Buffalo Springfield

Again

  • MOG Editorial Review

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    On the second of three albums during the group's short lifespan, Neil Young, Stephen Stills and company created an album that showed off the group's individual penchants for folk, rock, country, and the spaces they blissfully converge. "Rock and Roll Women," for instance, foreshadowed the multi-vocal harmonies that would come to define Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and "A Child's Claim to Fame" was Richie Furay at his country twang finest. Still, while each of the group's members seemed to have one foot out the door by this point, Buffalo Springfield's collective talents were astounding, and sprawling closer "Broken Arrow" was a reminder of just how brilliant they were when they truly joined forces.
  • AMG Review of Buffalo Springfield Again

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    Richie Unterberger
    All Music Guide

    Due in part to personnel problems which saw Bruce Palmer and Neil Young in and out of the group, Buffalo Springfield's second album did not have as unified an approach as their debut. Yet it doesn't suffer for that in the least -- indeed, the group continued to make major strides in both their songwriting and arranging, and this record stands as their greatest triumph. Stephen Stills' "Bluebird" and "Rock & Roll Woman" were masterful folk-rockers that should have been big hits (although they did manage to become small ones); his lesser-known contributions "Hung Upside Down" and the jazz-flavored "Everydays" were also first-rate. Young contributed the Rolling Stones-derived "Mr. Soul," as well as the brilliant "Expecting to Fly" and "Broken Arrow," both of which employed lush psychedelic textures and brooding, surrealistic lyrics that stretched rock conventions to their breaking point. Richie Furay (who had not written any of the songs on the debut) takes tentative songwriting steps with three compositions, although only "A Child's Claim to Fame," with its memorable dobro hooks by James Burton, meets the standards of the material by Stills and Young; the cut also anticipates the country-rock direction of Furay's post-Springfield band, Poco. Although a slightly uneven record that did not feature the entire band on several cuts, the high points were so high and plentiful that its classic status cannot be denied.

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