Buffalo Springfield/POCO
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Buffalo Springfield/POCO
Does anyone know if any of the players in either of these seminal groups played a Ric? If so, whom and what model?
Thanks
Thanks
"Whatcha ya gonna do now, Rich?"
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Don Miller
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For a while Stills was playing a 370-12RG , I believe, with Crosby and Nash...they'd do Turn Turn Turn in their live sets...
Ive seen pics of Richie Furay with what looks like a Gibson 335-12...but Ive never seen a pic or heard of anyone in Poco or the Buffalo Springfield using a Ric regularly...unless Bruce Palmer, Randy Meisner or Tim Schmidt used one on bass...The BS were mostly Gibson-Gretsch, and Poco were Gibson-Fender...
The Buffalo Springfield did apparently use gear...amps etc, loaned by the Byrds in the early days...
Ive seen pics of Richie Furay with what looks like a Gibson 335-12...but Ive never seen a pic or heard of anyone in Poco or the Buffalo Springfield using a Ric regularly...unless Bruce Palmer, Randy Meisner or Tim Schmidt used one on bass...The BS were mostly Gibson-Gretsch, and Poco were Gibson-Fender...
The Buffalo Springfield did apparently use gear...amps etc, loaned by the Byrds in the early days...
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shamustwin
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Don Miller
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- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2000 9:43 am
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mark_telfer
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It was The Dillards' abandoned electric instruments and equipment - not The Byrds' - that the group rehearsed with in the early days, according to John Einarson's book "There's Something Happening Here".
Although Richie inherited a Telecaster from the Dillards, I seem to remember reading that his first electric 12 was a Rickenbacker 360/12, which was then stolen, leading to his acquisition of the Gibson ES-335TD-12. There are no obvious Rickenbacker sounds on the Box Set, however.
Although Richie inherited a Telecaster from the Dillards, I seem to remember reading that his first electric 12 was a Rickenbacker 360/12, which was then stolen, leading to his acquisition of the Gibson ES-335TD-12. There are no obvious Rickenbacker sounds on the Box Set, however.
"But the man has a 47-string guitar." (Grace Slick on Paul Kantner's attempt to tune his 366/12 during a Winterland show of October 31 1969).
Although it doesn't cover guitars, this site shows the "Byrds Family Tree":
http://www.urban.ne.jp/home/koa7/byrdstree.htm
http://www.urban.ne.jp/home/koa7/byrdstree.htm
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
That "tree" was the inside artwork for a double album of Byrds hits... have the vinyl myself.
Think it is a great resource...
Would like to see same for a few other groups but if you read this tree, you get a pretty definitive idea of how California music became so interelated.
Think it is a great resource...
Would like to see same for a few other groups but if you read this tree, you get a pretty definitive idea of how California music became so interelated.
"Whatcha ya gonna do now, Rich?"
