Crosby, Stills & Nash – Crosby, Stills & Nash
Tracklist
A1 | Suite: Judy Blue Eyes | 7:22 | |
A2 | Marrakesh Express | 2:36 | |
A3 | Guinnevere | 4:43 | |
A4 | You Don't Have To Cry | 2:43 | |
A5 | Pre-Road Downs | 2:59 | |
B1 | Wooden Ships | 5:22 | |
B2 | Lady Of The Island | 2:36 | |
B3 | Helplessly Hoping | 2:37 | |
B4 | Long Time Gone | 4:17 | |
B5 | 49 Bye-Byes | 5:15 |
Companies, etc.
- Engineered At – Wally Heider Recording Studio, Los Angeles
- Pressed By – Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Terre Haute
- Manufactured By – Atlantic Recording Corporation
- Published By – Gold Hill
- Published By – Siquomb
- Published By – Guerilla (3)
Credits
- Art Direction, Design – Gary Burden
- Drums – Dallas Taylor
- Engineer [Engineered By] – Bill Halverson
- Lead Guitar, Organ, Bass – Stephen Stills
- Management [Direction] – David Geffen
- Other [Spiritual Guidance] – Ahmet Ertegun
- Photography By [Cover Photo] – Henry Diltz
- Producer – Stephen Stills, David Crosby, Graham Nash*
- Rhythm Guitar – David Crosby
Notes
Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Terre Haute pressing denoted by CTH suffix on label matrices.
First U.S issue, Atlantic orange/green labels with 1841 Broadway New York address. Textured gatefold cover, issued with single-sided, textured, foldout 11" x 22" lyric sheet.
Engineered by Bill Halverson at Wally Heider's Studio III, Los Angeles.
Runout sequences are primarily stamped with the Terre Haute "T" etched.
First U.S issue, Atlantic orange/green labels with 1841 Broadway New York address. Textured gatefold cover, issued with single-sided, textured, foldout 11" x 22" lyric sheet.
Engineered by Bill Halverson at Wally Heider's Studio III, Los Angeles.
Runout sequences are primarily stamped with the Terre Haute "T" etched.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Pressing Plant ID (Labels): CTH
- Pressing Plant ID (Runouts): T
- Rights Society: BMI
- Matrix / Runout (Label A): ST-A-691575CTH
- Matrix / Runout (Label B): ST-A-691576CTH
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 1): ST-A-691575-2A CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 1): ST-A-691576-2B CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 2): ST-A-691575-2B CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 2): ST-A-691576-2A CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 3): ST-A-691575-2H CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 3): ST-A-691576-2H CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 4): CTH ST A691575-2A T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 4): ST A691576-2C CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 5): ST A691575-2B CTH T B 13
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 5): ST A691576-2A CTH T B
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 6): ST A691575-2B CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 6): ST A691576-2C CTH T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 7): ST A691575-2A 1 T B2 o CTH
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 7): ST A691576-2A CTH 1 T A 2
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 8): ST A691575-2A 1 T CTH
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 8): ST A691576-2A CTH 1 T : : cb
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 9): ST A691575-2F CTH 1 T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 9): ST A691576-2H CTH 1 T
- Matrix / Runout (Runout A variant 10): ST A691575-2F CTH 1 T D2
- Matrix / Runout (Runout B variant 10): ST A691576-2H CTH 1 T D8
Other Versions (5 of 280)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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New Submission
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Crosby, Stills & Nash (LP, Album, Stereo, Gatefold) | Atlantic | ATR 9192, SD 8229 | South Africa | 1969 | ||
Recently Edited
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Crosby, Stills & Nash (LP, Album, Stereo, Gatefold, TELDEC Press) | Atlantic | ATL-SD-8229, SD-8229 | 1969 | |||
New Submission
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Crosby, Stills & Nash (LP, Album, Stereo) | Atlantic | SD 8229 | Colombia | 1969 | ||
Crosby, Stills & Nash (LP, Album, Stereo) | Atlantic | SAL-933479, SAL-933,479 | Australia | 1969 | |||
New Submission
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Renaissance Fare (LP, Album, Stereo, Green/silver label) | Atlantic | SAL-933479 | New Zealand | 1969 |
Recommendations
Reviews
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I love how Neil Young is peeking through the door on the back cover as if he's looking pissed that he wasnt on this album
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This version is pretty HOT in the vocals department. Sibilance is apparent throughout. For me, it’s not a deal breaker for this pressing. I have other pressings that excel and fail in other areas. This was always a tough album to get the “right” mix. Even the high dollar represses have their struggles. All in all, I enjoy this issue. If a clean one can be obtained at a reasonable price…grab it. The positives outweigh the negatives.
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There’s a near complete one-channel dropout in “Wooden Ships” that starts when Stills sings “say can have some of your purple berries” and doesn’t come back until right after he sings “probably keep us both alive.”
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So much timeless music came out in and around the year 1969, and one of the seminal albums, for both its innovative sound, character and quality, was the first Crosby, Stills & Nash release. Looking back at the cover, I can only wonder if I was ever so young, and if I didn’t have the pictures to prove it, I may have dismissed those years as nothing more then a dream.
So ... I could talk about the groups these amazing artists sprang from, but you all know those stories. Or I could talk about the splendid harmonies, guitar playing, and the return to the Americana music sound, but it would be much more pleasant to listen to them, then to read my words. Of course, I could always speak of the times, or the counter culture, but all of that is the stuff of history at this juncture. So where does that leave us at this point ... why with me, and the effect this album had on my life.
I had just landed in Vietnam when I finally got myself a copy of this album, thought I didn’t need one, as it was playing from record players and reel to reel tape machines from every hootch ... at times the whole Base was awash in the sounds of Crosby, Stills & Nash. With this release, the world was finally to came to with the mighty ‘Air Guitar,’ and though it was not a very feminine, or a girlie thing to do ... you guys have NEVER experienced ‘Air Guitar’ until you have seen a woman in olive drab BDU’s [Battle Dress Uniform], left foot on her camouflaged helmet, wailing away, using a fully automatic M16 [with the safety in the ‘On’ position] as a guitar, with the music blasting to the max ... that was the one good thing about being in Vietnam, there weren’t alot of people to disturb ... and I was the undisputed champion of the ‘Air Guitar’ for the entire 44th Medical Unit. I was lightening fast on the draw, I had the power chords down, I could reel back and bow forward with my head almost touching my knees, I had blisters on my fingers, and a smile on my face ... of course we all scrambled when we heard the from the rotors, as a line of choppers were circling to touch down.
But even in the OR, some kind soul had made a tape mix of songs which always included, “Guinnevere,” “Wooden Ships,” “Lady Of The Island,” and of course “Helplessly Hoping,” ... I can still taste the tears from that song, as they inched their way down my cheeks, leaving tiny trails in the red dust that covered my face.
*** The Fun Facts: The current residents don't wanna see your face on their porch, it's a private residence at 809 Pam Avenue in West Hollywood, California.
Review by Jenell Kesler -
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Maybe you all can help me. I have a version of this release that matches the codes/specs almost exactly, i.e. sd 8229, but on the label i have -RI instead of -CTH: ST-A-691575RI. Can anyone advise? There are already so many versions of this release I hesitate to think I've got a new one.
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It seems like just yesterday I brought home this first lp from Crosby, Stills and Nash. The lp offers superior musicianship, impeccable harmonies and for all of it the album is curiously sterile in its perfection.
I almost find the collection to be the first CD, in that it features oh so clean recordings that somehow have none of the 'warmth' of analog recording.
And talk about Overplay Hell, "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" is a pleasant enough song in its way, but I am thoroughly tired of it. Most of these songs I completely digested the first time I heard them, with no inclination to play any of them over and over again.
The one song that I seem to still enjoy is the relatively minor "Marrakesh Express" by Graham Nash. It doesn't aspire to be much, which I find refreshing.
But this was the era of the "supergroup", no? And C, S and N filled the bill irably. Unfortunately, I enjoy Stills' earlier work with Buffalo Springfield more, I like Crosby's work with the Byrds more, and I still get a kick out of Nash's tunes with the Hollies more than this collection.
Anyway, the whole idea of the "supergroup" sees rock and roll gaining respectability and putting on pompous airs. Makes me think about Elvis Costello's comment about "The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame" many years ago...."sounds like a contradiction in ".
And if I hear "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" one more time, I'm going to turn into a suicide bomber.
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