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Sold Date:
April 19, 2015
Start Date:
April 7, 2015
Final Price:
$15.95
$9.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
11383
Buyer Feedback:
161
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
CROSBY STILLS NASH & YOUNG
DEJA VU
ATLANTIC Records LP # SD 7200 original paste-on photo "1841 Broadway" 1st pressing
The textured gatefold cover has light wear
the labels* original inner sleeve and vinyl
are in VERY GOOD condition. owners name written on one label
1. Carry On 2.
Teach Your Children
3.
Almost Cut My Hair
4.
Helpless
5.
Woodstock
6.
Dj
Vu
7.
Our House
8.
4 + 20
9.
Down, Down/"Country Girl" (I ...): Whiskey Boot Hill / Down, Down, Down /
"Country Girl" (I Think You're Pretty) Country Girl: Whiskey Boot
Hill/Down
10.
Everybody I Love You
Crosby,
Still, and Nash topped their enormously popular self-titled 1969 debut by adding
Neil Young to their ranks and expanding their stylistic and sonic range. The
result, released in 1970, was an artistic and commercial success, representing
the talents of the four primary players to excellent effect. More ambitious and
incisive than its CSN predecessor, DEJA VU brings together folk, psychedelia,
jazz, African, and Middle Eastern flavors, Tin Pan Alley, and hard rock in a
manner that captures the tenor of the era's counterculture without sounding
dated.The group's distinctively lush harmonies are spread across the album,
notably on the record's two centerpieces--"Carry On," which segues into a
chugging, percussion-fueled groove halfway through, and "Woodstock," the band's
hard rock re-working of the Joni Mitchell tune. Elsewhere, the songs are stamped
by individual personalities, as on David Crosby's driving "Almost Cut My Hair,"
Graham Nash's quaint "Our House," and Stephen Stills dark, folky "4+20." Young's
aching, plaintive "Helpless" is one of the highlights here, as is Crosby's
complex title cut (with its intricate rhythms and vocal arrangements). Though
their time together was tumultuous and short-lived, CSNY were one of the most
successful acts of the era, and DEJA VU finds them at their
peak.