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The first in a long line of compilation albums, The Very Best of Poco features highlights from the band's career from 1969–1974. When released on CD in the late 1980s, the album omits two tracks originally on the album, "Railroad Days" and "Skatin" for space reasons.
"Crazy Love" is a 1979 hit single for the country rock group Poco introduced on the 1978 album Legend. Written by founding group member Rusty Young, "Crazy Love" was the first single by Poco to reach the Top 40 and remained the group's biggest hit, with a special impact as an Adult Contemporary hit, being ranked by Billboard as the #1 AC song for the year 1979.
In particular, the album includes an alternate acoustic version of Poco's first hit, Jim Messina's "You Better Think Twice", and four previously-unreleased songs from the Crazy Eyes sessions, including Furay's "Believe Me", which later became a hit for the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band.
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.
The Very Best of Poco: 90 1979 Ride the Country — Poco: The Songs of Paul Cotton — 1980 Poco: The Songs of Richie Furay — The Best Of — 1982 Backtracks: 209 1989 Crazy Loving: The Best of Poco 1975-1982 — 1990 Retrospective — The Forgotten Trail (1969-74) — 1995 Ghost Town/Inamorata — 1996 On the Country Side — 1997 The ...
The Very Best of Poco is a 1999 compilation album of songs by the band Poco. The Very Best of Poco; Greatest hits album by . Poco. Released: 1999: Genre: Country rock ...
Pickin' Up the Pieces is the debut album by country rock band Poco, released in 1969. [1] It was one of the earliest examples of the emerging genre of country rock. Several of the songs date back to Richie Furay's days in Buffalo Springfield. An early version of "What a Day" was included on the Buffalo Springfield box set in 2001.
"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.