Detroit Free Press

Reports: David Crosby, CSNY co-founder, dies

He was on the front lines of the cultural revolution

- Robert Jablon

David Crosby, the brash rock musician who evolved from a baby-faced harmony singer with the Byrds to a mustachioe­d hippie superstar and an ongoing troubadour in Crosby, Stills, Nash & (sometimes) Young, has died at 81, several media outlets reported Thursday.

The New York Times reported, based on a text message from Crosby’s sister in law, that the musician died Wednesday night. Several media outlets reported Crosby’s death citing anonymous sources; The Associated Press was not able to confirm Crosby’s death despite calls and messages to multiple representa­tives and Crosby’s widow.

Crosby underwent a liver transplant in 1994 after decades of drug use and survived diabetes, hepatitis C and heart surgery in his 70s.

While he only wrote a handful of widely known songs, the witty and ever opinionate­d Crosby was on the front lines of the cultural revolution of the ’60s and ’70s – whether triumphing with Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and Neil Young on stage at Woodstock, testifying on behalf of a hirsute generation in his anthem “Almost Cut My Hair” or mourning the assassinat­ion of Robert Kennedy in “Long Time Gone.”

He was a founder and focus of the Los Angeles rock music community from which such performers as the Eagles and Jackson Browne later emerged. He was a twinkly-eyed hippie patriarch, the inspiratio­n for Dennis Hopper’s long-haired stoner in “Easy Rider.” He advocated for peace, but was an unrepentan­t loudmouth who practiced personal warfare and acknowledg­ed that many of the musicians he worked with no longer spoke to him.

“Crosby was a colorful and unpredicta­ble character, wore a Mandrake the Magician cape, didn’t get along with too many people and had a beautiful voice – an architect of harmony,”

Bob Dylan wrote in his 2004 memoir, “Chronicles: Volume One.”

Crosby’s drug use left him bloated, broke and alienated. He kicked the addiction in 1985 and 1986 during a year’s prison stretch in Texas on drug and weapons charges. The conviction eventually was overturned.

“I’ve always said that I picked up the guitar as a shortcut to sex and after my first joint I was sure that if everyone smoked dope there’d be an end to war,” Crosby said in his 1988 autobiogra­phy, “Long Time Gone,” co-written with Carl Gottlieb. “I was right about the sex. I was wrong when it came to drugs.”

He lived years longer than even he expected and in his 70s enjoyed a creative renaissanc­e, issuing several solo albums.

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