Buffalo Springfield Again | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Buffalo Springfield |
Cover: | BuffaloSpringfieldBuffaloSpringfieldAgain.jpg |
Released: | October 30, 1967[1] |
Recorded: | January 9 – September 18, 1967[2] |
Studio: |
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Genre: | |
Length: | 34:07 |
Label: | Atco |
Producer: |
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Prev Title: | Buffalo Springfield |
Prev Year: | 1966 |
Next Title: | Last Time Around |
Next Year: | 1968 |
Buffalo Springfield Again is the second album by Buffalo Springfield, released on Atco Records in October 1967. The album features some of the group's best-known songs, including "Mr. Soul", "Bluebird", "Expecting to Fly" and "Rock & Roll Woman", all of which were released as singles. In contrast to the band's hastily made debut album, recording for Again took place over a protracted nine-month span and was fraught with dysfunction, with each member eventually producing his own material largely independent of one another.
The album was a moderate commercial success, peaking at number 44 on the Billboard Top LPs chart, and came to be regarded by many rock critics as a classic of the psychedelic era. In 2003, the album was ranked number 188 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time,[9] maintaining the rating in a 2012 revised list.[10] The album was included in Robert Christgau's "Basic Record Library" of 1950s and 1960s recordings—published in (1981)[11] —and in Robert Dimery's 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[12] It was voted number 165 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums in 2000.[13]
Several factors may have contributed to the slow pace of the recording sessions, including that bassist Bruce Palmer had been deported in January and had re-entered the United States illegally to continue working with the band, and guitarist Neil Young had quit and rejoined the group on several occasions, notably absent for the band's appearance at the famed Monterey Pop Festival where David Crosby substituted in his place at the request of guitarist Stephen Stills.[14] [15]
The album features the first recordings of songs written by guitarist Richie Furay, who had not contributed any material to the band's debut album. Also unlike the previous record, which had been recorded in its entirety by the band proper, session musicians appeared on various tracks as indicated on the album's inner sleeve. Palmer's deportation issues necessitated the contributions of outside bass players. During one of the times that Young had left the band, he had booked a studio to record "Expecting to Fly," with session musicians under the impression it was for a Neil Young solo project rather than for Buffalo Springfield.[16] Phil Spector Wrecking Crew associate Jack Nitzsche provided the musical arrangements for "Expecting to Fly"; it does not feature any members of the Springfield. Nitzsche would continue to work with Young through the early 1970s on both his solo debut album and his best-selling Harvest, also becoming a member of Young's backing bands Crazy Horse and The Stray Gators.
The album includes an early country rock track by Furay, "A Child's Claim to Fame." The track "Rock & Roll Woman" allegedly includes vocals by Crosby, who also allegedly had a hand in its composition; whether true or not, Stills acknowledges the genesis of the song was from jamming with Crosby.[17] Cash Box said of "Rock & Roll Woman" that it's a "mid-tempo rock ballad" and that "throaty vocals with a shimmering group backing are spiced with some outstanding guitar showing."[18] Record World called "Rock & Roll Woman" an "imaginative, different rock song."[19] Young's extended piece "Broken Arrow" begins with audience applause (taken not from a Buffalo Springfield show, but rather from a concert by the Beatles) and the opening of "Mr. Soul" (which opens the album) recorded live in the studio. The back cover of the album includes a lengthy list of people thanked as influence and inspiration, some of whom are musicians who contributed but were unaccredited. The album is dedicated to Barry Friedman, and listed as a York/Pala production. The album was remastered for compact disc in HDCD and reissued on June 24, 1997.
Adapted from band researcher and archivist Joel Bernstein.[20]
Buffalo Springfield
Session musicians
Production
1968 | Billboard Pop Albums | 44 |
Cashbox Albums Charts[21] | 33 | |
Record World Album Charts[22] | 36 |
June 1967 | "Bluebird" (1:59 edit) / "Mr Soul" | Pop Singles | 58 | |
September 1967 | "Rock And Roll Woman" / "A Child's Claim To Fame" | Pop Singles | 44 | |
December 1967 | "Expecting To Fly" / "Everydays" | Pop Singles | 98 |
June 1967 | "Bluebird" (1:59 edit) / "Mr Soul" | Pop Singles | 68 | |
September 1967 | "Rock And Roll Woman" / "A Child's Claim To Fame" | Pop Singles | 52 | |
December 1967 | "Expecting To Fly" / "Everydays" | Pop Singles | 99 |
June 1967 | "Bluebird" (1:59 edit) / "Mr Soul" | Pop Singles | 63 | |
September 1967 | "Rock And Roll Woman" / "A Child's Claim To Fame" | Pop Singles | 39 | |
December 1967 | "Expecting To Fly" / "Everydays" | Pop Singles | 92 |