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The Last Roundup

Poco

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Customer Reviews

A Grand Slam

If you are mainly familliar with the Richie Furay-era Poco, you may not recognize many of these songs. If you mostly know the Cotton-Young iteration of the band that has ebbed and flowed since "Legend" you may feel the same. But if you loved the Poco sound, and know the band well enough this is a great set of songs mostly culled from the great 4-man era prior to Schmidt leaving. And it is a fantastic live record. Well recorded, incredibly well played and it just doesn't have a down moment throughout. This is what Deliverin' should have been. Only complaint: Richie's cameo is under-realized. He hardly makes a difference on "Hoe Down." He should have done "Good Feelin to Know" or "Let's Dance" ... something only he could handle.

First RATE!!!

This album and Deliverin' are the Best live Poco. When will they release Country Bump?? MORE POCO PLEASE !!! POCO-NUTS UNITE!!

First-Rate!

Quite simply, this is Poco's best live album. Anyone who says differently does not know what they are talking about. The energy is fantastic and each song is performed as well as is possible. Many are superior to the studio version, e.g. "Magnolia" which has an incredible steel guitar solo that has to be heard to be believed. Worth whatever they're asking you to pay for it.

Biography

Formed: 1968 in Los Angeles, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

One of the first and longest-lasting country-rock groups, Poco had their roots in the dying embers of Buffalo Springfield. After Neil Young and Stephen Stills, the co-founders of that group, exited in the spring of 1968, only guitarist/singer Richie Furay and bassist Jim Messina remained to complete the group's swan song, Last Time Around. The final Springfield track, "Kind Woman," included only Furay and Messina, with a guest appearance on steel guitar by Rusty Young — at the time, he was...
Full Bio

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