Nice and chill album. I can get why it is so popular and the influence it had over the years. It's a bit too chill for me to be truly exciting but I guess that's the spirit.
Nice and chill album. I can get why it is so popular and the influence it had over the years. It's a bit too chill for me to be truly exciting but I guess that's the spirit.
Late in 1968 David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash all found themselves at a collective loose end, having either left or been fired from their respective bands. They teamed up to form an eponymous supergroup, recording this album just before playing at the Woodstock festival. Aside from the jolly Marrakesh Express about the joys of the hippie lifestyle, this album feels oddly melancholy, with songs about doomed relationships and a sense of a golden age coming to an end. The trio posed for the cover photo in front of a derelict house before agreeing on the band name and went back a few days later to retake the picture in the right order, only to find that the house had been demolished. That’s a perfect metaphor for the end of the sixties and this album as a whole.