Buffalo Springfield
Buffalo Springfield was a Canadian-American rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1966, featuring the core lineup of Stephen Stills on guitar and vocals, Neil Young on guitar and vocals, Richie Furay on guitar and vocals, Bruce Palmer on bass, and Dewey Martin on drums and vocals.[1][2] The group emerged from chance encounters on the Sunset Strip, with Stills and Furay recruiting the Canadian musicians Young and Palmer after spotting their hearse-like Pontiac in traffic, and adding Martin, a session drummer with country influences.[3] Named after a steamroller spotted nearby, the band quickly signed with Atlantic Records and debuted at the Whisky a Go Go, blending folk-rock harmonies, jangling guitars, and country elements into a sound that anticipated the country-rock genre.[2] Their signature track, "For What It's Worth," penned by Stills amid 1966 Sunset Strip curfew riots protesting youth curfews and commercialization, peaked at number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 and became an enduring anthem for social unrest.[4][5] Despite lineup instability—including Palmer's deportation and replacements like Jim Fielder—and internal rivalries between Stills and Young, they produced three albums: the self-titled debut (1966), Buffalo Springfield Again (1967), and the posthumous Last Time Around (1968), showcasing songwriting depth and instrumental prowess.[1][3] The band dissolved in early 1968 due to drug-related arrests, creative clashes, and diverging ambitions, yet their brief tenure profoundly influenced subsequent acts, with Stills co-founding Crosby, Stills & Nash, Young pursuing a solo career, and Furay starting Poco.[2][3]Formation
Origins and Inspiration
Buffalo Springfield originated from a serendipitous encounter on April 3, 1966, when Neil Young and Bruce Palmer, driving Young's black 1953 Pontiac hearse from Canada to Los Angeles, became stuck in traffic on the Sunset Strip. Stephen Stills and Richie Furay, former members of the folk group The Au Go Go Singers who had recently arrived in Los Angeles seeking opportunities, spotted the distinctive vehicle—previously seen in Ontario—and approached its occupants. This chance meeting reunited Stills with Young, whom he had briefly met in 1965 in Toronto, prompting an immediate decision to form a band blending folk-rock influences akin to The Byrds.[6][7][8] Stills, recognizing Martin's drumming talent from prior encounters, contacted Dewey Martin in Toronto and invited him to join as the band's drummer, completing the initial lineup of Young, Stills, Furay, Palmer, and Martin. The group's name derived from a steamroller manufactured by the Buffalo-Springfield Roller Company, spotted parked outside prospective manager Barry Friedman's residence on Fountain Avenue in Hollywood, symbolizing their intent to "flatten" the competition in the burgeoning Los Angeles music scene. This naming reflected the era's informal, street-level inspirations amid the vibrant Sunset Strip club circuit.[9][3] Musically, Buffalo Springfield drew inspiration from the folk-rock fusion popularized by The Byrds, with Stills and Young's songwriting emphasizing introspective lyrics and jangly guitars, while incorporating country and blues elements that foreshadowed later country-rock developments. The band's formation was motivated by dissatisfaction with prior folk-oriented projects and a desire to capture the electric energy of Los Angeles' emerging rock sound, positioning them as early experimenters in psychedelic folk-rock.[10]Initial Lineup and Early Performances
The initial lineup of Buffalo Springfield featured Stephen Stills on lead guitar, keyboards, and vocals; Neil Young on lead guitar and vocals; Richie Furay on rhythm guitar and vocals; Dewey Martin on drums and vocals; and Bruce Palmer on bass guitar.[1] [3] This configuration coalesced in Los Angeles during the first week of April 1966, after Stills, who had relocated from New York, reunited with Young—whom he had briefly encountered in Canada the prior year—and integrated Furay, Palmer, and Martin into the group through mutual connections and auditions.[3] The band held initial rehearsals in early April, refining a sound that fused folk-rock harmonies, country influences, and electric energy, before staging their first public performance on April 11, 1966, at the Troubadour's Folk Den in West Hollywood.[11] [12] [13] This debut showcased the quintet's raw potential, with Stills and Young trading guitar leads and vocals alongside Furay's harmonies, Martin's country-inflected drumming, and Palmer's bass foundation, drawing an audience that included emerging industry figures.[11] Following the Troubadour appearance, Buffalo Springfield secured residencies at key Sunset Strip clubs, including the Whisky a Go Go, where their sets of original material and covers amplified their visibility amid the burgeoning Los Angeles rock scene.[3] These early gigs, often extending into late-night hours, highlighted interpersonal dynamics—such as Young's occasional stage withdrawals due to health issues—and propelled the group toward a recording deal by late May 1966, as promoters and managers noted their distinctive blend of talents.[3]Rise to Prominence
Management, First Recordings, and Debut Album
In May 1966, Buffalo Springfield engaged Charles Greene and Brian Stone as managers, a duo previously associated with Sonny & Cher who aggressively pursued the band following their relocation to Los Angeles.[14] [15] Greene and Stone, described by band member Stephen Stills as "hustlers" with limited production credentials, facilitated a recording contract with Atco Records, a subsidiary of Atlantic Records.[16] [17] Their approach emphasized rapid studio access, allowing the group creative latitude despite the managers' inexperience behind the console.[18] A pivotal six-week residency at the Whisky a Go Go on the Sunset Strip, secured with assistance from the Byrds' Chris Hillman, elevated the band's visibility in mid-1966 and preceded their studio commitments.[19] This engagement, starting with a guest appearance in May, positioned Buffalo Springfield as a house band and drew industry attention amid the era's folk-rock scene.[12] Recording sessions for the debut album commenced at Gold Star Studios in Hollywood in June 1966, utilizing the facility's renowned echo chambers previously employed by Phil Spector and the Beach Boys.[19] [20] Most tracks were completed by July 18, 1966, under Greene and Stone's production, with engineering by figures like Dave Hassinger.[18] Notable sessions included Neil Young's "Flying on the Ground Is Wrong" on September 10, 1966, capturing the band's raw interplay of acoustic folk elements and electric experimentation.[21] The self-titled Buffalo Springfield album, comprising 12 tracks primarily written by Stephen Stills, Neil Young, and Richie Furay, was released on December 5, 1966, in both mono (Atco 33-200) and stereo (SD 33-200) formats.[22] Key inclusions were Stills' "For What It's Worth," inspired by protests on the Sunset Strip; Young's "Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing" and "Mr. Soul"; and Furay's "Go and Say Goodbye."[19] The record showcased the quintet's dual-lead guitar dynamic and harmonious vocals, though internal tensions over song selection foreshadowed later conflicts.[18]Breakthrough Hit and Sunset Strip Context
Buffalo Springfield's breakthrough came with the release of "For What It's Worth," a protest song written by Stephen Stills in response to escalating tensions on Los Angeles' Sunset Strip. Recorded on December 5, 1966, the track was rush-released as a single by Atco Records on December 10, 1966, ahead of the band's debut album. [23] [4] The song drew direct inspiration from the Sunset Strip curfew riots of November 1966, where young counterculture participants clashed with law enforcement over a newly imposed 10 p.m. curfew for minors. Local officials in West Hollywood and Los Angeles had enacted the measure in late October to address resident complaints of traffic gridlock, sidewalk congestion, panhandling, and public disturbances caused by large gatherings of teenagers at rock clubs and bars along the Strip. [24] [25] Protests peaked on November 12, with hundreds assembling to chant against police harassment; officers responded with tear gas and batons, resulting in over 50 arrests and media coverage of the "hippie riots." [23] [24] Performing regularly at Sunset Strip venues like the Whisky a Go-Go, band members including Stills directly observed the unrest while driving through the area, fueling the song's lyrics warning of paranoia and urging vigilance amid social friction. [4] [23] Though initially tied to local youth grievances rather than broader national issues like the Vietnam War, "For What It's Worth" resonated widely, climbing to number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 by April 1967 and becoming the band's only top-10 hit. [4] [26] This success elevated Buffalo Springfield from regional act to national prominence, encapsulating the era's youth-driven pushback against authority. [23]Challenges and Evolution
Lineup Instability and Legal Issues
The band's bassist, Bruce Palmer, faced repeated legal troubles stemming from drug possession arrests, which as a Canadian citizen led to multiple deportations to Canada and subsequent illegal re-entries into the United States.[27] These incidents began shortly after the group's formation in 1966 and escalated, with Palmer accumulating charges including possession of marijuana and driving without a license, prompting temporary replacements such as Jim Fielder in late 1967 and later Jim Messina.[28][29] By January 1968, amid ongoing instability, the band dismissed Palmer due to his escalating arrest record, which included a double bust on one evening, further disrupting rehearsals and performances.[30] Messina became a more permanent fill-in, contributing to sessions for the final album Last Time Around, though internal egos—particularly between Neil Young and Stephen Stills—compounded the turmoil, with Young frequently absent and Stills dominating songwriting.[27] Additional legal entanglements affected the group, including a March 20, 1968, drug raid at a party that resulted in arrests of Neil Young, Richie Furay, and Messina for possession.[31] Drummer Dewey Martin, sidelined by tensions over his limited songwriting input and the band's folk-rock shift, departed amid these conflicts; his subsequent attempt to tour as "New Buffalo Springfield" with new members in 1968 prompted lawsuits from Stills and Young, who successfully enjoined him from using the name.[32] These combined pressures—arrests, deportations, and litigation—eroded cohesion, hastening the band's effective dissolution by May 5, 1968.[27][33]Second and Third Albums Amid Internal Conflicts
The recording of Buffalo Springfield's second album, Buffalo Springfield Again, unfolded over nine months in 1967 amid profound dysfunction, including fistfights, walkouts, epileptic seizures, drug busts, and lineup upheavals.[34] In January 1967, bassist Bruce Palmer was deported to Canada after an arrest for marijuana possession, disrupting band stability and necessitating temporary replacements such as Jim Fielder.[28] Palmer returned in June, but tensions escalated as Stephen Stills' domineering approach clashed with Neil Young's passive aggression, sidelining Richie Furay's contributions and alienating Young, who missed key gigs like the Monterey Pop Festival.[34] Young departed in early June 1967, encouraged by producer Jack Nitzsche to pursue solo work amid frustrations with the band's direction, before rejoining on August 11.[34][1] Band members often recorded separately, with sessions at studios like Gold Star reflecting individual styles—Young's psychedelia, Stills' folk-rock, and orchestral experiments—yet yielding a cohesive despite the fractures.[35] Released on November 18, 1967, the album peaked at number 44 on the Billboard 200.[34][36] The third and final album, Last Time Around, epitomized the band's collapse, compiled from disparate sessions spanning mid-1967 to early 1968 by Furay and bassist Jim Messina, who had permanently replaced the repeatedly deported Palmer.[37] No track featured the full original lineup performing together, as Young drifted toward solo pursuits and contributed sporadically, while Stills and others focused on external opportunities, rendering collective efforts impossible.[37] Internal strife, including Young's withdrawal and unresolved egos, culminated in the band's final concert on May 5, 1968, at Long Beach Arena, featuring an extended "Bluebird."[37] Assembled to meet contractual obligations with Atco Records, the album was released on July 30, 1968, achieving the group's commercial peak at number 42 on the Billboard 200.[37][38] The dissolution followed immediately, driven by these cumulative conflicts and legal entanglements.[37]Dissolution
Final Recordings and Breakup Causes
The band's final studio album, Last Time Around, was recorded piecemeal between late 1967 and early 1968 as internal discord intensified, with no full-group sessions occurring; instead, members worked individually or in subsets, supplemented by session musicians such as Jim Messina, who contributed bass parts after Bruce Palmer's exit and also served as producer alongside Richie Furay to compile the tracks and fulfill contractual obligations to ATCO Records.[39][40] Released on July 30, 1968, the album reached number 42 on the Billboard 200, featuring contributions like Stills's "4 + 20," Young's "The Loner," and Furay's "Kind Woman," but its fragmented production reflected the group's unraveling cohesion.[37] The breakup, formalized after a final performance on May 5, 1968, stemmed primarily from chronic lineup instability and personal unreliability, particularly bassist Bruce Palmer's repeated drug possession arrests, which culminated in his deportation from the United States in March 1968 following prior expulsions in January 1967 and other visa violations that had already sidelined him intermittently.[41][29][28] Compounding this were escalating creative and ego clashes between Stephen Stills and Neil Young, who vied for leadership in song selection and touring commitments, with Young's attendance becoming sporadic amid frustrations over management and recording disputes.[27][42] Drummer Dewey Martin's diminishing role and broader burnout from relentless touring and legal entanglements, including a March 20, 1968, drug bust involving band members and Eric Clapton, further eroded viability, prompting Stills and Young to exit for solo and supergroup pursuits while Furay sought unsuccessfully to reconstitute the lineup.[43][44]Immediate Post-Breakup Projects
Following the band's effective dissolution in May 1968, Stephen Stills collaborated with David Crosby (formerly of the Byrds) and Graham Nash (formerly of the Hollies) to form Crosby, Stills & Nash, with the trio recording their self-titled debut album between June and December 1968 at Wally Heider Studios in Los Angeles and releasing it on May 29, 1969, via Atlantic Records.[41][45] Neil Young signed a solo recording contract with Reprise Records shortly after the breakup and recorded his debut album Neil Young at Wally Heider Studios and other Los Angeles facilities from August to October 1968, with the LP released on January 22, 1969, featuring tracks like "The Loner" that showcased his emerging introspective style.[1] Richie Furay partnered with Jim Messina, who had served as Buffalo Springfield's recording engineer, bassist on select tracks, and de facto producer during the band's final phase, to establish the country rock ensemble Poco in late 1968; the group rehearsed new material immediately and issued their debut album Poco (initially titled Pickin' Up the Pieces) on May 29, 1969, through Epic Records, emphasizing Furay's songwriting and harmonious vocals.[46][47] Dewey Martin organized New Buffalo Springfield (later shortened to New Buffalo) in October 1968, assembling a lineup including guitarist Mike Curtis, bassist Bob "BJ" Jones, and keyboardist David Price to capitalize on the original band's name; the group performed live dates through 1969 and released a self-titled album on ABC Records in 1969, though it achieved limited commercial success and disbanded by early 1970.[32] Bruce Palmer, the original bassist, returned to Canada post-breakup and engaged in sporadic session work and local performances but did not launch a prominent immediate project, later facing personal challenges including legal issues related to drug arrests during the band's tenure.[41]Reunion Efforts
New Buffalo Springfield and Early Attempts
Following the original Buffalo Springfield's dissolution in May 1968, drummer Dewey Martin assembled the New Buffalo Springfield in October 1968, recruiting session musicians including guitarist Dave Price, bassist Bob Apperson, and Martin's brother Bill on guitar to continue performing under the band's name.[48][49] The group debuted on November 15, 1968, in San Luis Obispo, California, and toured regionally, including the Holiday Rock Festival on December 26, 1968, and a Pacific Northwest swing in June–July 1969.[32] In February 1969, the New Buffalo Springfield signed with Atlantic Records and recorded demos, but the effort collapsed amid internal changes and a lawsuit from former members Stephen Stills and Neil Young, who obtained an injunction barring Martin from using the name and resulting in his loss of associated royalties.[32] The band briefly rebranded as Blue Buffalo before becoming Blue Mountain Eagle under musical director Mike Zalk; Martin was fired mid-1969, and the group released a self-titled album on Atco Records (an Atlantic subsidiary) in 1969 without his involvement.[32] Subsequent early reunion attempts by the original members did not occur until the 1980s, when the five principals gathered for three informal sessions at Stills' home in Encino, California, primarily rehearsing material from Neil Young's 1986 album Landing on Water but failing to progress beyond private jams due to unresolved tensions.[50][51] These efforts produced no public performances or recordings, highlighting persistent interpersonal conflicts that had contributed to the band's initial breakup.[50]2010–2011 Reunion Performances
Buffalo Springfield reunited for two acoustic performances at Neil Young's Bridge School Benefit concerts on October 23 and 24, 2010, at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California, marking their first stage appearance together in 43 years.[51] [52] The lineup consisted of the three surviving original members—Stephen Stills, Neil Young, and Richie Furay—without drummer Dewey Martin (who died in 2009) or bassist Bruce Palmer (who died in 2004).[51] The sets featured songs such as "For What It's Worth" and "Rock and Roll Woman," performed in an unamplified format suitable for the benefit event supporting children with severe physical and speech impairments.[52] Emboldened by the positive reception, the trio announced a limited reunion tour on March 29, 2011, comprising six California dates followed by an appearance at the Bonnaroo Music Festival.[53] The electric performances began with two shows on June 1 and 2 at the Fox Theater in Oakland, followed by two on June 4 and 5 at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, and two on June 7 and 8 at the Santa Barbara Bowl.[54] The tour concluded on June 11 at Bonnaroo in Manchester, Tennessee, where they delivered a set including "On the Way Home," "Burned," "A Child's Claim to Fame," and "For What It's Worth," drawing praise for its energy and fidelity to the band's original sound.[55] [56] These reunion efforts highlighted the enduring chemistry among Stills, Young, and Furay but did not lead to new recordings or an extended tour, as the members prioritized their solo and other collaborative projects thereafter.[51]Musical Style and Innovations
Influences and Genre Fusion
Buffalo Springfield's musical influences encompassed the folk revival of the mid-1960s, particularly the electric adaptations by Bob Dylan and the Byrds, which emphasized jangly guitars, harmony vocals, and introspective lyrics adapted to rock formats.[10] Stephen Stills and Neil Young, who met at a Toronto folk club in 1965, brought these elements into the band's core sound, while Richie Furay contributed songwriting rooted in folk traditions.[10] Additionally, Young's early exposure to rock 'n' roll pioneers like Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, and Johnny Cash infused raw energy and rhythmic drive, blending with the group's acoustic leanings.[57] The band fused these folk-rock foundations with country music elements, drawing from Dewey Martin's Nashville background and Furay's affinity for twangy pedal steel and banjo-like guitar tones, as heard in tracks like "Go and Say Goodbye" from their 1966 debut album.[58] This integration prefigured country rock, combining rock's amplification and British Invasion-derived aggression—evident in Stills' R&B-inflected rhythms—with rural Americana, without overt reliance on traditional country structures.[59] Psychedelic touches emerged in Neil Young's contributions, such as the orchestral haze of "Expecting to Fly" on Buffalo Springfield Again (1967), layering reverb and modal experimentation over folk-rock bases.[10] This genre fusion distinguished Buffalo Springfield as progenitors of 1970s country rock and folk rock hybrids, influencing subsequent acts through their balance of harmonic interplay, topical songcraft, and instrumental eclecticism, as recognized by their role in setting tonal precedents for the era.[2][60] Their approach avoided the overt country mimicry seen in later bands, instead achieving a seamless synthesis that prioritized song-driven innovation over stylistic purity.[61]Songwriting and Production Techniques
Buffalo Springfield's songwriting was primarily driven by Stephen Stills and Neil Young, with Richie Furay providing additional material, reflecting a process marked by prolific output and interpersonal rivalry that spurred innovation but hindered cohesion. Stills frequently initiated songs with acoustic frameworks, layering rock elements as in "Bluebird," while Young incorporated unconventional chord changes, alternate tunings, and metric shifts, as heard in "Mr. Soul" and "Expecting to Fly"—the latter originally envisioned in an Everly Brothers harmonic style before evolving into a more experimental form through collaboration with arranger Jack Nitzsche.[62][63] Tensions between the two songwriters, fueled by their competing visions and constant idea-sharing even mid-session, resulted in a dynamic where tracks like "For What It's Worth" emerged rapidly—composed by Stills in about 15 minutes amid social unrest observations—yet often required on-the-fly adjustments.[63][64] Furay's contributions, such as "A Child's Claim to Fame," emphasized country-inflected structures and relied on Stills-Furay vocal harmonies for emotional depth, contrasting Young's more introspective, cinematic approach that prioritized narrative subtlety over conventional verse-chorus forms.[63] The band's emphasis on dual-lead guitar interplay—Stills on Rickenbacker and Gibson models, Young on Gretsch and Fender—integrated folk picking with electric distortion, pioneering a textured sound that blended topical lyricism with improvisational riffs.[62] Production techniques shifted from rudimentary to sophisticated across their tenure. The 1966 debut album, handled by managers Charles Greene and Brian Stone with limited expertise, prioritized aggressive bass and drum levels via close-miking and compression, often submerging the guitars and harmonies in a muddy mix that the band later criticized as inadequate.[18] By Buffalo Springfield Again (1967), engineers like Bruce Botnick employed 8-track multitracking at Sunset Sound and Columbia Studios, using isolation booths for clean separation of vocals, strings, and brass, alongside custom echo chambers for natural reverb that enhanced spatial depth without artificial effects.[63] Specific innovations included live overdubs of diverse instrumentation—grand piano, electric piano, harpsichord, and triple basses on "Expecting to Fly"—augmented by subtle edits, stereo panning, and delays for a psychedelic haze, while "Bluebird" featured heavy compression via Universal Audio 176 limiters on a Sony C-37A microphone, coupled with Pultec EQ to amplify Stills' 1937 Martin D-28 acoustic into a robust, arena-ready tone.[62] These methods, informed by Nitzsche's orchestral touches and the band's push against managerial overreach, foreshadowed country-rock production norms, emphasizing organic layering over polished pop sheen.[63][62]Legacy
Critical Assessment and Commercial Impact
Buffalo Springfield's commercial success was modest during their active years from 1966 to 1968, primarily propelled by the single "For What It's Worth," which peaked at number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on March 25, 1967, and remained on the chart for 15 weeks.[65] Their three studio albums fared moderately on charts, with the self-titled debut reaching number 80 on the US Billboard 200 in 1966, Buffalo Springfield Again peaking at number 44 in 1967, and Last Time Around at number 42 in 1968.[66] Aggregate sales estimates place total album shipments over 1 million units in the United States, though none of the original releases received RIAA certifications at the time, reflecting limited mainstream breakthrough despite radio play and live popularity.[67] Post-breakup compilations, such as Retrospective: The Best of Buffalo Springfield (1969), later achieved platinum status in the US for 1 million units sold by 1989, indicating enduring catalog value.[68] Critical assessment of the band's output has evolved from contemporary ambivalence to strong retrospective praise for their role in pioneering folk-rock fusion with country and psychedelic influences. Early reviews often highlighted raw energy and standout tracks like Neil Young's "Mr. Soul" and Stephen Stills' protest anthem, but noted inconsistencies in production and band cohesion amid lineup instability.[69] Critics such as those at Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews have lauded them as a more talented ensemble than contemporaries like the Byrds, crediting superior songwriting and instrumental interplay.[70] However, some evaluations, including George Starling's discography analysis, argue their recorded legacy appears unimpressive relative to inflated reputation, attributing this to the brevity of their collaboration and disjointed album assembly rather than lack of potential.[71] This duality underscores how internal fractures limited deeper commercial exploitation, with greater impact realized through members' subsequent solo and supergroup endeavors.Cultural and Genre Influence
Buffalo Springfield's fusion of folk, country, and rock elements helped pioneer the country rock genre, blending rural Americana with electric instrumentation and British Invasion influences to create a template for Southern California's 1970s sound.[2] This approach, evident in tracks like Neil Young's "Mr. Soul" from their 1967 album Buffalo Springfield Again, emphasized jangly guitars and narrative-driven lyrics, prefiguring the harmonic complexities and pedal steel integrations later popularized in the style.[9] The band's most enduring cultural imprint stems from Stephen Stills' "For What It's Worth," recorded on December 5, 1966, and released as a single in January 1967, which peaked at number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100.[72] Inspired by clashes between police and youth protesting curfew expansions on Los Angeles' Sunset Strip in November 1966, the song's ominous riff and cautionary refrain—"Stop, children, what's that sound? Everybody look what's going down"—transcended its local origins to symbolize broader 1960s unrest, including anti-Vietnam War demonstrations and countercultural defiance.[4] Its non-partisan tone, avoiding explicit ideology, facilitated widespread adoption in protests and media, from civil rights rallies to modern revivals in contexts like the 2010s Occupy movements.[73] This influence extended through personnel overlaps with successor acts: ex-members Richie Furay and Jim Messina founded Poco in 1968, refining Buffalo Springfield's country-folk hybrid into a commercial blueprint that shaped the Eagles' formation and breakthrough album Eagles (1972).[74] Similarly, Stills and Young's collaborations in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young from 1969 onward amplified the band's folk-rock ethos in arena-scale harmonies and socially attuned songcraft, cementing Buffalo Springfield's role as a bridge from 1960s experimentation to enduring genre evolutions.[75]Individual Member Trajectories
Stephen Stills pursued a multifaceted career post-1968, co-founding Crosby, Stills & Nash with David Crosby and Graham Nash, which expanded to include Neil Young as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.[45][76] This supergroup yielded immediate commercial success through harmonious folk-rock arrangements. Stills simultaneously launched a solo discography beginning with his self-titled 1970 album and formed the roots-oriented band Manassas with Chris Hillman, blending rock, country, and bluegrass elements.[77] His trajectory emphasized guitar virtuosity and production, though later solo efforts faced critical mixed reception amid prolific output.[78] Neil Young transitioned to solo work immediately after the band's 1968 end, releasing his debut album Neil Young that year and forming the backing group Crazy Horse for raw, electric rock explorations.[79] He rejoined Stills in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in 1969, contributing to landmark albums before resuming solo endeavors, including the 1972 release Harvest, which emphasized introspective songwriting and acoustic textures.[80] Young's path diverged repeatedly from supergroup commitments toward independent projects, yielding over 40 studio albums by the 2020s, marked by genre shifts from folk to experimental rock and advocacy for environmental and social causes.[81] Richie Furay co-founded Poco in 1968 alongside Jim Messina and Rusty Young, pioneering country rock with melodic harmonies and pedal steel influences on albums like Poco (1970).[82] The band achieved moderate success but internal tensions led Furay to form the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band in 1974 with J.D. Souther and Chris Hillman, producing sophisticated soft-rock before its 1976 dissolution.[83] Furay released solo material in the late 1970s, then retired from secular music in 1983 to enter Christian ministry, pastoring in Colorado; he resumed performing in the 2000s with the Richie Furay Band and reunion projects, culminating in a 2021 farewell tour announcement after six decades.[84] Dewey Martin attempted to capitalize on the band's name by assembling the New Buffalo Springfield in late 1968 with replacement members including Jim Messina, touring extensively before renaming to New Buffalo in 1969 amid legal disputes.[32] He formed Dewey Martin & Medicine Ball, releasing a self-titled album in 1970 via Uni Records, but commercial failure prompted retirement from music in 1971 to work as an auto mechanic in Tennessee.[85][48] Sporadic revivals followed, including Buffalo Springfield Revisited in 1986 with Bruce Palmer, though health and obscurity limited impact; Martin died on February 1, 2009, at age 68 from undisclosed causes.[86] Bruce Palmer faced deportation to Canada in 1967 due to drug charges, briefly rejoining Buffalo Springfield before the 1968 disbandment; post-split, he played bass for Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in 1969 but departed soon after.[28] His subsequent career involved low-profile gigs, substance abuse struggles, and legal issues, with occasional participation in revival acts like Buffalo Springfield Revisited in the 1980s and 1990s.[87] Palmer lived reclusively in Canada, releasing a solo album The Cycle Is Complete in 1999; he died on October 1, 2004, at age 58 from a blood clot.[88]Personnel
Original and Core Members
Buffalo Springfield's original lineup formed in Los Angeles in April 1966, consisting of Stephen Stills (guitar, vocals, keyboards), Neil Young (guitar, vocals), Richie Furay (guitar, vocals), Bruce Palmer (bass guitar), and Dewey Martin (drums, vocals).[1][9] Stills and Furay, both from Ohio and previously performing together in the folk group Au Go Go Singers, relocated to California seeking greater opportunities; they encountered Young and Palmer during a traffic incident on Sunset Boulevard, where Young's hearse overheated, prompting an impromptu jam session that led to the band's inception.[89] The name "Buffalo Springfield" derived from a steamroller Young and producer Barry Friedman had observed earlier, symbolizing the band's folk-rock fusion aspirations.[1] This core quintet recorded the band's debut album, Buffalo Springfield, released in December 1966, and established the group's signature sound blending folk, country, and rock elements.[1] Stills emerged as the primary songwriter and arranger, contributing hits like "For What It's Worth," while Young's raw, emotive style added edge, though tensions arose early due to his intermittent departures.[9] Furay provided harmonic vocals and co-wrote material, Palmer anchored the rhythm section with inventive bass lines, and Martin, experienced from sessions with artists like the Dillards, delivered versatile drumming despite occasional overshadowing by the guitarists.[1] Despite lineup instability—Young briefly quit in August 1966 amid creative clashes, and Palmer faced deportation issues—these members formed the band's enduring nucleus, influencing subsequent country-rock developments.[1]Replacement and Touring Members
Due to repeated legal troubles and deportation threats stemming from drug arrests, original bassist Bruce Palmer was temporarily replaced on multiple occasions. Canadian musician Ken Koblun, a prior associate of Neil Young, briefly filled the role in late 1966 after Palmer's first arrest, allowing the band to continue initial touring commitments.[59] Koblun departed shortly thereafter, succeeded by Jim Fielder, previously of Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention, who joined on February 22, 1967, and handled bass duties through live performances—including the March 17, 1967, show at San Jose Civic Auditorium—and recordings such as "Everydays" on Buffalo Springfield Again, until his exit on June 2, 1967, to pursue other opportunities.[59][90] Guitarist Neil Young's intermittent absences, driven by interpersonal conflicts, particularly with Stephen Stills, prompted further substitutions during 1967 tours. Doug Hastings, formerly of the Daily Flash, stepped in as lead guitarist from January through June 1967, supporting dates across Colorado, Texas, Arizona, the West Coast, and the Monterey Pop Festival on June 17–18, 1967, where David Crosby of the Byrds provided additional rhythm guitar assistance for that event only.[1][59] Palmer's permanent deportation in January 1968 for a second drug offense led to the enlistment of Jim Messina as bassist and de facto producer-engineer, stabilizing the lineup for final sessions on Last Time Around amid escalating discord; Messina's involvement extended into sparse touring before the band's effective disbandment on May 5, 1968.[1] These fluid personnel shifts underscored the group's instability, with replacements enabling 1967's approximately 100 live dates despite core member volatility.[59] ![Buffalo Springfield posing 1967.jpg][float-right]Discography
Studio Albums
Buffalo Springfield released three studio albums on Atco Records between 1966 and 1968, reflecting the band's evolving folk-rock and country-rock style amid frequent lineup changes and internal conflicts. The debut captured their raw energy post-formation, while subsequent releases showcased individual songwriting strengths from Stephen Stills, Neil Young, and Richie Furay, often recorded in fragmented sessions due to Neil Young's intermittent absences and Bruce Palmer's legal issues. Production emphasized layered guitars, harmonies, and psychedelic elements, though the final album was largely assembled posthumously to meet contractual obligations. The self-titled Buffalo Springfield, released December 5, 1966, featured 12 tracks primarily written by Stills and Young, including the protest anthem "For What It's Worth," which became their signature hit peaking at number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100. Recorded hastily after the band's signing to Atco, the album blended folk-rock with emerging psychedelic influences, produced by Charles Greene and Brian Stone at studios in Los Angeles. Running 35 minutes, it included contributions from the original lineup of Stills, Young, Furay, Palmer, and Dewey Martin, with Stills handling most lead vocals. The record reached number 80 on the Billboard 200, establishing their West Coast sound despite modest initial sales.[91][92] Buffalo Springfield Again, issued October 30, 1967, marked a more experimental phase with Young's distorted "Mr. Soul" and Stills' orchestral "Expecting to Fly," alongside Furay's "A Child's Claim to Fame." Recorded amid Palmer's deportation and Young's temporary exit, sessions involved replacements like Jim Fielder and Doug Hastings, with production again by Greene and Stone emphasizing studio innovation like backward tapes and harpsichords. The 34-minute album peaked at number 44 on the Billboard 200 and yielded singles like "Bluebird" (number 58 Hot 100) and "Rock & Roll Woman" (number 44 Hot 100), highlighting the band's genre fusion of rock, country, and psychedelia.[93]| Album | Release Date | Peak Billboard 200 | Key Tracks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buffalo Springfield | Dec 5, 1966 | 80 | "For What It's Worth," "Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing" |
| Buffalo Springfield Again | Oct 30, 1967 | 44 | "Mr. Soul," "Expecting to Fly," "Bluebird" |
| Last Time Around | Jul 30, 1968 | 42 | "On the Way Home," "Kind Woman," "I Am a Child" |
Compilations and Box Sets
Retrospective: The Best of Buffalo Springfield, the band's initial posthumous compilation, was issued by Atco Records on February 10, 1969, shortly after their 1968 disbandment, assembling 12 tracks primarily drawn from their three studio albums, including the signature single "For What It's Worth" and selections like "Mr. Soul" and "Expecting to Fly."[95][96] This release peaked at number 42 on the Billboard 200 chart and served as an entry point for later audiences to the group's folk-rock and psychedelic output.[97] A self-titled double album compilation followed on Atco Records on November 12, 1973, expanding to 23 tracks across two LPs in a gatefold sleeve, incorporating most of Retrospective's content alongside deeper cuts and alternate mixes such as a live jam version of "Rock 'n' Roll Woman," though it omitted some material from Last Time Around due to contractual disputes among members.[98][99] This set reached number 104 on the Billboard 200, reflecting sustained interest in the band's catalog amid the era's reissue trends.[100] Rhino Records released the comprehensive four-disc box set Buffalo Springfield on July 17, 2001, compiling 88 tracks spanning studio recordings, outtakes, demos, and live performances from 1966 to 1968, with extensive liner notes and previously unreleased material curated from archival tapes, peaking at number 194 on the Billboard 200.[101][102] In 2018, Rhino issued What's That Sound? Complete Albums Collection on June 29, a five-disc set remastered from original analog tapes under Neil Young's supervision, reproducing the three studio albums in both stereo and mono formats, augmented by a disc of singles and rarities like "Go and Say Goodbye" in its mono single mix, emphasizing the band's raw production and lineup flux.[103][104] These box sets prioritized fidelity to source material over remixing, preserving the original engineering by producers like Charlie Greene and Brian Stone.Singles and Notable Tracks
Buffalo Springfield released a limited number of singles between 1966 and 1968, primarily through Atco Records, with most drawing from their studio albums. Their commercial breakthrough came with "For What It's Worth," written by Stephen Stills as a response to Sunset Strip protests in Los Angeles. Released in December 1966 with "Do I Have to Come Right Out and Say It?" as the B-side, it peaked at number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1967 and became a counterculture anthem.[5][58] Subsequent singles achieved modest or no significant chart success. "Bluebird," penned by Stills and featuring country influences with Doug Kershaw on fiddle, was issued in June 1967 backed by Neil Young's "Mr. Soul." It failed to reach the Billboard Hot 100 top 40. "Rock 'n' Roll Woman," also by Stills, followed in July 1967 with "A Child's Claim to Fame" (written by Richie Furay) on the B-side, marking the highest-charting single from Buffalo Springfield Again but still limited in airplay. "On the Way Home," a Young composition from Last Time Around, appeared as a single in 1968 and entered the Billboard Hot 100, contributing to the band's five total entries on the chart.[100][5]| Single Title | Release Date | B-Side | Billboard Hot 100 Peak |
|---|---|---|---|
| For What It's Worth | December 1966 | Do I Have to Come Right Out and Say It? | #7 |
| Bluebird | June 1967 | Mr. Soul | Did not chart in top 40 |
| Rock 'n' Roll Woman | July 1967 | A Child's Claim to Fame | Did not chart in top 40 |
| On the Way Home | 1968 | Special Care | Charted (position unspecified in primary sources) |