Song of the Day 10/16: Poco, “A Good Feelin’ to Know”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on October 16, 2020

Buffalo Springfield had three guitarists who were also singers and songwriters. Stephen Stills and Neil Young found greater fame after the group disbanded, but Richie Furay, who had the best voice of the three, never managed to break through to success or fame. He and Jim Messina, Buffalo Springfield’s replacement bassist and frequent producer, hooked up with pedal steel player Rusty Young to form Poco — cartoonist Walt Kelly threatened a lawsuit when they tried to call themselves Pogo — one of the first wave of California country-rock bands at the end of the ’60s.

After two critically acclaimed albums that sold poorly and a live album of new material that did slightly better, Messina left, replaced on bass by Timothy B. Schmit. Another LP, produced by Steve Cropper, also stiffed, and by 1972 Furay was desperate for a hit. “A Good Feelin’ to Know,” already a concert highlight, was chosen as the first single from the same-titled album, which had a heavier rock component than earlier efforts. With its interplay between Young’s steel guitar and Paul Cotton’s lead, it sounded great coming out of a car radio, yet it failed to even reach the charts at a time when mellowness ruled the airwaves.

After one more LP, Furay threw in the towel and left to join the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band. Poco finally scored a couple of hits in 1979 with “Crazy Love” and “Heart of the Night,” but by then Rusty Young was the only original member. In 1983 Furay retired from touring to become a Christian minister in Colorado, and though he has returned to music from time to time in the years since, he never had a hit record.

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  1. bamboozer says:

    It happens, trust me, all is fair in war, love and the band business. Many great players and vocalists never get their shot, and yeah, it sucks.

  2. nathan arizona says:

    Always good to hear Poco and Furay’s great voice. I’m gonna play some more right now. Richie found Jesus, but I guess Jesus didn’t buy any albums.

  3. Mike Dinsmore says:

    Richie Furay showed up at a Buffalo Springfield Reunion in 2010, at Neil Young’s Bridge School Benefit. I was there! As were Neil Young and Stephen Stills. However, I was only in the audience. 🙂 There used to be a video of their set on YouTube, but it seems to have been pulled.

    There’s a very good Poco collection available – it’s a 2 CD set, The Forgotten Trail (1969-1974). 38 tracks of great Poco music. Nathan, if you don’t already have it, it’s worthwhile getting.

  4. I really liked their last studio album “Crazy Eyes”. The title song, which I think is a masterpiece, was about Gram Parsons. I believe it was a musical intervention. Gram died four days after the album came out.:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZEpQh8hWzj4

    Fittingly, they also covered Parsons’ Brass Buttons on the album.

  5. BornBandCreature says:

    Always loved Poco. Saw that at UD in December 1972 (I think). Jim Croce opened. Terrific on record, terrific live.