Randy Meisner

RANDY MEISNER
 
 
Randy Meisner  (born March 8, 1946) is a retired American musician, singer, songwriter, and founding member of the Eagles.  Throughout his professional musical career, Meisner’s main role was that of bassist and backing high-harmony vocalist as both a group member and session musician.  He co-wrote the Eagles hit song “Take It to the Limit”, which he also sang.  

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When Last Time Around was being wound up, Stephen Stills and Neil Young had already exited Buffalo Springfield; and Richie Furay (guitar and vocals) and Jim Messina (bass guitar) were about the only ones left.  For the final track laid down by Buffalo Springfield, Furay and Messina were joined by Rusty Young (pedal steel guitar); he was a rarity in that time period in being one of the few steel guitarists who felt comfortable playing rock music.  The three stuck together; at Young’s suggestion, they added Randy Meisner (bass guitar and vocals), who had been in a band called the Poor, and George Grantham (drums and vocals), who had been in a psychedelic folk/rock band called Boenzee Cryque with Rusty Young

 

The band first began calling themselves Pogo, but Walt Kellythe creator of the popular comic strip Pogo objected, so they switched to Poco

 

Poco’s first album, Pickin’ up the Pieces is considered to be a classic of the country-rock genre, the leading sound emerging from Southern California in the 1970’s and into the 1980’s.  But their internal problems began almost immediately:  Randy Meisner played on the first album but was asked to leave the band after becoming angry at being left out of the final mixing and production of the tracks on the record.  Poco went further than most in its acrimony:  Although his instrumental contributions were left in, Meisner’s lead vocals were removed from the album (George Grantham sung new ones to take their place), and he was taken out of the cover painting and replaced with a dog. 

 

After leaving PocoRandy Meisner played with Rick Nelson for a while and then joined another country-rock outfit that eventually dubbed themselves the Eagles.  Jim Messina left not long after that and started a fruitful collaboration with Kenny Loggins as Loggins and Messina

 

(April 2014)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021