| | Buffalo Springfield CD Buffalo Springfield Discography of CDs
(5 Customer Reviews)
This 24-track reissue features the album's original track lineup, including "Baby Don't Scold Me," in mono, followed by the more well-known revised lineup, featuring the single "For What It's Worth" in place of "Baby Don't Scold Me," in stereo.
All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology.
Like the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield were influential in the melding of rock and folk that led to the country-rock sound of the '70s. Neil Young and Stephen Stills were the main singers/songwriters, constantly battling for creative control of the group. From this tempestuous union came melodic rock that ranged from Young's waltz-flavored "Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing" and the Beatlesque "Burned" (featuring Young's piano playing) to Stills' muscular guitar style on "Leave," which foreshadowed his subsequent work with Crosby, Stills & Nash. Fame came by way of Stills' "For What It's Worth," a moody song about a cops-versus-kids conflict on Sunset Boulevard. Two turbulent years and two albums later, Buffalo Springfield broke up, but they'd already blazed the trail for their disciples to follow.
Like the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield were influential in the melding of rock and folk that led to the country-rock sound of the 1970s. Neil Young and Stephen Stills were the main singers/songwriters, constantly battling for creative control of the group. From this tempestuous union came melodic rock that ranged from Young's waltz-flavored "Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing" and the Beatlesque "Burned" (featuring Young's piano playing) to Stills' muscular guitar style on "Leave," which foreshadowed his subsequent work with Crosby, Stills & Nash. Fame came by way of Stills' "For What It's Worth," a moody song about police brutality at a student protest on Sunset Boulevard. Two turbulent years and two albums later, Buffalo Springfield broke up, but they'd already blazed the trail for their disciples to follow.
Live Recording
Recorded at Gold-Star Studios and Columbia Studios, Hollywood, California.
Buffalo Springfield: Neil Young (vocals, guitar, piano); Stephen Stills, Richie Furay (vocals, guitar); Bruce Palmer (bass); Dewey Martin (drums).
Personnel: Neil Young (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano); Stephen Stills (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Douglas Hastings, Richie Furay (vocals, guitar); Jim Messina (vocals); Steve Stills (guitar); Bruce Palmer (bass guitar); Dewey Martin (drums).
Audio Mixers: Brian Stone; Buffalo Springfield; Charles Greene.
Audio Remasterers: Neil Young; Stephen Stills.
Recording information: Columbia Studios, Hollywood, CA; Gold-Star Studios, Hollywood, CA.
Photographers: Ivan Nagy; Henry Diltz.Goldmine - "...sounds better than ever, commendable mastering..." Buffalo Springfield Music | List Price | $7.98 (You save $1.13) | | Category | Rock Albums, Pop CDs, Rock/Pop, Folk Rock, Country Rock, Oldies Collections | | Label | Atco | | Orig Year | 1966 | | All Time Sales Rank | 6318  | | CD Universe Part number | 1096797 | | Catalog number | 33200 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Oct 03, 1989 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Mono | | Producer | Brian Stone; Charles Greene | | Engineer | "Doc" Siegel; Tom May | | Recording Time | 35 minutes | | Personnel | Neil Young - vocals, guitar, piano Stephen Stills - vocals, guitar, keyboards Steve Stills - guitar Jim Messina - vocals Richie Furay - vocals, guitar Bruce Palmer - bass Dewey Martin - drums Douglas Hastings
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Buffalo Springfield Songs Buffalo Springfield Music Review Purchase Buffalo Springfield CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Buffalo Springfield Again CD (1967)
Buffalo Springfield album
$7.19 All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology.
In retrospect, it's hard to believe that Buffalo Springfield could not only top their debut album, but that they'd do it within a year. AGAIN clearly states the band's case as a rootsy American Beatles to rival folk-rock kings the Byrds.
Singer-songwriters Steve Stills and Neil Young were firing on all cylinders, Young moving easily from sharp-tongued acid rock ("Mr. Soul") to complex, artsong-like ballads (the epic "Broken Arrow"). Stills could shift on a dime as well, offering the hypnotic, jazzy waltz "Everydays" right alongside the celebratory "Rock & Roll Woman" and the RUBBER SOUL-influenced "Bluebird." Richie Furay gamely navigated the choppy seas between these two giants and penned some beautiful, ahead-of-its-time country-rock along the way.
Live Recording
Producers include: ...
| | Buffalo Springfield Last Time Around CD (1968)
Buffalo Springfield CD music
$6.55 All tracks have been digitally remastered using HDCD technology.
Although this album was made amid the fragmentation of Buffalo Springfield, that fact is not apparent in retrospect. On the contrary, there is an appealingly gentle quality about the group's third and final album. As Jim Messina and ...
| | Jimi Hendrix Electric Ladyland CD (1968)
Buffalo Springfield music CDs
$9.65 Principally recorded at the Record Plant, New York, New York in April and May 1968.
On ELECTRIC LADYLAND Jimi Hendrix stretched and experimented in the studio, going beyond the power-trio format on what would be his last studio album with the Experience. ELECTRIC LADYLAND was revolutionary in its scope and execution. Using New York City's Record Plant as a gateway to free expression, Hendrix traversed an abstract landscape containing compositions as weird and wonderful as "...And The Gods Made Love" and "1983...(A Merman I Should Turn To Be)."
Simultaneously looking forwards and backwards, Hendrix mixed in a song reminiscent of his time on the chitlin' circuit (Earl King's "Come On [Part 1]"), a Bob Dylan favorite ("All Along The Watchtower"), and one of his snappiest singles ("Crosstown Traffic"). Although Hendrix produced and wrote most of this masterpiece, others weighed in with their own contributions. Noel Redding penned "Little Miss Strange," and other guests such as Al Kooper and Buddy Miles showed up to play. Traffic's Steve Winwood and Jack Casady of Jefferson Airplane also made cameos, appearing on this classic album's spiritual center, ...
| | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Buffalo Springfield songs
$6.39 This audio document of The Corrs' Dublin homecoming concert has pretty much everything fans of Irish pop could wish for, including an appearance from Bono in his earthly incarnation, fresh from an audience with President George W. Bush. It's to the band's credit that the charismatic singer fails to steal the show, despite creditable efforts via an anthemized version of Ryan Adams' beautifully downtempo "When the Stars Go Blue," and a great, leering rendition of Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra's "Summer Wine."
Somewhat more mysteriously, Rolling Stone Ron Wood also turns up on what sounds dangerously close to a lounge version of Jimi Hendrix's "Little Wing," but this minor faux pas is redeemed by the Irish folk medley "Joy of Life/Trout in the Bath" which arguably features more full-on Irishness than the Dublin ...
| | Deep Purple Who Do We Think We Are? CD (1973) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Buffalo Springfield album
$10.45 After establishing itself as a hard-rock giant, thanks to endless touring and the release of such milestone records as MACHINE HEAD and IN ROCK, Deep Purple was in a state of turmoil when it went into the studio to record 1972's WHO DO WE THINK WE ARE? Despite all the infighting, the band pulled together long enough to record seven tracks that only bolstered the band's reputation.
The best-known song, "Woman From Tokyo," boasted a riff as memorable as the one that defined "Smoke on the Water" and was later admitted by Ritchie Blackmore to have been cribbed from Eric Clapton's "Cat Squirrel." Although Blackmore's always-impressive riffing stands out on such songs as "Mary Long" and "Place in Line," this album also spotlights how far Jon Lord's contributions on organ went toward defining the band's sound. Lord's mastery was such that in addition to the impressive solos on "Place in Line," his sweeping runs are the highlight of the stop-and-go "Rat Bat Blue." On this roller coaster ride of an album, the members of Deep Purple come together best on "Our Lady," a five-minute-plus epic driven by Lord's churning organ and Ian Gillan's Wagnerian vocals.
Deep Purple had kicked off the '70s with a new lineup and a string of brilliant albums that quickly established them (along with fellow British giants Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath) as a major force in the popularization of hard rock and heavy metal. All the while, their reputation as one ...
| | Mike Bloomfield Super Session CD (1968) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Buffalo Springfield CD music
$6.75 A surprise best-seller when it was first released, this mostly improvised pairing of singer/keyboardist/producer Al Kooper with two major guitar heroes of the day sounds fascinating all these years later precisely because of the distance of time--nobody makes records like this any more. The material runs the gamut from folk pop (covers of Donovan and Dylan), to blues ("Albert's Shuffle," "You Don't Love Me"), to heady jams ("His Holy Modal Majesty"), to big-band jazz ("Harvey's Tune").
All the tunes make effective templates for the kind off-the-cuff music-making that in less capable hands might have resulted in simple noodling. In fact, although Bloomfield and Stills don't play together on any of the cuts (Bloomfield played on one side of the original LP, Stills on the other), all three principals get off lots of good licks and producer Kooper has some interesting tricks up his sleeve, as in the over-the-top phasing he lavishes on "You Don't Love Me." The only real disappointment here is that Stills, a far better singer than Kooper, never opens his mouth.
Those familiar with the Live Adventures album these two recorded at the Fillmore West know how brilliant they could be on stage, and here's another gem, recorded at the Fillmore ...
| | Carnivals, Cotton Candy And You CD (2003)
Buffalo Springfield music CDs
$13.09
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Buffalo Springfield songs
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| | Danny Mainstreet Ban Bulletproof & Ignorant CD (2008) (Import) Import
Buffalo Springfield album
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| | Classic African American Gospel CD (2008)
Buffalo Springfield CD music
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| | Whitecross Nineteen Eighty Seven CD (2008)
Buffalo Springfield music CDs
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