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It is hard to think of a time in the rock era when Crosby, Stills & Nash were not already a mainstay of the genre, but every rock legend has an origin, and the self-titled debut album first appeared in May of 1969. It was a near-instant success and one of the harbingers of a turn from blues-oriented rock to more acoustic, folk-oriented rock that would usher in the decade of the 70's.
Crosby, Stills & Nash were a supergroup from their debut. David Crosby came from The Byrds, Stephen Stills came out of Buffalo Springfield, and Graham Nash was from The Hollies. Each was a songwriter as well as a vocalist and instrumentalist (Crosby on guitar, Stills on guitar and keyboards, and Nash on guitar). The addition of Neil Young (who has also previously played with Buffalo Springfield) would come after the album was released.
As you listen to this podcast pay attention to the harmonies in the songs. That is the calling card for CS&N. Band members differ on where the trio first sang together. Crosby and Nash maintain that it was at Joni Mitchell's house, but Stephen Stills insists that he would have been too intimidated to sing at Mitchell's place, and that it was at Cass Elliot's (from The Mamas and the Papas) house! Either way the harmonies were so good it was clear that they would have to form a group.
Much of the album is accomplished with multi-instrumentalist Stephen Stills (aka "Captain Many Hands") playing on the tracks, though Crosby and Nash played guitar on songs that they wrote. You can't duplicate this onstage however, so more instrumentalists had to be brought in for the tour — including Neil Young. One of their first stops - only their second concert as a group in fact - would be Woodstock, where they played a set between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m.
Rob brings us this harmonic, folk album. We hope you enjoy it!
Suite: Judy Blue Eyes
Long Time Gone
You Don't Have to Cry
Helplessly Hoping
ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:
Everybody's Talking from the motion picture “Midnight Cowboy”
STAFF PICKS:
“Galveston” by Glenn Campbell
“Just a Little Bit” by Little Milton
“It's Your Thing” by The Isley Brothers
“In-A-Gadda-De-Vida” by Iron Butterfly
INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:
Theme from "Hawaii 5-0" by The Ventures
Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?”
NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.
Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock-worthy memes we can share.
Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!
**NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.
By Rob Marbury, Wayne Rowan, Bruce Fricks, John Lynch4.9
4747 ratings
It is hard to think of a time in the rock era when Crosby, Stills & Nash were not already a mainstay of the genre, but every rock legend has an origin, and the self-titled debut album first appeared in May of 1969. It was a near-instant success and one of the harbingers of a turn from blues-oriented rock to more acoustic, folk-oriented rock that would usher in the decade of the 70's.
Crosby, Stills & Nash were a supergroup from their debut. David Crosby came from The Byrds, Stephen Stills came out of Buffalo Springfield, and Graham Nash was from The Hollies. Each was a songwriter as well as a vocalist and instrumentalist (Crosby on guitar, Stills on guitar and keyboards, and Nash on guitar). The addition of Neil Young (who has also previously played with Buffalo Springfield) would come after the album was released.
As you listen to this podcast pay attention to the harmonies in the songs. That is the calling card for CS&N. Band members differ on where the trio first sang together. Crosby and Nash maintain that it was at Joni Mitchell's house, but Stephen Stills insists that he would have been too intimidated to sing at Mitchell's place, and that it was at Cass Elliot's (from The Mamas and the Papas) house! Either way the harmonies were so good it was clear that they would have to form a group.
Much of the album is accomplished with multi-instrumentalist Stephen Stills (aka "Captain Many Hands") playing on the tracks, though Crosby and Nash played guitar on songs that they wrote. You can't duplicate this onstage however, so more instrumentalists had to be brought in for the tour — including Neil Young. One of their first stops - only their second concert as a group in fact - would be Woodstock, where they played a set between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m.
Rob brings us this harmonic, folk album. We hope you enjoy it!
Suite: Judy Blue Eyes
Long Time Gone
You Don't Have to Cry
Helplessly Hoping
ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:
Everybody's Talking from the motion picture “Midnight Cowboy”
STAFF PICKS:
“Galveston” by Glenn Campbell
“Just a Little Bit” by Little Milton
“It's Your Thing” by The Isley Brothers
“In-A-Gadda-De-Vida” by Iron Butterfly
INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:
Theme from "Hawaii 5-0" by The Ventures
Thanks for listening to “What the Riff?!?”
NOTE: To adjust the loudness of the music or voices, you may adjust the balance on your device. VOICES are stronger in the LEFT channel, and MUSIC is stronger on the RIGHT channel.
Please follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/whattheriffpodcast/, and message or email us with what you'd like to hear, what you think of the show, and any rock-worthy memes we can share.
Of course we'd love for you to rate the show in your podcast platform!
**NOTE: What the Riff?!? does not own the rights to any of these songs and we neither sell, nor profit from them. We share them so you can learn about them and purchase them for your own collections.

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