Tag: “Buffalo Springfield”

Review: Richie Furay Band live

by Terry Roland
The Richie Furay Band’s brief February tour through Southern California was important for this veteran country-rock artist. His last time around was with his old bandmates Neil Young and Stephen Stills on their long-awaited Buffalo Springfield reunion tour. While most of the audiences who attended the Springfield shows in California were familiar with Stephen Stills of Crosby, Stills and Nash fame and the iconic Neil Young, fewer have had the chance to hear Furay in the years since the band’s demise.

For the audience, it was a reminder of his considerable contributions to the legendary band. Fewer still realized that he was a co-founder(along with Jim Messina) of the band Poco, which helped to define country-rock even before they had a string of soft-rock hits in the late ’70s and ’80s.

If the Feburary 3rd concert, the final show of the tour in San Juan Capistrano at The Coach House, was any indication, the summer Buffalo Springfield tour paid off, as the Richie Furay Band played to a capacity audience. The show was dynamic, energetic and fresh. With his band, including Scott Selen on lead guitar(and a near orchestra of other instruments), Selen’s son, Aaron on bass, Alan Lemke on drums and Jesse Lynch on background vocals, Richie delivered a strong set of songs spanning 40 years.

Opening with the familiar Buffalo Springfield classic “On My Way Home,” he also faithfully recreated a trilogy of Neil Young’s songs he originally recorded on the first Springfield album. The first two songs, “Do I Have To Come Right Out and Say It,” and “If Flying on the Ground is Wrong,” were a reminder of how good Young’s quirky lyrics sound with Furay’s distinctive voice. Young’s “Nowawdays Clancy Can’t Even Sing” was stunning, with an arrangement and lead guitar work by Scott Selen that did Neil proud, and matched the duet Furay performed with Young during last summer’s tour.

The set included a strong sampling of early Furay/Messina Poco. As conceived by the two former members of Buffalo Springfield, Poco was an energetic, passionate and dynamic band that pushed country-rock to its limits during their heyday in the late ’60s and early ’70s, when Furay left the band.

The band missed his energetic presence, but went on to a string of commercial successes with soft, breezy and sometimes overproduced pop music. At this concert, Furay conjured up that original sound and reminded us all where it all began. This is not easy. While Poco always had at least two and sometimes three instrumentalists playing off each other, Furay’s band today relies on virtuoso Selen alone. He recreates the sound of Jim Messina’s distinctive electric guitar leads, Rusty Young’s frenetic steel guitar riffs and even throws in an occasional banjo, acoustic guitar and keyboard when needed.

During the show this musical chemistry hit the mark with Furay’s song
dedicated to Gram Parsons, “Crazy Eyes.” During the course of this 12-
minute opus, Selen moved from instrument to instrument as the music
flowed through its various tempos and changes, the musical equivalent
of a triathlon. The live performance eclipsed the original recording,
with a sense of soul and urgency, immediate and bittersweet. Trading
vocals with his daughter Jesse, Richie revisited the song he wrote
as a way of reaching out to Parsons and which was released
days before Parsons died. It ends in sad, but knowing resignation with the line, ”Crazy eyes, you’re as blind as you can be.” As presented live with this band, it is a masterful, and soulful statement about the loss of a friend to addiction.

What became clear during the two-hour set is that Richie Furay is a soul singer. Whether he sings an original gospel song like “Rise Up,” or his new song to his wife of 45 years, “Still Fine,” he gives every song his whole heart.

Richie has a unique and distinctive voice and in live performance infuses every lyric with a feeling that often transcends and raises each song to a new level.

After a standing ovation and encore of “Kind Woman” slowed down to a blue-eyed soul pace, Richie Furay seemed much younger than his years. Indeed, the musical future remains bright for this country-rock innovator, with or without a call from Neil Young.

Buffalo Springfield returns

Nostalgia suits Neil Young.
During his last show at the Ryman, Young barely acknowledged the audience, performing an impressive set of songs with a stage presence somewhere between oblivious and sullen.
Contrast that with Young, the exuberant frontman for Buffalo Springfield, the legendary (and for once, the adjective is apt) sixties band that has just reunited after four decades on ice.
“We’re Buffalo Springfield and we’re from the past,” Young said gleefully. Buffalo Springfield wasn’t a supergroup in 1967; it was a prequel to a supergroup, as future stars Stephen Stills, Richie Furay and Young developed their craft. Its ambitious blending of folk and country would set the stage for Crosby, Stills and Nash, Young’s solo career, Poco and the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band.
Little wonder that Young was enthusiastic. Stills, Furay and Young mesh together beautifully and those who only know the band from old vinyl have to think “Oh, now I get it.” This is a vibrant, vital and occasionally possessed rock and roll band making up for lost time.
Each member has his moments, but the show serves as a reminder that Furay was at the heart of Buffalo Springfield. His vocals were dominant on the records and anticipated the Eagles generation of country-rock.
Young’s “Mr. Soul” and ” Broken Arrow” and were highlights of the show, and his guitar playing (and duels with Stills) ignited the set.
Stills was not in the spotlight as much, but he did step up to sing lead on the band’s only Top 40 hit, ‘For What It’s Worth,”a song about a disturbance on the Sunset Strip. The arrangement was raucous and hard-edged, closer to what Stills has been doing with Crosby and Nash and, possibly a concession to Still’s age and voice. Still, it wears very well.
The show closed with Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World,” a song Young introduced by saying that this is what it would have sounded like if they had ever recorded it. Clearly he was running out of stage patter, but the song brought the evening to an electrifying end.
This was perhaps the most unlikely rock reunion of all, a longer shot even than putting the three surviving Byrds together would be. To have Buffalo Springfield reunite and be a musical force rather than just an exercise in nostalgia is an even bigger blessing.
“There’s something happening here…” and it’s remarkably good.