Dave Zimmer: "With the 40th anniversary of
Woodstock at hand, the time feels right to share several short
interviews about Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young I did by e-mail with
writer colleagues/ friends Peter Doggett, John Einarson, Johnny Rogan
and Steve Silberman back in late 2007 and early 2008. Some of their
comments were potentially going to be included in the update chapter for
the latest edition of Crosby, Stills & Nash: The Biography.
During the final editing process, however, it was decided by my Da Capo
Press editor that the writers’ views and insights, while by turns
informative and fascinating, interrupted the flow of the narrative text.
As a result, with the exception of an excerpt from a Johnny Rogan
comment, their words were left on the editing room floor. Thanks to
4WaySite web site manager Dolf van Stijgeren, the question and answer
interviews are presented here, in unedited form. So put on your favorite
CSN&Y music, settle back and read on".
* PETER DOGGETT *
Peter Doggett is one of the UK’s leading rock writers
and journalists. He was editor of Record Collector magazine for
fifteen years, and currently writes for Mojo and Q, among
other publications. His most recent book is There's A Riot Going On:
Revolutionaries, Rock Stars, and the Rise and Fall of the '60s. He is also the author of
Are You Ready for the Country? In addition, he has also written
biographies of John Lennon and Lou Reed.
Dave Zimmer: What is it about CSN and
CSNY that keeps the musicians themselves coming back to the combinations
-- even now that all of the guys are in their 60s?
Peter Doggett: At its most basic, the reason is money: would
Stills and Crosby work together unless it was so financially lucrative
that they felt they had to? I doubt it very much. It's obvious that
Stills prefers to work alone; likewise Crosby & Nash as a duo; but it's
the trio, and especially the quartet, that pulls in the crowds. (Sadly
none of these combinations can sell records any longer, no matter how
good they are.) Plus one could get into a long psychological debate
about the way in which Young has treated CSN down the years, using and
losing them as it suits him, and manipulating CSNY like a dictatorial
control freak.
But I’d rather accentuate the musical side of these equations.
While CSN has, for the past two decades, effectively been a (wonderful)
oldies act, CSNY pushes all four musicians into places they couldn't
reach any other way. That was brought home to me when I finally got to
see all four perform together in 2002: Stills and Young fired each other
up like demon engines, and Crosby and Nash picked up on that vital
energy. For three remarkable hours, four flawed individuals became an
almost supernatural positive force. During those moments, money is no
longer the motivation - although they wouldn't have allowed themselves
to get into that position unless they were getting paid.
DZ: What keeps their audiences coming
back?
PD: As with every ‘classic’ act, most of the audience for
CSNY is there for nostalgia - a reminder of when they felt young and
vital, with the power to change the world. Nobody imagined in 2006 that
CSNY could help to overthrow Bush, the way that their audience must have
felt with Nixon in 1970 (not to mention 1974). But it must have been
wonderful to relive the sense of possibility.
Beyond the baby boomers who would just as soon go and see Chicago or the
Doobie Brothers, people like us go back to see all the CSNY combinations
because we're still moved by the songs, dazzled by the harmonies, and
electrified by the passion. Part of that is nostalgia; a larger part is
that when, for instance, C&N are performing Guinnevere, there's nowhere
else in the world we'd rather be.
DZ: How much has the drama of
their lives and the guys' personal turmoil contributed to the allure and
popularity of CSN and CSNY?
PD: You could reverse the question, and ask how much their
popularity has been harmed by the drama and turmoil. How big and
influential a band might CSNY have been if they had maintained their
unity from 1970 through to the end of the decade? How much great music
was wasted on the way? Yet as a committed fan, the intrigue, the endless
arguments, the shifting of allegiances, the life-and-death struggles,
and the triumphant return of C, S and N as recording artists in the past
decade, has been like wallowing in a glorious soap opera. If the guys’
egos hadn’t been so big that they were bound to collide, endlessly, then
they wouldn't have been the personalities and musicians that they are.
DZ: How do
you think the CSN/CSNY story will ultimately end? And what will their
epitaph be?
PD: There won’t be any end beyond the end that awaits us all.
While they’re still alive, they'll still be making music. Epitaph? It
will be in the words of the songs: Teach Your Children, Love The One
You're With, “remember what we've said and done and felt about each
other”. Historically, they’ll be remembered as the epitome of the
Woodstock generation, whether they like it or not. But I’d rather they
were remembered for producing music that was both breathtakingly
beautiful and fiercely powerful.
DZ: What is
it about Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, collectively and individually,
that first attracted you and why do the guys and their music continue to
hold your interest and enthusiasm?
PD: Stills was my main man, originally, and then Young, and
it took me a while to realise that I loved all four (and maybe Crosby
most of all). I've always been a sucker for harmonies, and CSN's
harmonies are like nobody else's. But there's so much more than that. I
love Crosby's weirdness and Nash's directness and Stills' soulfulness
and Young's inspiration. For all their faults, I love the four
individuals who created and inhabit their songs. Their music lives in my
head, day after day, and if you catch me singing on a street corner, it
will almost always be a CSNY-related song. How can you deliver a
rational explanation for falling in love?
DZ: What is
your most memorable personal moment (or moments) with individuals in the
CSNY family?
PD: Having been fortunate enough to interview CS&N on several
occasions, there have been a few . . . sitting round a table in London
with CSN, realising that for the next hour, I was the fourth member of
the quartet . . . getting a chance to experience the original personal
chemistry that united the trio, as they playfully batted jokes back and
forth and teased each other mercilessly . . . the evening when my phone
rang, and a voice said, “Hi Peter, this is David Crosby”, followed a few
minutes later by another call, and “Hi Peter, this is Graham Nash” (I
tried to imagine how the 15-year-old me would have felt) . . . Crosby
interrupting a passionate rant about CPR to compliment me on my socks .
. . Stills and I bellowing at each other for 90 minutes in a London
hotel room, trying to overcome our mutual inability to work out what the
hell the other one was saying . . . Crosby's boyish enthusiasm whenever
he gets a compliment . . . Nash’s sardonic humour . . . and then there
are the musical memories: the Suite at Wembley in 1983, greeted by the
longest ovation I've ever heard from any crowd; CSN opening up with Deja
Vu a lifetime later at another London show; likewise Crosby and CPR in a
small London club, opening with Music Is Love; Young and Crazy Horse in
full ecstatic flight; and every time I've heard Crosby and Nash winding
their voices around Guinnevere. Not to mention the next time I play any
of their records.
*
JOHN EINARSON *
Renowned
rock historian John Einarson is the author of more
than a dozen books, including the critically-acclaimed
Hot Burritos: The True Story of the Flying Burrito Bros.,
voted among the 10 Best Books of 2008 by Uncut;
Mr. Tambourine Man: The Life and Legacy of The Byrds'
Gene Clark, voted among the 20 Best Books of 2005 by
Uncut and Record Collector; For What
It's Worth: The Story of Buffalo Springfield; Don’t Be
Denied: Neil Young’s Canadian Years, and Randy
Bachman: Takin’ Care of Business, among others.
|
Dave Zimmer:
What is it about CSN and CSNY that keeps the musicians themselves coming
back to the combinations -- even now that all of the guys are in their
60s?
John Einarson: It’s a case of the sum of its parts being greater
than the individuals. When the members of CSN or CSNY come together what
they create is something wholly unique and special that they do not
experience individually or in other combinations. It’s a ‘1+1+1 = 4’
thing, something distinctive and extraordinary that each member brings
to the collective that is only present in that combination and
transcends their individual musical personalities. There was a joy that
the three experienced when their voices first blended together. There
was nothing like it anywhere else then and nothing since. Together they
create a certain magic absent on their own. And they recognize that.
Despite all the water under the bridge over the years, when those three
or four voices come together in song it’s a sound like nothing else.
That’s a pretty compelling attraction for them.
DZ: What
keeps their audiences coming back?
JE: CSN and CSNY are a touchstone to a particular time and place for
millions of people. They are the living embodiment of the Woodstock
generation and their music and message continue to resonate with a
particular age group, that same peace and love sentiment that we all
still idealize and aspire to. It wasn’t just fluffy pipe dreams. It was
real, and CSN(Y) reminds us of an idyllic time in our lives and in the
world when we all believed music could, indeed, change the world. They
and their music have become icons of an era, symbols for a generation.
And because their music has substance and a universally-appealing
message that spans the generations they continue to draw new and younger
fans to their concerts.

DZ: How much
has the drama of their lives and the guys' personal turmoil contributed
to the allure and popularity of CSN and CSNY?
JE: I don’t think the wider world is really aware of all the drama
and internecine warfare over the decades between the individuals in the
group. Certainly David Crosby’s life has provided plenty of tabloid
fodder and perhaps that has some attraction for fans. But I believe it’s
still all about the music they create together that draws people to the
group. That transcends any human drama surrounding the individuals.
People don’t always get along, that’s a fact of life and we all accept
that, but when these three or four individuals come together that’s a
very special moment.
DZ: How do
you think the CSN and CSNY story will ultimately end?
JE: The fact that both CSN and CSNY have continued to tour and
delight audiences is very reassuring. They’re all in their sixties now
yet still able to create their own unique brand of magic onstage
together night after night. Certainly Nash and Young are capable of
surviving the tour grind for several more years but health issues are
beginning to plague Stills and Crosby. Realistically I think we’re
nearing the end of the line. Better to leave the stage on a high and
part as friends than beat something into the ground. They have
absolutely nothing they need to prove to anyone. Their legacy remains
firmly intact and will outlive them and us. A century from now people
will still be singing “Teach Your Children”, “Find The Cost Of Freedom”
or “Woodstock”. That music and those sentiments are timeless.
*
JOHNNY ROGAN *
Johnny Rogan is the author of over
20 acclaimed books, including The Byrds: Timeless Flight
Revisited, Neil Young: Zero To Sixty and Crosby,
Stills, Nash & Young: The Visual Documentary. His other
titles include major biographies of Van Morrison, the Kinks,
the Smiths, and musical studies of John Lennon and
Morrissey, plus the groundbreaking study of rock management,
Starmakers & Svengalis.
|
Dave Zimmer: What is it about CSN and
CSNY that keeps the musicians themselves coming back to the combinations
-- even now that all of the guys are in their 60s?
Johnny Rogan: There have probably been different reasons at
different times. In the past, personal, financial and musical motives
have each played a part in the collective decision somewhere along the
line. But the noblest reason harks back to the formation of the original
trio when they made that pact about not being a group but an aggregation
of friends, equally capable of flying solo or in formation. Few believed
them at the time, but they proved true to their word. They probably lost
millions by declining to 'reform' on many occasions over the decades.
The skeptics always forget that, don’t they? The foursome have enjoyed
playing solo and in different permutations and I’ve loved them all. I
think they understood the importance - musically and mythically - of CSN&Y,
more than ever on the last couple of tours. Taking an overview, it’s
amazing that all four didn’t reconnect more over the years and that was
our loss too. It speaks volumes that they never ‘manufactured’ a
reunion. You have to admire them for that.
DZ: What
keeps their audiences coming back?
JR: Nostalgia? For some, surely. The love of great music,
certainly. All their tours have been well received, and rightly so.
They've often shown an uncanny ability to capture their time, even when
that time seemed past. After 1971, we wondered whether the magic
foursome would ever reconvene, and there was a ludicrous 28 year gap
between album releases. But in 1974 we had the stadium tour. The counter
culture seemed in decline then, their own lives affected by related
tales of doom and death - read the books! I described them as 'lost
King Arthurs in search of a Camelot'. But that summer, they reclaimed
all that had seemed lost. The spectre of Sixties idealism returned with
them - their arch nemesis Richard Nixon was impeached, as if fulfulling
the prophecies of Young's 'Ohio' and Stills' 'America's Children',
Muhammad Ali reclaimed the world heavyweight championship and there was
CSN&Y defining the age once more. Nor was this simply nostalgia for
Woodstock survivors. The foursome were still introducing new songs of
high quality.... Flash forward to more recent times, a different age, a
different president, a different war, but CSN&Y had once again found a
cause. There was nothing cosily nostalgic about this tour. They had
something to say and captured their time yet again. Listen to the tapes,
watch the DVD. It’s like ancient warriors returning to remind the world
of lost ideals, seeking to inspire again. It would have been even better
if they took the last tour around the world, as they have a global
audience and this was about more than the fight for the political heart
and soul of America. . . Beyond all that, CSN&Y offer their audience a
unique sense of history. How many other aggregations from the late
Sixties can still boast an original line-up intact? Given their
colourful histories, they've done remarkably well to escape the blade of
the Grim Reaper. Consider Crosby's lengthy spell in freebase hell and
even recent heart trouble; Nash's boating accident which might easily
have cost him his life; Young's brain aneurism; Stills’ health problems.
As a result, there's a feeling of event when CSN&Y tour or record -
always the unspoken thought that this could prove the last time around.
Near death scares ensure audiences treasure the moment even more.
DZ: How much
has the drama of their lives and the guys' personal turmoil contributed
to the allure and popularity of CSN and CSNY?
JR: I'm sure it’s all contributed to the myth, but for me it was
their music that was most important. There was little known about the
turmoils in Buffalo Springfield or even the Byrds when that wonderful
debut album 'Crosby, Stills & Nash' was released. What people responded
to was the power and quality of the music. They were the masters of
acoustic music at the dawn of the golden age of the singer songwriter.
This was before Woodstock, before superstardom, before Neil Young even
joined. Later, we learned of their romantic lives, their politics, their
drug use, their internal conflicts, their cultural importance - and much
else. Obviously this added appeal and column inches but that would have
meant nothing without the music. Looking back now, I'm still amazed at
that scarcely believable run of releases - 'Crosby, Stills & Nash', 'Deja
Vu', 'Stephen Stills', 'After The Goldrush', 'If I Could Only Remember
My Name', 'Songs For Beginners', onward to Manassas ... the songwriting
quality and self belief is staggering. It's as if they knew that between
them they could single-handedly create the finest music of the early
Seventies. Every time one of them issued an album, it was an event.
DZ: How do you think the CSN/CSNY story
will ultimately end? And what will their epitaph be?
JR: Well, it will end in death, of course, as all things do. Their
epitaph? Probably some cliché about being spokespersons for the
Woodstock generation or rock's premier supergroup, but that's lazy
shorthand for a more complex legacy. I trust history will acknowledge
their importance and immense contribution to popular music.
DZ: What is it about Crosby, Stills, Nash
and Young, collectively and individually, that first attracted you and
why do the guys and their music continue to hold your interest and
enthusiasm?
JR: Well, obviously, as a massive Byrds fan I was eager to hear what
Crosby would do next. I liked the Hollies too and had even seen Graham
Nash's final appearance with them in a star-studded cast at the Save
Rave on 8 December 1968. I also had a Buffalo Springfield album and
given I was still a school kid these were not casual purchases. The
single 'Marrakesh Express' was the first taster but nothing prepared me
for the moment I placed the needle on the record and heard that opening
album track, 'Suite: Judy Blue Eyes'. It's difficult to express how
refreshing and astounding it was to hear those exquisite three-part
harmonies, the beautiful melodies and thoughtful, poetic lyrics. It
seemed that they were taking the mantle from the Beatles as singer
songwriters supreme.
Already masters of the acoustic ballad, they also revealed themselves as
a great rocking electric ensemble, as shown through concert performances
and the succeeding 'Deja Vu'. I've already mentioned the solo outings
and recall endless debates - often simply in my own head - about whether
Stills' debut album was even better than 'Deja Vu' or Crosby's first
solo better still. It really was that important – and those records were
amazing. Obviously, I was always in there for the long haul and that was
important too. Loyalty can bring its own rewards. Many listeners left
the party prematurely after the initial hurrah. Some may not even have
bought the great 'On The Beach' or missed Stills' wonderful 1975 album.
The 1977 'CSN' record was another strong effort, underrated in the UK in
that summer of punk. The Eighties was a dark decade for the foursome.
They were dismissed by post punk critics as beyond passé; even Neil
Young was criticizing the other three in print and in song. Record
releases were infrequent and... well you know the story. But musical
trends are often cyclical and their legacy was too great to be ignored,
especially when acoustic music came back into vogue. Now their standing
seems beyond assured, but for those who followed them from the late
Sixties till today, there were many dark nights of the soul. In those
pre-Internet days, it sometimes seemed that there were only a small
number of people who still carried a torch for them. At least that was
the experience on this side of the Atlantic. I always stood up for them,
as well I might given what they had achieved.
One of the few times I wrote to the music press was after Mojo did a
major retrospective piece on them which I thought was unfairly balanced.
It's pleasing to see that, at the time of writing, they're still alive
and seemingly well. CPR is a great project, Stills and Nash are delving
into their archives and hopefully will be sufficiently inspired to issue
some new work; Young continues indefatigably and still has the capacity
to surprise. It's a wonderful story with a happier ending than anybody
could have anticipated.
DZ: What do the four mean to you? Why did
you spend so much time and energy covering them? What impact did they
have on your life?
JR: Wow. CSN&Y were the enshrinement of a dream. As
individual songwriters, they were thrilling but together they had the
power to become even greater than the sum of their parts. Beyond the
music there was the added attraction of a romantic philosophy of which
they may not even have been aware. It was as if they advocated a mantra
of free love but by placing it in such a powerful personal context they
exchanged any licentiousness for what seemed like an aspect of
neo-Romanticism, more reminiscent of the courtly love precepts of
Chaucer. Their impact on my life was profound. The reason I spent so
many years covering their careers was the same reason why I still play
their records today - an intense engagement with the music, writing and
personalities. It’s like a life-long commitment. Writing the CSN&Y book
was a tremendous joy as I was able to choose the photos, contribute all
my concert tickets and the like and throw in the kind of arcane stuff
that I felt would complement the more formal bio. I think the contract
said up to 50,000 words, but I did 110,000 and got them to swallow the
extra cost. Hey, this was CSN&Y – one of the great loves of my life!
DZ: What is your all-time favorite personal
moment (or moments) with individuals in the CSNY family?
JR: Time to get personal . Undoubtedly, my favourite
moment as an interviewer with anyone ever was my first serious encounter
with David Crosby over two long days during his five-night stint at
London's Venue in April 1980. It was the greatest interview of my life.
Crosby was passionate, brutally honest, funny, angry – a veritable
emotional barometer. Nearly a decade later, the newly rehabilitated
Crosby was still charming and flattering and wrote me the cherished
epigram, 'Your knowledge is amazing!' At a subsequent reception,
however, we became unexpectedly embroiled in a heated debate about a
song I had recently acquired on tape, 'Psychodrama City'. Crosby denied
he'd composed or even sung this composition, though it was clearly his
lead vocal, as I insisted. It was probably a lapse of memory – hardly
surprising as this was a minor outtake and Crosby hadn’t really recalled
much about 'It Happens Each Day' either. But he was resolute, and there
were other people around which reinforced his resilience. I adopted the
theatrical role of a hardened inquisitor, which he’d previously enjoyed
but these were different times and, on reflection, he probably
misinterpreted my playfulness as blind arrogance, or worse. Still
later, after the song appeared, I wrote him a jaunty teasing note via
Bill Siddons, which no doubt made things worse. At the same time, I was
grabbling with the Byrds' name game saga and the role of Gene Clark and
Michael Clarke in the scheme of things. Contentious stuff. I’m sure that
didn’t help. Some years later, Crosby suddenly and severely castigated
me in the fiercest possible terms - albeit online as opposed to print.
He's the only person in the music business whose words have ever caused
me hurt or upset - and the least expected considering his previous
flattering comments. There's a moral there, I suppose. His former mentor
Jim Dickson, actually wrote me a letter afterwards empathizing!
There are countless wonderful concert memories involving all
four members from different eras. Surprisingly, perhaps, I'd nominate
the Crosby/Nash shows from 1971 as the most emotionally powerful,
brimming with humour, empathy and a thrilling acoustic reinterpretation
of their finest work. Equally importantly, I was still a teenager and at
that age you’re arguably at your most receptive and impressionable.
Manassas was spectacular too and thank goodness they came to the UK or
I’d never have seen them. By contrast to the intimacy of Crosby/Nash,
the 1974 CSN&Y Wembley extravaganza was the ultimate day out - the Band,
Joni, and three and a half hours of CSN&Y at their zenith. There were
many others, of course, but the early ones tend to stick in your mind as
it was all so new and exciting. It felt like history in the making.
Favourite slice of humble pie was witnessing Stills at Central Park in
July 1979 and feeling sorely disappointed. It was a strange period at
the end of the Seventies. The record industry was changing and singer
songwriters were under threat. They all needed to be at the top of their
game then, but it was a period of uncertainly. It’s always difficult for
a performer to sustain greatness and evolve at the same time. That was
such a strange show. Brooks Hunnicutt was doing ‘Love The One You’re
With’. I think I misjudged what Stills was trying to do. Sixteen years
later I dutifully and rather apprehensively listened to a tape of that
Stills’ show while researching my CSN&Y book and was amazed how
audacious, adventurous and even subversive it sounded. This was Stills'
'Tonight's The Night' - the ultimate deconstruction of his rock star
myth. Riveting. I wrote about it at length in the book. They should
release that stuff too. It deserves a re-evaluation. . . .A final word
on Stills. Years ago, we used to regard Young as the dark, brooding,
mystery figure and Stills as the open, media-friendly spokesman and
personality. Since then, Young has revealed intimate details about his
life and work, via 'Shakey'. Crosby, whose interviews were once gold
dust re-emerged as a ubiquitous interviewee and has since produced two
autobiographies, written with Carl Gottlieb. Tellingly, Stills appears
in none of these tomes, even though his role was central. It’s funny
but, in terms of information, he now seems to have taken on the mantle
of mystery once allocated exclusively to Young. Who’d have thought it?
It may sound fanciful but I've often wondered whether there was some
existential moment in the late Seventies when everything changed utterly
for Stephen Stills. I remember Crosby telling me - and he said something
similar in the Zimmer book - how Stills back in 1974 wanted CSN&Y to be
bigger than the Stones. That unrelenting ambition had been evident in
his career since the Buffalo Springfield days through Manassas, a
creative whirlwind, punctuated by a series of catalogue busting songs.
We all thought he'd match Young release for release thereafter. People
can talk about ego, drugs or hubris, but there's something deeper about
Stills' seeming abnegation of rock godhead. In more recent years you can
detect an emotional detachment and slightly comic incredulity in his
asides as if he is aware of the vanities of ‘stardom’ and can no longer
connect with that brash young man of the early Seventies. And that, I
would argue, has paradoxically enhanced his legend as much as it has
diminished his output. Derek Taylor once reminded me that the Beatles
and the Byrds deserve endless analysis - the same applies to CSN&Y.
DZ: What buried CSN/CSNY archival treasure
that you are aware of would you like to see/hear officially released?
JR: This may come as a surprise but I find myself strangely satiated
these days. What with the recent box sets and higher quality of
unreleased CD-R recordings we're well provided for. I still get a shiver
when a demos CD comes out though. I welcome more of those. Plus, I keep
returning to the originals, which is a testament to their longevity.
There are a number of Stills' unreleased songs that I've never heard
dating back to the mid to late Seventies, but I'm half-scared that they
might prove anti-climactic. I wish there was more of Crosby from the
early Byrds period or before then. Some stuff seems to have disappeared
forever. But I'd still love to hear more before I shuffle off this
mortal coil. Beyond that, I am content.
*
STEVE SILBERMAN *
Steve
Silberman is a contributing editor at Wired
magazine and author of liner
notes for several Crosby & Nash album re-issues, including
Wind on the Water, Whistling Down the Wire and
Crosby-Nash Live. He also wrote essays for C&N’s Another
Stoney Evening, David Crosby's Voyage box set
and Crosby, Stills & Nash's Greatest Hits. He
co-authored, with David Shenk, the book, Skeleton Key: A
Dictionary for Deadheads. His essays on the Grateful
Dead appeared in the book, The Grateful Dead Reader,
as well as other books and magazines. Steve has also written
liner notes for several Grateful Dead album re-issues and
co-produced a five-CD Grateful Dead box set of unreleased
recordings, So Many Roads (1965 – 1995). He is also
co-host of several conferences on
The Well,
one of the most perspicacious and longest-lasting online
communities.
|
Dave Zimmer:
What is it about Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, collectively and
individually, that first attracted you? Why do the guys and their music
continue to hold your interest, inspire you and spark feelings that make
you think and fill you with wonder?
Steve Silberman: I was 12 years old when I walked into a sandal shop
in Provincetown and heard the most beautiful and mysterious music I’d
ever heard in my life. When I asked the guy behind the counter what was
playing, he uttered a series of names that sounded more like a law firm
than a rock group. Cool music, I thought, but a dorky name for a band.
The song I heard that day was “Guinnevere.”
Listening to the song today after hearing it hundreds of times since in
various live and studio versions, it still strikes me as one of the most
evocative and elusive pieces of music ever written. The melody and lyric
seem to create their own place and time in an endless spiral, where King
Arthur and peripatetic sailors and maidens who sneak into gardens at
night to inscribe mystic symbols on a wall coexist in a kind of twilit
landscape, like the mind at the edge of sleep. And those harmonies!
A few months later, when I walked into a
department store to buy my first record album, I chose Déjà Vu.
The photo on the cover also seemed to exist outside of time, in a
mythical California that was still the Wild West. The range of music on
that record was astonishing – from Stephen’s muted, almost private
reckoning with his past in “4+20,” to the incandescent passion of the
guitars in “Almost Cut My Hair” and “Everybody I Love You,” to Neil’s
sweeping “Country Girl” epic. Almost every other band (with the notable
exception of the Beatles) seemed to make music in a much smaller
universe. CSNY instantly became the music of my soul, a gateway to the
subtleties of my own feelings, a light into the secret places of the
heart. As I got older, I came to appreciate the dimensions of their art,
from Stephen’s microtonal levels of articulation to Neil’s cathartic
firestorms. But it was David and Graham’s music that spoke to me in my
own inner language. They were obviously best friends who loved each
other – you could see it in the wonderful cover shot of Wind on the
Water, how profoundly at ease and joyful they were in each
other’s presence. And you could see it onstage when they were together.
I related to that.
And eventually, I started hearing pieces
of what I loved about CSNY music in other music – in Bill Evans’ sublime
piano playing, the meditative reveries of Miles Davis, the uncanny
sacred polyphonies of Gregorian chant and Perotin’s “Viderunt omnes.”
CSNY prepared my ears to hear all that beauty, because their own music
was nourished by so many streams of melody and human feeling.
DZ: What is
it about David Crosby that makes him such a great friend, online
communicator and fellow traveler in this universe?
SS: David thrives in dialogue and relationship – whether he’s
immersed in the love of his family, furthering his ongoing 40-year
musical conversation with Graham, or dropping into an online forum where
the topic at hand is his favorite subject: him. I’m almost glad I didn’t
know David before the dark times in the ‘80s, because the David I came
to know had been humbled by his very public fall. I only occasionally
glimpsed the infamous oversized ego, and more often saw a secretly shy,
quirkily brilliant, culturally omnivorous, and restlessly passionate man
who loves honesty, social justice, well-wrought tools (sailboat, planes,
guitars), and deliciously weird opportunities for creative expression.
For all the hysterical media attention David’s gotten over the years –
fawning at first, then vicious, and almost all of it clueless about the
depth of his recorded legacy – I think he’s actually one of the
least-understood figures in popular music. Just as “If I Could Only
Remember My Name” was dismissed by the hack critics of its day as a
paragon of flaky hippie excess – and is now widely recognized as some of
the most idiosyncratically gorgeous and subtle music of the modern era –
I have faith that the music David made with CPR will be recognized by
future generations for the hard-won wisdom contained in the lyrics and
the luminous celebration of mortal life contained in the melodies. When
David and his muses commune, he has access to a profound wellspring of
the kind of art that teaches you how to live, how to embrace all the
ambiguity and suffering and intensity of being human with an open heart.
That’s rare in any medium.
DZ: Much has
been made, over the years, of the periodic personal differences of
opinions and distances between the guys. Why do you think this is? And
how has it impacted the music?
SS: While David was forced to face his own oversized
appetites in a harsh media glare, Stephen never did. I think that the
blunting of Stephen’s magnificent gift by name-your-poison is one of the
quiet tragedies of rock and roll. When Stephen recorded the first
Crosby, Stills, and Nash album, there was nobody better. As a young man,
he could sing with the unearthly purity of an angel, the very
earthy and lusty passions of a broken-hearted lover, or the ragged
road-weariness of a blues sage. But as Stephen got older, he seemed to
lean more and more on the musical bombast that makes people stand up and
cheer in arenas, rather than the vulnerable intimacy and quiet fire of
his best recordings. David and Graham, however, never lost their sense
of how important that intimacy is, because it’s what builds a healing
bridge between the inner life of the performer and the inner life of the
audience.
DZ: So what
is at the heart what makes CSN and CSNY music endure?
SS: At the heart of the magic of CSNY is an alchemical whole
greater than the sum of its parts. Like the Beatles, CSNY is an
agglomeration of widely disparate personalities and talents that
corrects for the shortcomings of the individual players, though they're
all capable of making highly compelling music on their own. David is a
musical poet
whose dreamy melodies benefit from having a brilliant lead guitarist
articulate them, whether it's Stephen or Jerry Garcia. Stephen is
an astonishingly inventive and soulful player and orchestrator in
the studio, but his voice sounds best with the others, and Neil's
presence dares him to greatness. Graham creates simple human stories
and writes instantly memorable pop melodies, but his music lacks an
edge that Stephen and Neil provide – and David and Graham’s
harmonies together are one of the sublime wonders of the audible world.
Neil doesn't need anyone else to make great records, but his tunes
never sounded better than with the full force of the "mothership"
chorus behind him.
BONUS Crosby, Stills &
Nash The Biography “Interview Outtakes”
In early 2008, Dave Zimmer also
solicited comments from Francesco Lucarelli, CSN&Y
archivist, musician (his new album, Love in Dangerous Times, featuring
James Raymond, Jeff Pevar, Kenny Passarelli and others, is coming out in
the fall) and co-author, with Herman Verbeke, Luciën van Diggelen, and
Stefano Frollano,
of the three volume book, Crosby, Stills, Nash (and Sometimes Young),
for possible use in the Crosby, Stills & Nash: The Biography
update chapter. Here is the exchange of questions
and answers, presented for the first time.
Dave Zimmer:
What is it about Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, collectively and
individually, that first attracted you and why do the guys and their
music continue to hold your interest and enthusiasm?
Francesco Lucarelli: I began listening to them in 1976, when
I was just 13. Four Way Street blew me away because of the two
different sides of their music: the acoustic ballads and the scorching
electric numbers. Plus - obviously - their different voices and the
harmonies. I was already listening to the Beatles but it was because of
CSNY I began to love all the bands with multiple singers: The Band,
Eagles, Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds, Fleetwood Mac.
All these aspects have been sticking on me
since then and this is why I love to alternate the raw energy of the
rocking numbers and the delicate sound of acoustic guitars whenever I
have a gig, possibly having more singers with me on stage, as it happens
when I perform with the California Stars 'n Bars Revue. It doesn't have
to be me in the spotlight, but the beautiful sound coming from all our
voices mixed together.
DZ: What is
your all-time favorite CSN or CSNY personal moment?
FL: I had the privilege of meeting the guys on several occasions and
in different places: from Nash's hotel room in Manhattan, back in August
1988, when me and Lorenzo Conci helped him to remember the chords and
lyrics of Paul Simon's “America” (which he eventually sang that night
during CSN concert at the Meadowlands Arena), to a jam-session and
dinner at my place in Roma with David, to an unforgettable three minutes
of glory, when David and Graham invited me, Stefano Frollano and Max
Rossetti on the stage of Tendastrisce in Roma (April 1992) to sing
“Teach Your Children” with them (I shared the mike with Stephen, who I
share the same birth date with...only I'm younger! :))
Among the many stories, the fondest one
is the least musical one of the bunch.
In August 1988, me, Lorenzo Conci and Mauro Coscia were on the East
Coast. We flew there to attend 6 CSN shows in a row. We had the chance
to arrange a meeting with the Croz in Philadelphia and that morning we
were late on our schedule, so we began speeding on the highway. After a
few minutes, three police cars were behind us and we had to stop and
follow them to the nearest police station. We had to bail out Mauro,
paying $255, but we were irreparably late for our appointment with
David. We were really depressed in the car but on our way to Philly we
caught them talking to Pierre Roberts on WMMR and at one point they
began talking about “the crazy Italians” who had come all the way from
Italy just to attend their shows and who were following some of their
dates on the East Coast. It was like a sign from the sky which
immediately cheered us up. That night, after their second show in a row
in Philadelphia, Mac Holbert told us the band was waiting for us
backstage. There we went and CSN and their crew were waiting for us.
Graham began telling us how everybody had known about what had happened
to us that morning and then he came to us with a white envelope saying
(more or less these were his words): “Here's 250 dollars which we
collected for you. The missing five dollars are to remind you not to
speed on the highway.” I guess this says much about them and their
music. It's all about the feelings, their human side.
DZ: What
buried CSN/CSNY archival treasure that you are aware of would you like
to see/hear officially released? FL: There's a lot
of interesting stuff buried in their vaults: David's early recordings,
pre-Byrds; the P.E.R.R.O (Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra)
Sessions; that little song of David’s, which he used to sing live in
1973/74: 'Your Life is What You Fill Your Day With'; David's version of
Neil's 'Interstate', an outtake from 'Thousand Roads'; the many outtakes
from Stephen's second album (including a version of 'Change Partners' in
Spanish); a live album by Manassas; Graham's 'Pre-Road Downs' studio
version with John Hammond Jr. on bottleneck; the unreleased songs and
alternate takes from the sessions of 'Earth & Sky'. Some of the most
intriguing stuff, though, might be on those reels containing CSN and CSN&Y
1969/1970 sessions and on those 1977/78 tapes with the sessions for the
album which was supposed to follow CSN's 'boat' album.
Anyway, this is just the tip of the iceberg and I'm sure the most
interesting archival stuff is the one we don't have any detail of, and
which would really surprise us, as Stills' 'Just Roll Tape' did.
Francesco Lucarelli's
photo gallery:
www.francescolucarelli.com

Stephen Stills at the Denver Airport, 1970.
PHOTO: HENRY DILTZ |
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Neil Young, with Gretsch White Falcon Guitar,
rehearsing at Stephen Stills's house, Studio City,
California, July 1969. PHOTO: HENRY DILTZ |
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Dave Zimmer and Henry Diltz at Crosby, Stills & Nash: The
Biography book signing at the Morrison Hotel Galley of Fine Art
Photography, SoHo, New York City, December 2008.
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These are the books Dave Zimmer has written
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