In a departure from the first album,
Linda Ronstadt was the lead vocalist on almost all songs, with only occasional harmony vocals. The exception is the title song, "Evergreen" (also released on the B-side of the album's first single, "One for One").
Kenny Edwards sang lead on "Part One", while "Part Two" is an instrumental. Both parts have a
psychedelic rock feel and feature
sitar playing (also by Edwards). The album contains the band's biggest hit, "
Different Drum", written by
Mike Nesmith prior to his joining
The Monkees. The Stone Poneys' version went to No. 12 on ''
Billboard's'' Hot 100 chart (with 'featuring Linda Ronstadt' on the single label; she was the only band member on the track). As Edwards recalled, the band based their original recording of the song on a version by
The Greenbriar Boys from their 1966 album
Better Late than Never!: "We cut a version very much like that, with mandolin, kind of a
jug bandy, bluegrass-lite version." Record producer
Nik Venet, sensing that the song could be a hit, had Ronstadt re-record it with other musicians. However, "Different Drum" did not chart until November 1967, after the band's four-month tour to support the album; Edwards had already left the Stone Poneys by then. The first single from the album, "One for One," did not chart. It was co-written by Austin DeLone, later a member of seminal
country rock band
Eggs Over Easy, a group credited with launching the
pub rock movement in Great Britain. Five of the songs were co-written by band members
Bobby Kimmel and Edwards. Kimmel also co-wrote "New Hard Times" – with the unusual theme of examining the downside of '60s affluence – with Mayne Smith, a member of the San Francisco Bay Area's first bluegrass band, the Redwood Canyon Ramblers. Many of the other songwriters featured on the album, like the Stone Poneys themselves, were struggling singer-songwriters on the Los Angeles folk scene.
Steve Gillette contributed "Song about the Rain" and "Back on the Street Again", and sang harmony vocals with Ronstadt on the latter.
Sunshine Company had their biggest hit with "Back on the Street Again" (reaching No. 36 in Billboard); and Gillette included it on his eponymous debut album; both versions were released in 1967. More than 30 years later, West Coast
bluegrass band Laurel Canyon Ramblers (led by
Herb Pederson) released the song as the title track of their third CD, in 1998. "December Dream," the album's opening track, was written by
John Braheny, who had a brief career as a singer-songwriter before moving on to other areas of the music business.
Fred Neil recorded the song in the same general time period, although it remained unreleased until the 1998 double-CD
compilation album The Many Sides of Fred Neil. Braheny also included it on his eccentric 1970 LP,
Some Kind of Change. ==Track listing==