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Tagged: timothybschmidt

Found 4 posts tagged timothybschmidt:

New John Fogerty single debuts today

New John Fogerty single debuts today John Fogerty's new single, a cover of the Everly Brothers' "When Will I Be Loved?" is scheduled to debut today on his official website. The track is from his new album The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again , coming out Sept. 1 - grammatical errors and all. The album features guest appearances from former Eagles Don Henley and Timothy B. Schmidt, and Bruce Springsteen who duets with Fogerty on "When Will I Be Loved?" As he did on the first Blue Ridge Rangers album (1973) Fogerty dusts off a bunch of covers - the new album features [...]

JOHN FOGERTY's New "BLUE RIDGE RANGERS RIDES AGAIN" Gets September 1 Release

MUSIC NEWS - John Fogerty's new album Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again has been announced for a September 1 release from Fortunate Son/Verve Forecast . On RRRA , Fogerty brings back the concept behind his solo debut, 1973's The Blue Ridge Rangers . He's dusted off a collection of his favorite classic songs, such as John Prine's " Paradise," Buck Owens' " I Don't Care ," Delaney and Bonnie's " Never Ending Song of Love " and John Denver's " Back Home Again ," as well as his own " Change in the Weather " [...]

John Fogerty Gets Help from Springsteen, Some EAGLES and Others on New Album

MUSIC NEWS- John Fogerty's upcoming album, "The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again," the follow-up to his debut work from 36 years ago, is now complete with a late summer/early fall album release date pending, reports the Country Standard Time. Blue Ridge Rangers , released in 1973, was the first album from Fogerty after the break-up of Creedence Clearwater Revival . The new disc is said to contain 12 songs and shows the influence country and roots music have had on Fogerty [...]

Lost Classics! Poco

Lost Classics! Poco In the late 1960s, country rock was still in its infancy. And frankly, not a whole lot of people knew exactly what it was - even some of its better practitioners. But in 1968, along came this band Poco, and they seemed to have a pretty good idea of what they were doing. The lineage of this band had great promise: Richie Furay came out of the fractured Buffalo Springfield, and Jim Messina was that band's last bass player and producer. Furay and Messina recruited multi-instrumentalist Rusty Young (who played on Furay's "Kind Woman" for the Springfield), drummer [...]