So here's a new idea for a series on this blog. Because, you know, there ain't enough of them already. But I've been playing with the idea in my head for a while now, and the little alternate album Poco retrospective on these pages these last few weeks sprung me into action. To wrap up the whole Poco thing, I'm going to present the first installment of Discography, which, as you might have deducted from its ambigious title, looks at a band's or artist's discography and ranks the albums. As any good countdown should, we'll be counting down the spots, so the trash gets taken out first. A couple of ground rules: I'm obviously not rating greatest hits comps or box sets, but also no live albums. Studio albums only, folks, so it's a level playing field.
With Poco I get in trouble right away, though,with the 'no live album' rule, as one of their biggest sellers and critically acclaimed album is DeLIVEring, their 1970 live album, which - if you've read the write-up to From The Outside In - was a compromise to ease tensions brewing between co-founders Richie Furay and Jim Messina in mid-1970, but was also half new original songs, so it wasn't the classic 'greatest hits, but faster and sloppier' album. If I were to rank it, it would top the studio albums of the Messina-era and be a Top Ten Poco album. But nope, no live stuff, which is also good because in their latter years, when the band was essentially a nostalgia act, and no one expected nor wanted studio albums from them, they issued a couple of live albums, none of them bad, none of them necessary. Plus their 70s prime was also covered with a couple of newly released live albums, Live At Columbie Studios and The Last Roundup, both worthwhile, so Poco as a band has more live albums than other bands have issued albums altogether.
Anyway, let's get down to business, shall we?
19. Legacy (1989)
Okay, let's get this out of the way: This isn't really a Poco album. This is an album of five guys who called themselves Poco more than twenty years before, as for this one-off the 'original Poco' including Randy Meisner reunited. But this is atrocious stuff, the result of one of those weird mid-to-late 80s mini-trends of producers or musicians wanting to see their teenage idols back in action with modern studio techniques. (Richard Marx was a driving force behind this). There is no collaboration, no songwriting (almost all here comes from corporate songwriter teams), and almost no harmonizing, much less a sound that anyone would recognize as Poco. Hell, they didn't even let George Grantham behind the drums, leaving the playing to soulless L.A. hired guns. And the songs? Yuck. This is all-around awful stuff, and I say that as someone with a really high tolerance threshold for 80s AOR rock and AOR cheese.
18. Cowboys And Englishmen (1982)
If this isn't the bottom of the litter on a technicality, it is easily the worst album made by Poco as an active band. The always dreaded record contract filler in its worst incarnation, the best thing about this album is the unexpecetdly attractive cover art. The rest? Oh boy. Sounding like a bored bar band on a slow tuesday night going through their repertoire for the same five barflies that are there every tuesday, you can almost hear them count down the minutes in their head until they're outta here. Not without slaughtering eight innocent cover songs. Seriously, if you want to hear how a band kills two Gordon Lightfoot classics back to back, this is the album for you. The only saving grace is the lone original, the Rusty Young medley of "Ashes/Feudin'", the latter a reminder of Young's country past and, somewhat surprisingly, being nominated for a Grammy. Other than that one, avoid at all costs.
17. Inamorata (1984)
Poco's swansong for the band as an active recording entity, this is also awful, with everything you hate about 80s music production in place: cavernous drums, chintzy keyboards and unnatural sounding guitars all over the place, coupled with weak and derivative songwriting. Rusty Young has seemingly discovered New Wave only half a decade or so late, and tries to get into the game, with predictably awful results. Oh, and what's with the album cover that looks like it should be for a Marillion album? Inamorata has exactly two saving graces: A wonderful cover of Ricky Nelson's "This Old Flame", and Cotton's wistful "Days Gone By" with a vocal cameo of Richie Furay. The rest? Avoid at all costs.
16. Running Horse (2002)
Poco's, uh, 'comeback' album, after 18 years away (since this is the Cotton-Young version of the band, it's predecessor is Inamorata, not Legacy). And boy, does it sound as no time has gone by, albeit not in a good way. This is a 21th Century album that sounds stuck in the late 80s, and I don't mean that in a good way. Still too many listless ballads and AOR songs, coupled with a synthetic production straight out of 1987. "Never Get Enough" is pretty neat, and the title song one of the few that actually move, but if you're missing out on this album, you're not missing much.
15. Under The Gun (1980)
The follow-up to their unexpected hit record Legend couln't repeat the trick. Paul Cotton's title song is actually pretty good, but as far as highlights go that's about it. Rusty Young had now discovered Bruce Springsteen, and seemingly tries to write Springsteen-inspired songs, with predictably awful results. The best you can say about this album is that it is inoffensive while you listen to it.
14. All Fired Up (2013)
If it has to be latter-day Poco, this is much better than Running Horse. It's still a very tranquil set, but the playing is good, the production not as grating, and this comes out as a friendly Adult Contemporary country-rock album, that plays well while running. You won't remember much about it once it's done, but as a last album, this could have been much worse.
13. Ghost Town (1982)
Their first album for Atlantic Records, after they left ABC Records with the stinker Cowboys & Englishmen. You can see why that album was what it was, because Cotton and Young kept all their good compositions for this one, and sound like they are actually trying here. Rusty Young's title song is merely okay, but his "Shoot For The Moon" is a nice AOR ballad, if you can stomach that kind of thing. I'm also quite fond of Paul Cotton's album closing instrumental "High Sierra". This isn't a great album by any means, but it is at least respectable.
12. Legend (1978)
Thousands will disagree with me, as this was their big seller, throwing off two top twenty hits in "Crazy Love" and "Heart Of The Night", and is generally well-remembered by those who bought it at the time. And I admit it: This is really well done AOR and soft rock. That's the good news. The bad news? It's still AOR and soft rock, which - even when well done - has a ceiling in terms of how great this can be. Yes "Crazy Love" is a classic, their island vacation on "Barbados" is pretty neat, and "Heart Of The Night" is okay if you're into that kind of music. But yeah, the total shedding of any hint of country rock still hurts my personal enjoyment of this.
11. Indian Summer (1978)
The last hurrah for the 'original' Poco, as far as a band with a ton of lineup changes can be called such a thing, but this is still a band with a clear lineage to the original pioneering country rock outfit. Unfortunately the 1974-1977 foursome call it a day with their weakest album, running out of steam and ideas. There's still some fine songs to be heard here ("Indian Summer", "Living In The Band"), but the disco strings & horns on their "The Dance" suite - not to mention Tim Schmit's falsetto yells - are a terrible idea. When your proud hard-working country-rock band tries to compete with the Bee Gees, it is maybe indeed time to hang it up.
So, the first half of Poco's discography is out of the way. If you've made it this far, you've seen that you can - and probably should - do without the first five albums listed, and then your mileage may vary. None of these are essential, obviously, but the last four are pretty good listens if you are not too discerning. The real good stuff is obviously coming when we hit the top ten in Part 2. You can also see that I have a clear preferace for the 'Poco' Poco years, leavng most of the 'Cotton-Young Band as Poco' albus behind. I get at this in the Legend mini-review as this kind of shameless AOR-soft rock has a definitive ceiling for me. Oh, als: Tim Schmit - who Rusty Young hated - is five times the vocalist that Young is, even though they both work in the same high and smooth register, so it stands to reason that any Scmit record will best one with tons of Young one exception to the rule will show up in part two).
By the way, did you notice something in the above album covers? The famous running horse logo that graced their only hit record legend shows up in variations on no less than four other covers, including the last three the band would issue. Anything to remind people of the band's commercial highpoint...oh, quick trivia time: That iconic cover was created by...Phil Hartman, doing graphic design work to pay the rent while waiting on breaking through as a comic
And that's it for today, folks, come back in a day or two for the top ten of Poco records which I can guarantee has some surprises for Poconuts, or Poconuts in training...

























