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  1. Jan 11, 2000 · Maybe it took more than nine months to come up with another batch of first-rate material, or maybe David Crosby and Graham Nash were saving their first-rate material for the next Crosby, Stills & Nash album, but Whistling Down the Wire, their third and final new studio album as a duo, was a distinctly second-rate effort.

  2. Maybe it took more than nine months to come up with another batch of first-rate material, or maybe David Crosby and Graham Nash were saving their first-rate material for the next Crosby, Stills & Nash album, but Whistling Down the Wire, their third and final new studio album as a duo, was a distinctly second-rate effort.

    • Crosby & Nash
  3. David Crosby and Graham Nash's 1975's "Wind On the Water" was a really good album. In contrast, can remember buying 1976's "Whistling Down the Wire" and thinking it was an okay album. At least to my then 16 year old ears, part of the problem was that "Whistling Down the Wire" sounded very much like a series of outtakes from the former album.

    • (11)
    • 1976
    • Crosby & Nash
    • 3.13 / 5.00.5from 247 ratings
  4. Apr 19, 2024 · Thanks to his contract with Ahmet Ertegun’s Atlantic Records, Stills and his superstar kings of harmony mates – David Crosby, Graham Nash and Neil Young – are on a $1 million per album ...

  5. Jun 5, 2021 · June 5, 2021December 24, 2021. by Jeff Gemmill. The Essentials: Déjà Vu by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. (As noted in my first Essentials entry , this is an occasional series in which I spotlight albums that, in my estimation, everyone should experience at least once.) Released on March 12th, 1970, Déjà Vu received instant accolades from ...

  6. Mar 13, 1999 · It's like this; I enjoy the first Manassas album, but if David Crosby and Graham Nash had been in Criterion Studios with Stills, if Stills had challenged the duo to write stronger songs than what appeared on the first Crosby-Nash album that same year (1972), and if Crosby and Nash had their own ideas to contribute for Stills's consideration. . . .

  7. www.rollingstone.com › deja-vu-2-246851Deja Vu - Rolling Stone

    David Crosby ‘s “Deja Vu” has little or no tune and fails totally to capture the eerie feeling that accompanies a real deja vu experience. “Our House” by Graham Nash is a flyweight ditty ...