While the Stones,
Who and Led Zep battled it out for the title of biggest UK band in the US
during the early seventies, there was only one contender for biggest US band:
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Unstable and prone to outbreaks of verbal squabbling
between themselves, CSN&Y nevertheless set aside their differences and
undertook a huge tour of the US in 1974. Seeing them on 25 July that year from
the side of the stage at Mile High Stadium in Denver was a highlight of the
year for me, and I can still remember looking out over that huge crowd as the music
made by two Americans, one Canadian and one delighted Englishman washed over them.
Flown in from New York courtesy of
Atlantic Records, I stayed in the same hotel as the group and in the afternoon
interviewed Graham Nash. Stephen Stills had been quoted as saying that the
first time CS&N went out on the road was for art, the second time for the
girls and this, the third, for the dollars, but Graham took exception to this. “We’re
doing it for the music, man, because all of us know that none of us can make as
good music together as we can apart,” he told me. Unlike Crosby and Stills,
Nash was thin and wiry, and he spoke so passionately that I couldn’t help but
believe him. Stills wandered into the room at one point, and was very friendly.
Nash introduced us. “This is Chris, from Melody
Maker in London.” “English, huh,” said Stills, thereafter that day calling me ‘English’,
never Chris. I didn’t mind.
Later in the afternoon I found myself
in the lift with Neil Young, a pure coincidence, but was too overawed to speak.
He was thin and wiry like Graham, and travelling separately from CS&N, in a home-on-wheels with his wife
and dogs. “Each night he packs up his guitar, wife, baby son and dog and hits
the road,” Crosby told me after the show.
It was a warm night and watching the
show from the side of the stage, gazing out over a crowd of 60,000 or more, was one of
those once-in-a-lifetime rock experiences. At 9 pm, three-quarters of an hour
after The Beach Boys, CSN&Y appeared to a standing ovation, and for the
next three hours they joyously celebrated their reunion alongside Tim Drummond
on bass, Russ Kunkel on drums and Joe Lala on congas. The ovation washing over
them, the four principals moved to the front, Stills to the left and Young to
the right, with Crosby and Nash in the centre bobbing between mikes and
occasionally sharing. They opened with Stills’ ‘Love The One You’re With’.
The show was three hours long and divided
into two halves with a 15-minute break. The first half, the longest, opened with
an electric set and switched to acoustic, with the second half all electric,
and different combinations of CSN&Y took songs in turn. Those numbers where
all four played and sang together were undoubtedly the highlights.
Crosby’s ‘Wooden Ships’, with Young at
the grand piano, followed ‘Love The One’, then Nash went over to the keyboard
for ‘Immigration Man’, Stills taking the guitar solo. A new Neil Young song, ‘Traces’,
followed with Young playing a huge Gretsch White Falcon and trading guitar
breaks with Stills. Crosby stepped up next for ‘Almost Cut My Hair’, screaming
out the vocals above the combined backing. For this song, Nash moved over to
the organ, but again it was Stills’ guitar that carried the weight. Young’s
turn came next with ‘Cowgirl In The Sand’ and the first electric set ended with all
four joining together for ‘Pre-Road Downs’.
Five minutes later an assortment of
acoustic guitars (about a dozen) were set up around two stools and four mikes. Firstly
Young appeared alone to sing ‘Only Love Can Break Your Heart’ and ‘Old Man’, then
Crosby followed with a new song called ‘For Free’, and Nash followed with two
songs at the piano, ‘Simple Man’ and ‘Prison Song’. For the latter he was
joined by the whole band and they stayed in place for Young’s ‘Sugar Mountain’
which inspired a mass sing-along, rightly so as we were in the foothills of the
Rockies.
Stills offered ‘Change Partners’, sung
by the whole band, and ‘Questions’ which he played alone. I’d have preferred ‘4
And 20’. The acoustic set closed with ‘Suite: Judy Blue Eyes’, all four tearing
into this mythical song and, although some of the harmonies were occasionally a
little off-pitch, they handled this long and difficult piece with the kind of
assurance that comes only from those who’d created it.
For those who experience it only occasionally, there is something positively awe-inspiring about standing on a stage a few feet from rock superstars playing to an audience in excess of 60,000; the vast sea of faces stretching out into the distance, the waves of adulation they release, the deafening on-stage volume of the music. When CSN&Y walked off after the first half the applause from the massive crowd seemed to me to be as loud as the music.
The second half opened with Crosby’s ‘Long Time Coming’, followed by Young on ‘Don’t Be Denied’ and Stills with a new song called ‘First Things First’ on which he played congas. Crosby offered ‘Déjà Vu’ before Young played two more new songs, ‘Revolution Blues’ and ‘Pushed It Over The End’, on which both he and Stills soloed at length. The concert ended with ‘Ohio’, a great crowd favourite, another sing-along, but they returned for one encore, a lengthy version of ‘Carry On’, which proved equally popular.
The second half opened with Crosby’s ‘Long Time Coming’, followed by Young on ‘Don’t Be Denied’ and Stills with a new song called ‘First Things First’ on which he played congas. Crosby offered ‘Déjà Vu’ before Young played two more new songs, ‘Revolution Blues’ and ‘Pushed It Over The End’, on which both he and Stills soloed at length. The concert ended with ‘Ohio’, a great crowd favourite, another sing-along, but they returned for one encore, a lengthy version of ‘Carry On’, which proved equally popular.
The cheers were deafening but after a
quick wave they left the stage fast, Young heading for his camper truck and the
others to black limousines. On the way past me Stills stopped for a second. “Hey,
English,” he shouted. “What da ya think?” I couldn’t think what to say so I just
gave him a thumbs-up.
I lingered for a while as the crowd was
leaving, kneeling down next to a monitor and scribbling away in a notepad, anxious
not to forget what I’d just seen. After a while I put my notepad away and
noticed a girl on her own, down at the front, gazing up at the crew clearing
the stage. I shouted to her, asking if she’d enjoyed the show. “It was great,”
she yelled back. “What are you doing later?” I asked. She shrugged. “Come to
the party at the hotel,” I shouted and lobbed my hotel keys down to her. She
caught them and laughed so I just hoped for the best.
There was a party in the hotel,
in a reception room high up on the top floor. Stills kept calling me ‘English’
and Crosby didn’t stint on the wine. I’d taken my pocket tape recorder along.
Where’s Neil, I asked David. “He’s two miles out of town by now and so high on
the show that nothing can touch him,” he replied. “He’s out there so happy. He
came and did what he had to do for three hours and knows he did it well.
Nothing can make a man happier than that.”
Crosby and Nash seemed the most
enthused by the show, Nash especially. In fact, Graham seemed as high as a
kite, rushing here and there and refusing to stop talking to anyone who’d
listen. “It was a dramatic want to play music together again. A real need, man,”
he replied when I asked point blank what motivated them to reunite. ”I think we
realised about a year ago that we had a really fucking hot band if we wanted
and we could really make this hot music. We missed each other, y’know. We
missed that bounce off. When there’s four of yer up there and there’s Stephen
at one side and Neil at the other and me and David in the middle. Just watching
them converse with each other. That’s it, y’know. That’s it. Like tonight, when
we did ‘Sugar Mountain’, we stopped playing and heard 60,000 people sing back
at us. Do you know what a rush that is?”
I knew. I was about 20 feet away from him. It was one of those pinch-me
moments.
I stayed at the party for a couple of
hours hoping my friend with the key would show up but she didn’t. It was the
only disappointment of a fabulously memorable night.
(This, of
course, is a reworked version of a much longer story I wrote for Melody Maker when
I got back to New York after the show.)
I have been binge reading your blog over the last couple of days, it's great! ....thanks so much for making it available.
ReplyDeleteThanks. CC
ReplyDeleteI was there.
ReplyDeleteI had moved with some friends who wrre in a band from Covina, CA to the Palmer Lake / Monument area outside of Colorado Springs in the Summer of "74." We heard about the concert and there was no question that we had to attend, and I don't believe it was noted that Jessie Colin Young opened the show. What a day, what a year!
ReplyDeleteJust reminiscing about that concert and vacation. I was from Ohio and fell in love with the whole area. Always wanted to move there but never did. Probably one of the best times of my life.
ReplyDeleteI still have my playbill from the concert but not the ticket which bums me out.
ReplyDeletei was there, from los angeles on a long summer road trip in my 68' dodge van, rolled out 25,000 miles that summer, concert was a highlight, remember driving into Denver from Casper Wyoming with a thunderstorm raging in the Rockies, i left the concert as they started the encore, with "CARRY ON" floating out over us as we walked away from the stadium on the warm summer night... phew!
ReplyDeleteI was there working with the Pepsi equipment. I wasn't much into music but I still remember seeing them on the stage playing all this incredible music.
ReplyDeleteI was there on the field selling Pepsi. lol
DeleteI was there, too! And it was the most memorable of concerts. Jessie Collin Young was part of the event, I remember. I lost the people I came with somehow, and had to rely on the kindness of strangers who put me up for the night and other strangers to get back to Aspen the next day to work in the popcorn wagon. There were no cell phones back then!
ReplyDeleteTwo americans, and englishman and a canadian. I was there. The Beach boys were great as well :)
ReplyDeleteYou're right, my mistake! CC
DeleteWere the Beach Boys playing at this show?
ReplyDeleteYes, Beach Boys were there, too. Concert started during the day with frisbees and beach balls flying all around the place... hot, clear day, warm night... i can still feel it.
ReplyDeleteI was there as well, 17, and it was my first concert. What a beautiful day, and great music. Down in front on the left side, to this day I still have hearing loss in that ear, but it was worth it.
ReplyDeleteI was there too. I'll never forget their voices echoing back from the mountains. It was probably the best concert I ever went too. We also lost our ride and had to hitchhike back to Victor
ReplyDeleteWe were there too. My wife Peg and I, along with our 2 yr old son Jason, drove down from Aspen the back way through Leadville, in our VW bus. We sat up in the back of the stadium seating. We only had a few records at the time and CSN&Y and Beach Boys were some of them. Jason knew all the tunes and he stood bouncing our our knees through the entire thing. Jason went on to become a musician in his own right as a founding member of "lick", and part of the Pig Face collective. We lost him in 2017. Greatly missed.
ReplyDeleteThanks Terry. Sorry to hear about Jason. Happy New Year to you.
ReplyDelete