BPM — "Fly Like an Eagle" sits at about 92, slightly elevated but still relaxed), and enough sonic texture to hold attention without demanding it. This is why it consistently appears on Reddit's r/trees "favourite smoking songs" threads alongside Pink Floyd, Bob Marley, and Tame Impala.

The 1996 Seal cover of "Fly Like an Eagle" — recorded for the Space Jam soundtrack — introduced the song to a new generation. Seal's version is smoother and more R&B-influenced, but keeps the hypnotic quality of the original. Both versions appear on modern stoner playlists, and both work for different moods: Miller's original for a hazy, psychedelic evening session; Seal's for something warmer and more laid-back.
| Song | Artist | Year | BPM | Why It Works for Smoking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fly Like an Eagle | Steve Miller Band | 1976 | ~92 | Hypnotic synth intro, spacey layering, builds slowly |
| The Joker | Steve Miller Band | 1973 | ~84 | "Midnight toker" — the original stoner anthem |
| Comfortably Numb | Pink Floyd | 1979 | ~63 | Guitar solo that rewards altered attention |
| Three Little Birds | Bob Marley | 1977 | ~76 | Reggae pulse, calming message, universal vibe |
| Let It Happen | Tame Impala | 2015 | ~116 | Psychedelic layers that shift and morph over 7 minutes |
For a hazy evening session, the Steve Miller Band's 1976 album Fly Like an Eagle is the best starting point — 9 tracks that flow together like a single 35-minute piece. Follow it with Pink Floyd's Wish You Were Here (1975) or Tame Impala's Currents (2015) and you've got a 2-hour soundtrack that matches the arc of most sessions from start to finish.
Steve Miller turned 82 in 2025 and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016. The Steve Miller Band hasn't released a studio album since 2010, but the catalogue — especially the 1973-1982 run — remains some of the most-played classic rock on streaming platforms worldwide. "Fly Like an Eagle" alone has outlived most of the songs that charted above it in 1976, because its audience doesn't just listen to it — they experience it, one session at a time.
Next time you're rolling a joint or packing a bowl, put on Fly Like an Eagle from the beginning — not just the single, the whole album. Azarius has been selling the gear for those sessions from Amsterdam since 1999. Steve Miller provided the soundtrack. We provide the grinders, the papers, and the truffles.
Last updated: April 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
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About this article
Adam Parsons is an external cannabis and psychedelics writer and editor who contributes to Azarius's wiki as both author and reviewer. On the writing side, he authors Azarius's kratom and kanna clusters, drawing on exten
This blog article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by Adam Parsons, External contributor. Editorial oversight by Joshua Askew.
Last reviewed April 23, 2026
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