Buffalo Springfield released the track "For What It's Worth," inspired by a Los Angeles protest that became tied to the Vietnam War.
Stevie Nicks has a deep connection with Buffalo Springfield’s 1967 song, “Rock & Roll Woman.” Listening to it as a 19-year-old girl, Nicks thought it was about her, or at least the woman she wanted to ...
Richie Furay has never lived in San Diego, but the 1997 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee and co-founder of the pioneering bands Buffalo Springfield and Poco can credit the city for twice playing a ...
He made the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a founding member of Buffalo Springfield. This Friday, Richie Furay releases his new country music duet album “In the Country.” “What a challenging, fun project ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Buffalo Springfield rehearse inside their house on Oct. 30, 1967, in Malibu, California: Bruce Palmer, Stephen Stills, Neil Young, ...
TOUR KICKS OFF IN JUNE WITH SIX CALIFORNIA DATES Buffalo Springfield will launch a reunion tour this June with six dates in California and an appearance at the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in ...
Here we are yet again. Welcome back to the University of Connecticut for a fun-filled semester and another edition of No Skips, where we take albums track-by-track and see whether they contain any ...
The late 1960s ushered in a musical revolution on the West Coast, with psychedelic rock bands like Jefferson Airplane and Buffalo Springfield blazing the trail while future rockers like Stevie Nicks ...
One record had a dramatic effect on the course of Richie Furay’s career — “Mr. Tambourine Man” by The Byrds. As soon as Furay, a folk musician, heard the new electric sounds by the American rock band ...