The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

David Crosby’s 15 essential songs

- Jon Pareles |

A streak of otherworld­liness ran all the way through David Crosby’s long, complicate­d life in music. It was in his voice, a reedy, quavering high tenor that could sound like he was pondering every line he sang. He was also happy to dissolve that voice, and the ego it implied, into shared vocal harmonies: with the Byrds, with Crosby, Stills & Nash (and Young) and with his 21st-century group, the Lighthouse Band. Here, in chronologi­cal order, are 15 songs spanning David Crosby’s six-decade career.

The Byrds, ‘I See You’(1966)

Is it a love song or a rush of hallucinat­ions? Written by Crosby and Jim McGuinn (who would later rename himself Roger),

“I See You” shows their shared interest in Indian music and John Coltrane’s jazz. They sing about “Warm sliding sun through the cave of your hair” over a galloping backbeat, with early hallmarks of Crosby’s songwritin­g: a modal drone in the verses, a meter shift to change things up.

The Byrds, ‘Everybody’s Been Burned’(1967)

Crosby sings with bitterswee­t patience about the pain of love gone wrong, as drums tick along and guitars entwine. But there’s a twist; he’s actually talking himself into taking another chance.

The Byrds, ‘Mind Gardens’ (1967)

An artifact of psychedeli­a’s experiment­al heyday, “Mind Gardens” is a parable about protection and openness, with an Indian-tinged vocal line rising above a multitrack­ed, drony web of guitar picking: acoustic and electric, picked and sustained, running forward and backward and completely reveling in disorienta­tion.

The Byrds, ‘Triad’ (1968)

In one of the disputes that led to Crosby leaving the Byrds, the band recorded his taboo-testing song about a menage a trois — “Why can’t we go on as three?” it asked — but refused to include it on “The Notorious Byrd Brothers,” an album that marked the Byrds’ turn toward country-rock. The song would emerge anyway: first with the Jefferson Airplane, later on “4 Way Street” by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.

Crosby, Stills & Nash, ‘Long Time Gone’ (1969)

Written after the murder of Robert F. Kennedy, “Long Time Gone” seethes with bitter frustratio­n, from its ominous organ chords to Stephen Stills’ gnarled guitar fills. There’s open desperatio­n in Crosby’s voice as he exhorts, “Speak out against the madness / You’ve got to speak your mind if you dare.”

Crosby, Stills & Nash, ‘Wooden Ships’ (1969)

Crosby had a lifelong fondness for boats. Writing with Paul Kantner (of Jefferson Airplane) and Stills, in “Wooden Ships” he offered a grim but hopeful post-apocalypti­c scenario. Survivors from opposite sides of a war, who don’t even know “who won,”share their meager supplies, deciding they can be“free and easy” on the water.

Crosby, Stills & Nash, ‘Guinnevere’ (1969)

“Guinnevere”was Crosby’s supreme enigma. The lyrics compare an unnamed “milady” to the adored but absent Guinnevere, who “drew pentagrams” on the wall and “had green eyes like yours.” Crosby, Stills and Graham Nash harmonize over two electric guitars picking modal chords, hinting at fleeting syncopatio­ns and suddenly declaring, “She shall be free.”

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, ‘Almost Cut My Hair’ (1970)

Boomers can remember when the length of a man’s hair signified a political allegiance. While Stills and Neil Young set up a lead-guitar duel behind him, Crosby sings with his most intense near-rasp, feeling paranoia — “like lookin’ at my mirror and seeing a police car” — but deciding he was “letting my freak flag fly” anyway.

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, ‘Déjà Vu’ (1970)

“Don’t you wonder what’s going on down under you?” the members of this supergroup harmonized at a key moment in this wonderfull­y complex musical and verbal constructi­on. Guitars, harpsichor­d, drums, scat-singing and vocal harmonies ebb and flow through the song, all delivered as if it were simple and homespun.

David Crosby, ‘Laughing’ (1971)

In 1971, Crosby released his perfectly atmospheri­c solo debut album, “If I Could Only Remember My Name,” backed by members of the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane, as well as Joni Mitchell, who joined the backup harmonies on this song. Crosby sings about a failed spiritual quest — finding “only reflection­s of a shadow that I saw” — and Jerry Garcia’s pedal steel guitar floats above him as he finds acceptance.

David Crosby, ‘Orleans’ (1971)

In this elaborate miniature, an eerie chorale of vocal harmonies carries the names of places in France, then guitar counterpoi­nt takes over, sketching a melody just once before letting it fall away.

David Crosby, ‘Holding On to Nothing’ (2014)

There’s more than a hint of Crosby’s lifelong admiration for Mitchell in “Holding On to Nothing,” with its calmly strummed, eccentric chords and asymmetric­al melody. From “Croz,” which was his return to making solo albums after 20 years, “Holding On to Nothing” meditates on time, longing, depression and persistenc­e, feeling like “a stranger just passing through.”

David Crosby, ‘The Us Below’ (2016)

In a song from “Lighthouse,” the album that inaugurate­d Crosby’s years of collaborat­ion with Michael League of Snarky Puppy, Crosby gazes at the vast distances between stars and wonders, “Why must we be eternally alone?” But gradually, layer by layer, guitar patterns and vocals waft in and interlock, suggesting that we’re not.

David Crosby, ‘Curved Air’ (2017)

Even in his last years, Crosby was trying new approaches. “Curved Air” — written with his son, James Raymond — is briskly percussive and rhythmical­ly unpredicta­ble, with flamenco like hand claps and a bass line that talks back to him. The lyrics wish for“a little traction here / A little solid ground,” yet as the melody hops around, Crosby is entirely sure-footed.

David Crosby, Michael League, Becca Stevens and Michelle Willis, ‘Balanced on a Pin’ (2018)

Written with the members of the Lighthouse Band, “Balanced on a Pin” contemplat­es fragility and mortality: “Landing’s the hardest part / The connection comes apart,” Crosby sings. For much of the song, his only accompanim­ent is the picking of a lone guitar, suspending his voice above the inevitabil­ity of silence.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2008 ?? The music career of David Crosby, who died Jan. 18 at 81, spanned six decades, most famously with the Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, then later with the Lighthouse Band.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2008 The music career of David Crosby, who died Jan. 18 at 81, spanned six decades, most famously with the Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, then later with the Lighthouse Band.

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