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jim messina

Jim Messina

As a member of such seminal rock legends as Buffalo Springfield, Poco and Loggins & Messina, Jim Messina has had his hand - as writer, singer, guitarist, producer and engineer - in some of the definitive music of the Rock Era. And now you can have Jim Messina peform at your next special event in an acoustic band format. Call us to book Jim Messina today.

In the mean time, here is more information ona real contributor to rock music's history - Jim Messina:

Jim's parents divorced when he was still an infant, so his youth was divided between his mother's native state of Texas and his father's home in California. Jim's mom was into doo-wop, honky-tonk and early rock 'n roll, while his father - himself a semi-professional guitarist - leaned more toward the jazzabilly of Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys and Spade Cooley.

Jim began learning guitar at the age of 5 and as he got older was attracted in particular to the guitar parts and sounds in early Elvis Presley and Ricky Nelson records. His California roots led him to early '6O's surf music, again especially fascinated by the guitar sounds of early surf/rock groups like Dick Dale and the DelTones and the Champs.

When Jim was only 17 and a senior in high school, he was asked by a local deejay who had heard him play, to assemble a band and produce albums on two new artists the man was working with. Unsure just what producing even meant, Jim knew that he knew music, and he readily accepted the offer.

Though both albums made beelines for oblivion, the studio's engineer was impressed with Jimmy and asked him to stay on as his assistant and protégé. Over the next few years Jim became a knowledgeable and skilled recording, mixing and mastering engineer as well as musician and producer.

Jim had given up on playing professionally by then, content with the satisfaction he received from the technical side of making music, and having graduated to the position of second engineer at Hollywood's famed Sunset Sound, working with superstars-to-be, among them the Doors, Lee Michaels and Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass and later Buffalo Springfield.

After engineering their second album, Buffalo Springfield Again, on which he also served as something of an unaccredited producer, Jim joined the group playing bass and producing their final album, Last Time Around. When the Springfield splintered in 1968, Jim and Richie Furay, along with Rusty Young, who's played pedal steel guitar on the original "Kind Woman," were already formulating a plan to hang onto the rock 'n roll shoes while adding some spin from the country influences they'd loved and grown up on.

"Rusty was really into using the pedal steel to play rock 'n roll," recalls Jim. "It was the natural instrument to add to the band to create the feeling we were looking for."

Jim remained with Poco for less than two years, but in that short tenure Poco had not only carved out a previously unknown genre of music called country/rock, but also nurture the talents of Eagles-to-be Randy Meisner and Timothy B. Schmidt.

"There really was a sense of something new and exciting in the air at that time," Jim says. "By the time we showcased for the heads of a number of the labels, we were tight and rehearsed and the program was sequenced, and we came on that stage like a freight train."

While Poco's chart performance and commercial success was less than their historical importance, their impact was nonetheless profound.

Jim departed with hopes of returning to the producer's chair, and was soon rewarded with a six-album production deal with Columbia Records. His first project was a young singer-songwriter named Kenny Loggins. Jim became an integral part of Loggins' debut, Sittin' In, and felt a desire to join the newcomer on his first tour until Loggins was firmly and confidently established. The credibility Jim brought from his days with both the Springfield and Poco cemented the relationship in the label's eyes.

Loggins & Messina went on to release nine albums in the next seven years, amassing sales of over 14 million units. "Poco had been some real good-time music," says Jim. "Loggins & Messina just took that a step further and made it more sophisticated and attainable, because it was so musically diverse - from folk to country/rock, to jazz or classical. Through the years, the Loggins & Messina period yielded the stuff I'm most proud of."

After a few years off for the rest and self-exploration, Jim made three solo albums in the '80s, as well as recording and touring with the original, reunited Poco when they released the album Legacy in 1989. Solo acoustic performance dates by Jim were well-received and led to his forming a new band to tour with and do the best of his own material and as well as that of some of the illustrious company he'd kept over the years. With an album of all-new material on River North, Jim says he's enjoying discovering who he is, where he's been and where he's going.

Jim Messina's "Watching The River Run" is more than a collection of greatest hits, though it's eleven selections have indeed accounted for millions of record sales. And it's no simple stroll through the past, though many of it's songs have become integral parts of people's lives.

Assembling for the first time his classic songs from the various super-groups he helped foster, Jim brought together some of the most seasoned and celebrated touring musicians from the pop, country and rock worlds and recorded almost the entire album live in the studio, bringing it a welcome freshness and spontaneity, and in some cases even giving new faces to songs that are as close as old friends.

"These songs on this album are a chronology of all that's part of me - past, present and future," Jim explains. "I was looking for a title that would tie that together. Metaphorically, looking at my life as a river, and watching it run through all the valleys and mountains and stages that it goes through until it finally reaches the ocean, giving perfect picture of what I'm trying to say."

Jim soars on the title song, done originally on Loggins & Messina's watershed LP, Full Sail, redone this time as an impassioned duet with Crystal Bernard. "Listen to a Country Song" still stands up today with the best of contemporary country, even though it predated current trends by almost 20 years.

The same can be said for "Kind Woman" and "A Child's Claim to Fame," both written by Jim's Springfield and Poco band mate, Richie Furay. "You Better Think Twice" is just as exuberant country/rock as it was the day Poco first recorded it. "Your Mama Don't Dance" takes on a punchy Chicago blues groove, while "Angry Eyes" - driven by Jim's stinging electric guitar - hits home with more power than ever.

Already revered by country artists, writers and producers as a pioneering figure, Messina has been establishing ties with the Nashville creative community for some time, co-writing Brooks & Dunn's "Mexico Minutes" with Kent Robbins, which appears here in a very different form.

"Brooks & Dunn cut "Mexico Minutes" very country and it really works well for them" says Jim. "I wanted to arrange and record it with the same ambiance in which I wrote it. The real Spanish/Mexican influences in the melodies and arrangement is what makes it work for me."

"After all my years as a producer shaping other people's music to be the best it could possibly be, I'm just enjoying focusing my efforts and abilities on my own identity musically," he concludes. "I've just wanted to do the best work I possibly can and then let it be what it's gonna be, because there are no guarantees in this business. The only thing I hope for is that what I do will be inspiring to enough people that it will become a part of their lives and create a life of its own."

Now available for your next corporate event - Jim Messina! Contact us today to arrange an appearance for your next special event.


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