Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The band's membership fluctuated over the years. After Furay left the group, Young took on more song writing responsibility, along with Paul Cotton and Timothy B. Schmit. Young is best known for writing the Poco songs "Rose of Cimarron" and "Crazy Love". In 2013, Young was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame. [7]
In early 2012, a live video of a new song, "Neil Young", was released on YouTube as a teaser for a new studio album, All Fired Up, that was recorded in Nashville and released in March 2013. Selling on iTunes , the band's website and through a distributor in Europe, Young, Sundrud and Webb penned all the songs on the self-produced album.
"Rose of Cimarron" is a song by country rock band Poco being the title cut of their 1976 album release Rose of Cimarron: written by founding member Rusty Young, the song featured lead vocals by Paul Cotton and Timothy B. Schmit.
Rusty Young, who co-founded the country-rock group Poco in 1968 and was the only mainstay through the band’s five-decade-plus history, died Wednesday at age 75. A representative said Young died ...
Rusty Young died on April 14, 2021, at his home in Davisville, Missouri, from a heart attack. He was 75. [30] [31] Poco split after Young's death. Three and a half months after Rusty Young's April 2021 death, his former partner in the band, Paul Cotton, died at his summer home in Eugene, Oregon at age 78 on August 1, 2021. [32]
A singer, she is one of the few players, who can sing and play the saw simultaneously and in pitch. [26] She has played in TV- and Radio shows and for film and CD recordings. [27] Jamie Muir of the progressive rock band King Crimson briefly uses a musical saw on the song "Easy Money" from the album Larks' Tongues in Aspic.
Paul Richard Furay (born May 9, 1944) is an American musician and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member (with Buffalo Springfield). He is best known for forming the bands Buffalo Springfield with Stephen Stills, Neil Young, Bruce Palmer, and Dewey Martin, and Poco with Jim Messina, Timothy B. Schmit, Rusty Young, George Grantham and Randy Meisner. [1]
A surprising scene on a train platform in Sweden inspired Ron Davis Álvarez. The Venezuelan conductor created a unlikely orchestra for young refugees and asylum-seekers, despite the fact that ...