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~ Ohio
Views: 7972 |  |  |  |  | 1970
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young: "Ohio"
Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.
Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if ...More you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?
Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?
Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio. |
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~ Almost Cut My Hair
Views: 56834 |  |  |  |  | Almost Cut My Hair crosby stills nash and young.. ive been asked to re-post this as a stand-alone vid. it was originally featured on the Daily Toke as their first "musical guest".
Crosby, Stills & Nash, also Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young when including oc ...More casional fourth member Neil Young, are a folk rock/rock supergroup. The band is known for their distinctive vocal harmonies and activist politics, and have a strong association with the segment of 1960s counterculture known as the Woodstock Nation. They are commonly referred to by their initials CSN or CSNY.
Formation
Initially formed by the trio of David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash, the genesis of the group lies in two 1960s rock bands, The Byrds and The Hollies, and the demise of a third, Buffalo Springfield. Friction existed between Crosby and his fellows in the Byrds, which came to a head specifically in 1967 over two issues: his substitution, at the invitation of Stills, for an absent Neil Young during Buffalo Springfield's set at the famous Monterey Pop Festival in June; and the Byrds' rejection of Crosby's controversial "Triad" composition as either a single or an album track in August. As a result, Crosby was dismissed from the Byrds in the fall of 1967.[1] By early 1968, Buffalo Springfield disintegrated over personal issues, and after aiding in putting together the band's final album, Stills found himself unemployed by the summer. He and Crosby began meeting informally and jamming, the results of one encounter in Florida on Crosby's schooner being the song "Wooden Ships," composed in collaboration with another guest, Paul Kantner.[2] Nash had been introduced to Crosby when the Byrds had toured the UK in 1966, and when the Hollies ventured to California in 1968, Nash resumed his acquaintance with Crosby.[3] At a party at the home of either Cass Elliot of the Mamas and Papas, Joni Mitchell, or John Sebastian, depending on differing accounts, Nash asked Stills and Crosby to repeat their performance of a new song by Stills, "You Don't Have To Cry," blending a second harmony on the spot into their singing.[4] The vocals gelled, and the three realized that they had lucked into something quite special.
The Hollies, who had enjoyed pop hits in the mid-sixties, had been struggling with the changing music scene in England due to the advent of psychedelia, and were planning to do an album of all Dylan covers. Seeing this as a step in the wrong direction, and creatively frustrated with the Hollies, Nash decided to quit and throw his lot in with Crosby and Stills. After failing an audition with the Beatles' Apple Records, they were signed to Atlantic Records by Ahmet Ertegün, who had been a fan of the Springfield and disappointed by that band's demise.[5] From the outset, given their respective band histories, the trio decided not to be locked into a group structure, using their surnames as identification to ensure independence and a guarantee against the band simply continuing without one of them, as had both the Byrds and the Hollies after the departures of Crosby and Nash. Their record contract with Atlantic reflected this, positioning CSN with a unique flexibility unheard of for an untested group. The trio also picked up a unique management team in Elliot Roberts and David Geffen, who had engineered their situation with Atlantic and would help to consolidate clout for the group in the industry.[6] Roberts kept the band focused and dealt with egos, while Geffen handled the business deals, since, in Crosby's words, they needed a shark and Geffen was it.[7] Roberts and Geffen would play key roles in securing the band's success during the early years.
Their first album, Crosby, Stills & Nash of 1969 was an immediate hit, spawning two Top 40 hit singles and receiving key airplay on the new FM radio format, in its early days populated by unfettered disc jockeys prone to playing entire albums at once. Other than the presence of drummer Dallas Taylor, Stills had handled the lion's share of the instrumental parts himself, a testament to his talent but leaving the band in need of additional personnel to be able to tour, now a necessity given the debut album's commercial impact.
[edit] Enter Neil Young
Déjà Vu album coverRetaining Taylor, the band decided initially to hire a keyboard player, Stills at one point approaching Steve Winwood, who declined.[8] Over dinner with Ertegün, the Atlantic label head suggested Canadian singer/songwriter Neil Young, also managed by Roberts, as a fairly obvious choice.[9] Initial reservations were held by Stills and Nash, Stills owing to his history with Young in Buffalo Springfield, Nash due to his not knowing Young at all outside of his work. But after several meetings, the trio expanded to a quartet with Young a full partner, the name duly changed law firm-style, the terms allowing Young full freedom to maintain a parallel career with his new back-up band, Crazy Horse. With Young on board, the group went on tour in the late summer of 1969 through the following January, their second gig being a baptism-by-fire at the Woodstock Festival in front of their peers, CSNY with their hit record of the event later being seen as its embodiment. By contrast, little mention is made of the group's subsequent appearance at Altamont, CSNY having escaped mostly unscathed from the fallout of that debacle. Great anticipation had built for the group, and their first album with Young, Déjà Vu, arrived in stores in March of 1970 to zealous enthusiasm, topping the charts and generating three hit singles. Reflecting unerringly the tastes and viewpoints of the counterculture as the sixties changed into the seventies, with protest against both the establishment and the Vietnam War gearing up, the group made no secret of their political leanings, Crosby in particular. While staying at a house down the peninsula from San Francisco, the ubiquitous reports of the Kent State shootings reached Young and Crosby, inspiring Young to write his protest classic "Ohio," recorded and rush-released weeks later and another Top 20 hit for the group.[10]
Between "Ohio," their appearance in both the festival and movie of Woodstock, and the runaway success of their two albums, the group found themselves in the position of enjoying a level of adulation far greater than experienced with their previous bands. The collective talents allowed the band to straddle all the flavors of popular music eminent at the time, from country-rock to confessional balladry, from acoustic guitars and voice to electric guitar and boogie. Indeed, with the Beatles break-up made public by April of 1970, and with Bob Dylan in reclusive low-key activity since mid-1966, CSNY found itself as the adopted standard bearers for the Woodstock Nation, vouchsafing an importance in society as counterculture figureheads equaled at the time in rock and roll only by The Rolling Stones. An entire sub-industry of singer-songwriters in California either had their careers boosted or came to prominence in the wake of CSNY, among them Laura Nyro, Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne, and The Eagles. All were managed, incidentally, by Roberts, and all but Nyro signed to Geffen's Asylum label, which would be the home for what came to be known as the Mellow Mafia for the remainder of the decade.
However, the tenuous nature of the partnership, built into the group philosophy from the onset and strained by their success, weighed on the individual personalities, and the group imploded after their tour in the summer of 1970. Concert recordings from that tour would end up on another chart-topper, the 1971 double album Four Way Street, but the group would never completely recapture momentum as years would pass between trio and quartet recordings. |
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~ 4+20 Stephen Stills tuning DDDDAD
Views: 41257 |  |  |  |  | 4+20 Stephen Stills tuning DDDDAD
Crosby, Stills & Nash, also Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young when including occasional fourth member Neil Young, are a folk rock/rock supergroup. The band is known for their distinctive vocal harmonies and activist politic ...More s, and have a strong association with the segment of 1960s counterculture known as the Woodstock Nation. They are commonly referred to by their initials CSN or CSNY.
Initially formed by the trio of David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash, the genesis of the group lies in two 1960s rock bands, The Byrds and The Hollies, and the demise of a third, Buffalo Springfield. Friction existed between Crosby and his fellows in the Byrds, which came to a head specifically in 1967 over two issues: his substitution, at the invitation of Stills, for an absent Neil Young during Buffalo Springfield's set at the famous Monterey Pop Festival in June; and the Byrds' rejection of Crosby's controversial "Triad" composition as either a single or an album track in August. As a result, Crosby was dismissed from the Byrds in the fall of 1967.[1] By early 1968, Buffalo Springfield disintegrated over personal issues, and after aiding in putting together the band's final album, Stills found himself unemployed by the summer. He and Crosby began meeting informally and jamming, the results of one encounter in Florida on Crosby's schooner being the song "Wooden Ships," composed in collaboration with another guest, Paul Kantner.[2] Nash had been introduced to Crosby when the Byrds had toured the UK in 1966, and when the Hollies ventured to California in 1968, Nash resumed his acquaintance with Crosby.[3] At a party at the home of either Cass Elliot of the Mamas and Papas, Joni Mitchell, or John Sebastian, depending on differing accounts, Nash asked Stills and Crosby to repeat their performance of a new song by Stills, "You Don't Have To Cry," blending a second harmony on the spot into their singing.[4] The vocals gelled, and the three realized that they had lucked into something quite special.
The Hollies, who had enjoyed pop hits in the mid-sixties, had been struggling with the changing music scene in England due to the advent of psychedelia, and were planning to do an album of all Dylan covers. Seeing this as a step in the wrong direction, and creatively frustrated with the Hollies, Nash decided to quit and throw his lot in with Crosby and Stills. After failing an audition with the Beatles' Apple Records, they were signed to Atlantic Records by Ahmet Ertegün, who had been a fan of the Springfield and disappointed by that band's demise.[5] From the outset, given their respective band histories, the trio decided not to be locked into a group structure, using their surnames as identification to ensure independence and a guarantee against the band simply continuing without one of them, as had both the Byrds and the Hollies after the departures of Crosby and Nash. Their record contract with Atlantic reflected this, positioning CSN with a unique flexibility unheard of for an untested group. The trio also picked up a unique management team in Elliot Roberts and David Geffen, who had engineered their situation with Atlantic and would help to consolidate clout for the group in the industry.[6] Roberts kept the band focused and dealt with egos, while Geffen handled the business deals, since, in Crosby's words, they needed a shark and Geffen was it.[7] Roberts and Geffen would play key roles in securing the band's success during the early years.
Their first album, Crosby, Stills & Nash of 1969 was an immediate hit, spawning two Top 40 hit singles and receiving key airplay on the new FM radio format, in its early days populated by unfettered disc jockeys prone to playing entire albums at once. Other than the presence of drummer Dallas Taylor, Stills had handled the lion's share of the instrumental parts himself, a testament to his talent but leaving the band in need of additional personnel to be able to tour, now a necessity given the debut album's commercial impact.
Enter Neil Young
Déjà Vu album coverRetaining Taylor, the band decided initially to hire a keyboard player, Stills at one point approaching Steve Winwood, who declined.[8] Over dinner with Ertegün, the Atlantic label head suggested Canadian singer/songwriter Neil Young, also managed by Roberts, as a fairly obvious choice.[9] Initial reservations were held by Stills and Nash, Stills owing to his history with Young in Buffalo Springfield, Nash due to his not knowing Young at all outside of his work. But after several meetings, the trio expanded to a quartet with Young a full partner, the name duly changed law firm-style, the terms allowing Young full freedom to maintain a parallel career with his new back-up band, Crazy Horse. With Young on board, the group went on tour in the late summer of 1969 through the following January, their second gig being a baptism-by-fire at the Woodstock Festival in front of their peers, CSNY with their hit record of the event later being seen as its embodiment. By contrast, little mention is made of the group's subsequent appearance at Altamont, CSNY having escaped mostly unscathed from the fallout of that debacle. Great anticipation had built for the group, and their first album with Young, Déjà Vu, arrived in stores in March of 1970 to zealous enthusiasm, topping the charts and generating three hit singles. Reflecting unerringly the tastes and viewpoints of the counterculture as the sixties changed into the seventies, with protest against both the establishment and the Vietnam War gearing up, the group made no secret of their political leanings, Crosby in particular. While staying at a house down the peninsula from San Francisco, the ubiquitous reports of the Kent State shootings reached Young and Crosby, inspiring Young to write his protest classic "Ohio," recorded and rush-released weeks later and another Top 20 hit for the group.[10]
Between "Ohio," their appearance in both the festival and movie of Woodstock, and the runaway success of their two albums, the group found themselves in the position of enjoying a level of adulation far greater than experienced with their previous bands. The collective talents allowed the band to straddle all the flavors of popular music eminent at the time, from country-rock to confessional balladry, from acoustic guitars and voice to electric guitar and boogie. Indeed, with the Beatles break-up made public by April of 1970, and with Bob Dylan in reclusive low-key activity since mid-1966, CSNY found itself as the adopted standard bearers for the Woodstock Nation, vouchsafing an importance in society as counterculture figureheads equaled at the time in rock and roll only by The Rolling Stones. An entire sub-industry of singer-songwriters in California either had their careers boosted or came to prominence in the wake of CSNY, among them Laura Nyro, Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne, and The Eagles. All were managed, incidentally, by Roberts, and all but Nyro signed to Geffen's Asylum label, which would be the home for what came to be known as the Mellow Mafia for the remainder of the decade.
However, the tenuous nature of the partnership, built into the group philosophy from the onset and strained by their success, weighed on the individual personalities, and the group imploded after their tour in the summer of 1970. Concert recordings from that tour would end up on another chart-topper, the 1971 double album Four Way Street, but the group would never completely recapture momentum as years would pass between trio and quartet recordings |
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~ Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young "Ohio"
Views: 109985 |  |  |  |  | Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young's "Ohio" set to a devastating series of photos from the Kent State shootings, and other 1960-70's protests, compiled by Hard Rain Productions.
Visit our Channel for more music video compilations.
Please feel free to lea ...More ve feedback, rate, and comment! |
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~ Needle and the Damage done in my lab.
Views: 8082 |  |  |  |  | Needle and the Damage Done, is one of my favorite Neil Young songs, along with Harvest Moon, Heart of Gold, Old Man, Cinnamon Girl, and Ohio. As a Canadian boy growing up in Alberta, I spent a summer in Manitoba. As a volunteer at CHCL 1450 radio (C.F.B. ...More Cold Lake, Alberta), I knew that great Canadian Rock comes from Winnipeg.. including Neil Young, the Guess Who and others. As a young teenager I picked up the guitar I had learned to play single notes on several years before at Borden (Ontario). In the Air Cadets with short hair in the mid 70s, I taught myself chords to get some "cool" points in highschool. Short hair was not well tolerated back then. :) Short hair was not cool at all, nor jeans with strait legs. :) Teaching myself chords and PinBall Wizard, did get me some "cool-enough" points. Then guitar took off for me when I went to that magical music land in Manitoba (summer of 78), and one of my fellow air cadets was a serious spanish/classical guitarist on his way to music studies. He informed me that I should not feel inferior compared to his skill at instant sight-reading (of any music). He told me I had a gift with the guitar, LOL, to my surprise, and suggested I just play what I hear and want to make up or improvise. Up to that point, I thought that being able to find the key and groove and solo with any song, was a skill that would develope for any musician who practiced enough. He informed me that was not true; many working musicians can read and play anything or even write material, but not all can make it up on the fly like Jimmy Page. He did inspire me to learn "Classical Gas", but he told me to trust my ear learning things like Neil Young songs, and I could just find the playing methods myself and embellish the chords with any picking and flicking, pulls and bends I felt like. This song is one of the first where I realized this basic spicing up of basic chords, turning a basic strum pattern into a rather rich picking on top of rythm. Also, that picking made me "feel" what I was playing, because it is my twist on it. I could just sit there and listen to it flow for hours sometimes.
Also, this song speaks to me regarding all the people who destroyed themselves from addictions to drugs of various kinds in the 70s. So this song has some meaning and lamentation for almost every listener; can you recall any young men and women from your past who just fell into the abyss? ((This was recorded in my lab on a quiet evening using the built in mic on a 2007 iMac. Reverb, stage setting, was added with some tweeking of the equalizer; using the basic audio editing right in iMovie. Saved to Quicktime movie format (web streaming size) and uploaded into YouTube. Easy. Not bad for a pinhole microphone.)) Dr M. |
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~ Crosby Stills & Nash: Déjà Vu (live 2005)
Views: 10932 |  |  |  |  | Performed live on the 2nd of August, 2005, in New York City. Déjà Vu is the second album by rock and roll band Crosby, Stills & Nash, and their first as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; it was released on March 11, 1970. The premiere CSN collaboration with ...More Neil Young, greatly anticipated after the popularity of its predecessor, it hit #1 on the Billboard 200 album chart, generating three Top 40 singles in the process: "Teach Your Children," "Our House," and "Woodstock."
The group's "Ohio" single, hot on this album's heels, sealed the deal, granting CSNY absolute leadership status by the Woodstock Nation, about to flood their ethos above ground into mainstream entertainment, lifestyles, and political movements. Sitting on the cusp as the 1960s gave way to the 1970s, Déjà Vu, with its mix of country and rock flavors, the confusion inherent in its multiple points of view arising from four distinct personalities, and its embedding of counterculture values, captured and summarized the spirit of the outgoing times as it simultaneously anticipated the sensibility that would quickly dominate the music and popular culture emanating from California into the the "Me" decade.
Stills estimates that the album took somewhere in the neighborhood of 800 hours of studio time to record; this figure may be exaggerated, even though the individual tracks display meticulous attention to detail.
Deja Vu the single was written by David Crosby and is the title track and sixth song on Deja Vu the album. In 2003, the album was ranked number 147 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. The same year, the TV network VH1 named Déjà Vu the 61st greatest album of all time. The album ranked at #14 for the Top 100 Albums of 1970 and #217 overall by Rate Your Music. |
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~ Vietnam; Kent State Massacre May 4, 1970
Views: 35548 |  |  |  |  | A project for the shootings at Kent State University 1970 I made for school.
Okay, I made this video montage a little over a year ago, and I just realized that the on the very first clip, it says Kent State Massacre, May 2, 1970; the actual massacre wa ...More s actually on May 4th. Just a silly mistake. The actual protest/riots, I believe, started on the first or the second of May. I'm sure that's why I put that down. Lol, sorry. =) |
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~ Pearl Jam: Vote For Change? 2004 - Trailer 1
Views: 36159 |  |  |  |  | Watch the full movie at pearljam.com
VOTE FOR CHANGE?
...
In 2004 directors Coan Nichols and Rick Charnoski set out from Seattle to make a " Super 8 home movie" of Pearl Jam's barnstorming, eight-city Vote for Change Tour. There was no script, no p ...More lan. It was gritty, reality film-making in the finest tradition -- recording human moments with hard-pressed voters from Reading, Pa., to Kissimee, Fl.; getting the music down wherever it happened, including unforgettable footage of a Pearl Jam sound check with Neil Young in a hockey rink in Toledo, Ohio. The result a film locked away in a vault for four years -- is by turns tender, raw and electric. But more than that it remains a searingly painful lesson about what can happen when the wheels come off America's democracy. We present for the first time VOTE FOR CHANGE?
more soon... |
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