Crosby, Stills & Nash - Helplessly Hoping (studio outtakes) - 1969

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  • čas přidán 16. 12. 2011
  • The first track is the Instrumental version, followed by a 2nd which includes vocals.
    www.stevesilberman.com/csn/
    Singing Their Way Home:
    35 Years of Crosby, Stills, and Nash
    by Steve Silberman
    Crosby, Stills, and Nash's debut album, released in May of 1969, was one of those rare recordings that expresses the most enduring values in music while sounding startlingly fresh. The trio's three-part harmonies were shimmeringly beautiful, even unearthly, and the album radiated a spontaneous, offhand warmth, as if the listener had just strolled in from the weathered porch on the cover and found three friends singing in the living room for their own joy.
    The lyrics explored the classic themes of all music with roots in the ancient ballads - the pain of love in "Helplessly Hoping," the ragged exuberance of the musician's traveling life in "Pre-Road Downs" - but the band went places no one had before. "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" stirred folk, country, and Latin influences into a new kind of soul music that Stephen Stills sang with an authority far beyond his years. Graham Nash's "Marrakesh Express" got you high just listening to it, an ode to wanderlust for a hip generation that made itself at home anywhere in the world. David Crosby's meditative "Guinnevere" seemed untethered from every cliché of pop, as if the song was a burnished artifact from some domain outside of time. (Jazz pioneer Miles Davis promptly recorded an epic version of it with his Bitches Brew band.) There was a palpable ecstasy in this menage a trois that Joni Mitchell described as "amorous."
    The music of Crosby, Stills, and Nash wasn't just about love, it was love: the exhilaration of three strong-willed innovators who felt inspired to genius in one another's presence.
    This three-way consummation had been a long time coming. Crosby and Nash met in 1966, when Crosby glanced up from rolling a joint and saw Nash in his living room, brought over by Cass Elliot of the Mamas and the Papas in a supreme act of musical matchmaking. Crosby was still in the Byrds, where he helped marry the social consciousness and haunting harmonies of folk to the visceral backbeat of rock and roll. In songs like "Eight Miles High," he and his band mates brought fiery tonalities inspired by the John Coltrane Quartet into rock and roll for the first time; along the way, Crosby turned George Harrison on to the music of Ravi Shankar, global cross-pollination that bore fruit on albums like the Beatles' Rubber Soul. Nash had already achieved chart-topping success with the Hollies in England, and Crosby pegged him as a fellow "harmony junkie" after hearing his high part on "King Midas in Reverse." The two young musicians couldn't have been more different in temperament - Crosby was arrogant and outrageous, while Nash was wry and self-effacing -- but they both shared a taste for mischief, and became fast and life-long friends. "Crosby fascinated me. I'd never met anyone like him," Nash told Dave Zimmer, the band's official biographer. "He was a total punk, totally delightful, totally funny, totally brilliant, a totally musical man."
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Komentáře • 26

  • @bveracka
    @bveracka Před 5 lety +49

    This is cool. It's almost 60 years later and this song is still as solid as it was back then, and Gibson still can't make a guitar with a G string that stays in tune.

    • @xfiazc07
      @xfiazc07 Před 4 lety

      Potato from Eugene Washington ?

    • @jfkesq
      @jfkesq Před 4 lety +4

      funny, I had a Gibson in High School, flipping G was always out

    • @Interference79
      @Interference79 Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you!!

    • @dontpaniciceland
      @dontpaniciceland Před rokem +2

      This made me chuckle because it’s so fucking accurate.

    • @bveracka
      @bveracka Před rokem +1

      @@dontpaniciceland Hah! I forgot about this comment. If you start it at 2:24 it's immediately noticeable. And yes, I know some musicians will say "oh but it's the 12-tone equal temperament tuning, not the guitar" - to which I will reply, "You've never owned a Gibson, have you?"

  • @just_julian
    @just_julian Před 4 lety +8

    I LOVE this version ooh my GOD!

  • @patriciaarancibia8012
    @patriciaarancibia8012 Před 2 lety +2

    Love this song, love this performance, love C,S&N...😍😍😍🎵🎤🎼🎵🎹🎻🎧🌻🌻🌻✌✌✌🌻🌻🌻✌✌✌

  • @FlyMIfYouGotM
    @FlyMIfYouGotM Před 3 lety +8

    Had never heard this version and the more I listen to it the more I like it! Even some of the harmony parts are a bit different and in some ways a bit better. Their entro even has a bit of the feel of Rick Nelson's, "Garden Party".

  • @johnwurdemann7517
    @johnwurdemann7517 Před 3 lety +2

    What a great version of this song

  • @stevebidigare9484
    @stevebidigare9484 Před 3 lety +3

    Can't believe I never heard this before, this is freaking awesome 👏

  • @michaelromeo5689
    @michaelromeo5689 Před 4 lety +4

    Always loved this song by CSN!

  • @dario6253
    @dario6253 Před 6 měsíci

    They are just so freaking great❤

  • @ruditrick6893
    @ruditrick6893 Před rokem

    Love this song ❤️🎸🙏😥RIP David Grosby! 🎸🎶❤️

  • @theresaluchsinger4488
    @theresaluchsinger4488 Před 5 lety +7

    How could anyone not like this? always one in the crowd lol.....love you guys!

    • @Equality72521sr
      @Equality72521sr Před 3 lety +1

      They do like it. Clearly, they thought they were hitting the “download” button.

  • @edwardgarner1299
    @edwardgarner1299 Před 3 lety +6

    Personally, I think this is a better version than the one that went on the album. The vocals are pure and it has a swinging, sweet rhythm.

  • @marymaloney4866
    @marymaloney4866 Před rokem

    Kinda Texas Twangy beat. Round the campfire sound.

  • @johnweir1277
    @johnweir1277 Před 4 lety +9

    Jerry Garcia on pedal steel I think

    • @colehuntley4600
      @colehuntley4600 Před 3 lety +3

      Really? Thats awesome, I love Jerry's pedal steel work. Do you mind if I ask how you found this out?

    • @myguitardetective5961
      @myguitardetective5961 Před 3 lety +3

      Actually, that sure sounds like an electric guitar w/ amp tremolo and a volume pedal..I was really intrigued by that sound and now I want to explore it right away. It's a "poor man's" attempt to emulate the sound and feel of a pedal steel....

    • @morganthomas5934
      @morganthomas5934 Před 3 lety +2

      No pedal steel here, just Stephen Stills, An electric guitar with a bigsby, and a volume pedal

    • @johnweir1277
      @johnweir1277 Před 3 lety

      i just assumed as it did not sound like typical nashville pedal steel and jerry is listed as " spiritual advisor"
      on the album liner notes. stills on electirc guitar with volume pedal as corrected below, i looked into whether jerry played pedal steel on any csny songs a while ago and i though i posted it here but i guess not. if i remember there was a few maybe teach your children? @@colehuntley4600

    • @mooglancashire424
      @mooglancashire424 Před rokem

      @@johnweir1277Garcia played on teach your children. I think that was it for CSN stuff.

  • @DarkOrbChoir
    @DarkOrbChoir Před 3 lety

    Sweetheart of the rodeo got you there then emergency third rail power trip finished you off.....