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| Richie Furay and his daughter, Jesse Furay Lynch |
At B.B. King's Blues Club & Grill tonight, Furay performed a handful of Buffalo Springfield songs and a handful of Poco songs, but also introduced some of his newer material. Early in the set, Furay sang a medley of three Neil Young-written songs he sang in Buffalo Springfield, "Flying on the Ground in Wrong", "Do I Have to Come Right Out and Say It" and "Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing." Later in the evening Furay sang three others, including the band's only hit song, "For What It's Worth," which was originally sung by Stephen Stills, and an encore of "On My Way Home," originally sung by Neil Young. The Poco songs included the better-known "Pickin' Up the Pieces" and "A Good Feelin' to Know," plus three others. A sparse and tender encore of "Kind Woman," a song dedicated to his wife of 47 years, was the bridge, a song written for Buffalo Springfield but better known by Poco. Furay also sang the sole Souther Hillman Furay Band hit, "Fallin' in Love." The new songs included the title track of a forthcoming album, Hand in Hand. These lyrics described the faith and hope that comes with a mature love; the song may be the sequel to "Kind Woman," nearly 50 years later. Furay's daughter sang lead on one new song as well, "A Girl Like That."
Furay is 70 years old, but tonight he sang as well as he did
in his prime. Similarly, his repertoire has stood the test of time. The problem
tonight was that country rock is no longer cutting edge music and the exciting
innovation of those songs has diminished. The songs were reworked somewhat for
the stripped down band as well. Poco frequently had several instrumentalists
playing pedal steel, banjo and guitar off of each other, but tonight's band featured
one talented guitarist driving those songs. Furay and his band performed well,
but the show was especially suited for the nostalgic country rocker.
Visit Richie Furay at www.richiefuray.com.

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