Retrospective The Best Of Buffalo Springfield Rar

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Buffalo Springfield – Discography (1966 – 2001)
EAC Rip | 8xCD | FLAC Tracks & Image + Cue + Log | Full Scans Included
Total Size: 2.19 GB | 3% RAR Recovery
STUDIO ALBUMS | COMPILATION | BOX SET
Label: Various | Genre: Folk Rock, Country Rock

Buffalo Springfield 'Retrospective' is in many ways the only album by this band that you absolutely need. It's flow is as perfect as you can get for a greatest hits compilation. Musically this album is comprised of beautiful, soft, autumnal folk rock combined with psychedelic/political lyrics that reflect the 1960s. Free shipping on orders of $35+ from Target. Read reviews and buy Buffalo Springfield - Retrospective: The Best of (CD) at Target. Get it today with Same Day Delivery, Order Pickup or Drive Up. Retrospective: The Best Of Buffalo Springfield Buffalo Springfield. LP £18.99 Black Vinyl 180 Gram Vinyl. 180 Gram vinyl of the first Buffalo Springfield. Editors' Notes Of course they barely lasted two tempestuous years: Buffalo Springfield were born to ignite a movement and then explode. The smoke had hardly cleared when this compilation was released in 1969, and these songs are testament to both the band's lasting impact on folk rock and their brilliance as songwriters and players.

Apart from the Byrds, no other American band had as great an impact on folk-rock and country-rock — really, the entire Californian rock sound — than Buffalo Springfield. The group’s formation is the stuff of legend: driving on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, Stephen Stills and Richie Furay spotted a hearse that Stills was sure belonged to Neil Young, a Canadian he had crossed paths with earlier. Indeed it was, and with the addition of fellow hearse passenger and Canadian Bruce Palmer on bass and ex-Dillard Dewey Martin on drums, the cluster of ex-folkys determined, as the Byrds had just done, to become a rock & roll band.

Buffalo Springfield wasn’t together long — they were an active outfit for just over two years, between 1967 and 1968 –but every one of their three albums was noteworthy. Their debut, Buffalo Springfield, including their sole big hit (Stills’ “For What It’s Worth”), established them as the best folk-rock band in the land barring the Byrds, though Springfield was a bit more folk and country oriented. Again, their second album found the group expanding their folk-rock base into tough hard rock and psychedelic orchestration, resulting in their best record. The group was blessed with three idiosyncratic, talented songwriters in Stills, Young, and Furay (the last of whom didn’t begin writing until the second LP) yet they also had strong and often conflicting egos, particularly Stills and Young. The group, who held almost infinite promise, rearranged their lineup several times, Young leaving the group for periods and Palmer fighting deportation, until disbanding in 1968. Their final album clearly shows the group fragmenting into solo directions. ― Allmusic

1. STUDIO:

1966. Buffalo Springfield (2005, ATCO, CD 90389, Canada)

1967. Buffalo Springfield Again (1997, ATCO, 33-226-2, USA, HDCD)

1968. Last Time Around (1997, ATCO, CDE 90393, Canada, HDCD)


2. COMPILATION:

1969. Retrospective. The Best of Buffalo Springfield (1989, ATCO, 38-105-2, USA)


3. BOX SET:

2001. Buffalo Springfield ‎Box Set(2001, Rhino, 8122-74324-2, EU, 4CD, HDCD)

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Retrospective The Best Of Buffalo Springfield Rar Files

Retrospective: The Best of Buffalo Springfield
Previously released material
Released on February 1969
US CHART POSITION #42 . . . PLATINUM RECORD
Find it at GEMM
SD 33-283 cover
[high resolution scan]

The American psychedelic scene of the late ‘60s produced some really strange birds, few stranger than Buffalo Springfield. Though the group only released three albums, people have pored over that trilogy and drawn from it a rich musical legacy. (You’d have to look across the pond at Cream and Traffic to find the same phenomenon.) A lot of that legacy belongs to Neil Young, whose restless creativity and fierce independence transformed the Buffalo from just another smart folk/rock band into something bigger. Without his acid electric guitar and solo experiments, Buffalo Springfield might have been merely a precursor to Poco and CS&N. But with Young there was no telling where Buffalo might roam: miniature epics (“Broken Arrow”), icy innocence (“I Am A Child”), Motown (“On The Way Home”), Phil Spector (“Expecting To Fly”) or heavy psychedelic R&B (“Mr.Soul”). In between these minefield masterpieces are strewn the contributions from Stephen Stills and (occasionally) Richie Furay. There’s no denying that Stills and Young feed off one another; you hear that on “Bluebird” and “Rock And Roll Woman.” But the three of them are coming from very different places and, rather than meet in the middle, tend to stay in their own camps. Cream, Traffic, even The Beatles arranged their songs so that each was identifiable as the work of that band. No so Buffalo Springfield; Neil Young’s lead guitar might be the lone consistent element from track to track. For example, it’s hard to believe today that “For What It’s Worth,” “Kind Woman” and “Mr.Soul” are the work of the same band. What you hear in the music of Buffalo Springfield is the sound of three separate songwriters growing together in isolation. Retrospective marked the fork in the road where the trio diverged and where fans return to commemorate a serendipitous alignment of talent.

SD 33-283 back cover

TRACK LISTING

Retrospective
  1. FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH (Stephen Stills) 3:00
  2. MR. SOUL (Neil Young) 2:35
  3. SIT DOWN, I THINK I LOVE YOU (Stephen Stills) 2:30
  4. KIND WOMAN (Richie Furay) 4:10
  5. BLUEBIRD (Stephen Stills) 4:28
  6. ON THE WAY HOME (Neil Young) 2:25
  7. NOWADAYS CLANCY CAN'T EVEN SING (Neil Young) 3:26
  8. BROKEN ARROW (Neil Young) 6:13
  9. ROCK AND ROLL WOMAN (Stephen Stills) 2:44
  10. I AM A CHILD (Neil Young) 2:15
  11. GO AND SAY GOODBYE (Stephen Stills) 2:19
  12. EXPECTING TO FLY (Neil Young) 3:39

CREDITS

Springfield

Eve Babitz -- album illustration
Haig Adishian -- album design
return to BUFFALO SPRINGFIELD discography

REGIONRELEASE DATELABELMEDIAID NUMBERFEATURES
US/CANFebruary 1969AtcoLPSD 33-283
UK1969AtcoLP228 012
UK1972AtlanticLPK40071
JPN1972AtlanticLPP-8220A
US1975AtcoLP/CSSD/CS 38-105
UK/GERAtcoCD90417
US1989AtcoCDSD 38-105

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