CROSBY, STILLS AND NASH
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Crosby Stills Nash - What's Going Down
Crosby Stills Nash - Open 24 Hours



All The News That..Does Matter... "Cause It Will All Be, However It's Gonna"

"I wish I had presents for each of your smiles..."

_JBS_


Click icon for archived CSN News since 2000

The News was last updated 06/23/05 NYC

SCOTT YOUNG ©

+SCOTT YOUNG+

_LONG MAY HE RUN_

Neil Young's dad, journalist Scott Young, passed away on Sunday June 12th, 2005.

This was sent to me by my buddy Tim.

He came upon this place below in the Florida Keys.

NICE!

Thanks Tim...

photo by Tim Ryan©

Neil Young's song Old Man can be found on the Soundtrack to SONY PICTURES.

THE LORDS OF DOGTOWN

MAN ALIVE! RECORD REVIEW

by Lorraine Kaczorowski©

The June / July Issue of Guitar World_ Acoustic is out.

Stephen is mentioned on the cover under

NEW GUITARS
Martin 000-45S Stephen Stills

A full page article appears in the magazine on page 98 which is the last page of the magazine!

So if you stop by Tower Records, or Barnes in Noble in the states, you can thumb through right back to the last page and read!

Thing I did not know...that the article enlightened me to...

When the guitar was introduced this January 2005 @ NAMM, it sold out within a few hours!

Note to self: There are only 91 one these guitars being made.

Also included in the issue of the magazine is a transcription of "Carry On".

Also nice pix (photo's by Henry Diltz) and article on the EAGLES.

CHECK IT OUT!!!

Stop, hey, what's that sound... is it NEW STILLS I HEAR????>>>>

_L I S T E N_

NEW STEPHEN STILLS SONG

LISTEN!

DRIVIN' THUNDER

http://www.stephenstills.com/mp3s/DrivinThunder.mp3

Stephen Stills and Greg Bladecki meet @ HOB Hollywood May 15th, 2005 - photo © Greg Bladecki

(left-right)

Stefano Frollano, David Crosby, Stefano Fedele, and Francesco Lucarelli @ the C/N show in Italy, Winter 2005

photo © Isabella Lucarelli

MORE FRANZ....

PLEASE VISIT THIS SITE

http://rusty81.altervista.org/articoli/IntervistaLucarelli.htm

"Interview is in Italian, but with an online sw translator
you might at least get the sense of it...

Many stories about csny and my visit to Neil's ranch."

Ciao,
Francesco

www.francescolucarelli.com

04/27/05 - Hot off the press, as per Stephen Stills manager Gerry Tolman

STEPHEN STILLS

_NEW RECORD_

MAN ALIVE!

_COVER ART NEW!!! 5/10/05_

USA RELEASE DATE: August 2nd, 2005

Label is Titan/Pyramid, distributor is Universal

MAN ALIVE!

Will be released in Europe

June 6th, 2005

The following information comes from the official "sales sheet" from Pinnacle Records.
Pinnacle is the European distributor (based in UK) of the new Stills album.

* * *

TRACKLISTING

AIN'T IT ALWAYS
FEED THE PEOPLE
HEARTS GATE
ROUND THE BEND
I DON'T GET IT
AROUND US
OLD MAN TROUBLE
DIFFERENT MAN (with Neil Young)
PIECE OF ME
WOUNDED WORLD
DRIVIN' THUNDER
ACADIENNE
SPANISH SUITE

FORMATS: CD
CAT NO: TECD077
BAR CODE: 5028479007721

CSN TOUR WATCH 2005...

TOUR UPDATE 04/27/05

CSN will tour Europe June 1 thru July 12

US tour starts July 23 - September 17

Prints for Sale @ Nash editions...


photo©
Changing The Touring Business Model panel.
L-R: Doc McGhee, Charlie Brusco, Peter Katsis, Peter Asher, Elliot Roberts.

2005 POLLSTAR CIC- (Concert Industry Consortium)
(which is a yearly music industry conference)

Elliot Roberts participated in the following panel.

Thursday, February 3
Changing the Touring Business Model
Moderator: Charlie Brusco, Alliance Artists
Doc McGhee, McGhee Entertainment
Elliot Roberts, Lookout Management
Peter Katsis, The Firm
Peter Asher, Sanctuary Artist Management

Let’s get one thing out of the way. These high ticket prices? They’re not because of high guarantees set by managers. Right out of the gate, the panel of managers made sure that was clear.
“We all know it’s because of us going to everybody and putting a gun to their head and saying, ‘If you don’t pay us this amount, we’re gonna kill ya,’” Charlie Brusco joked.

The answers lie in the new era of the big promoter.

“Ticket prices are going up because of the conglomerate promoters like Clear Channel who took over the venues where we have to play our acts,” Elliot Roberts said. He talked of the late-’90s business model of CCE (or SFX Entertainment) overpaying for acts, which turned into a model of the promotion company owning the venue, getting the facility fees, parking fees and other ancillary income on top of the box office.

“If you go with the younger, independent promoters, ticket prices are much lower,” Roberts said.
“It’s simple. The culture changed five years ago,” Doc McGhee said. “Before then, for 27 years, I never had a guarantee with a promoter. Even eight years ago, we could negotiate terms with the buildings as far as T-shirts were concerned, parking, everything. We could pound them and walk out with a lot of money without the guarantee.”

That took the panel on a walk down memory lane, back to the days when the 25 major promoters in the U.S. “were our partners in the artist because they had an investment from the start,” an esprit de corps that shared the vision for the young artist. There were Mo Ostins at the record companies whom you could take a record to, and they’d listen to it and work on the strategy with you.
“Now, if KROQ doesn’t take the track, it’s over,” Roberts said.

His folk-tinged Tegan & Sara will take years longer to break because of the lack of airplay (outside of Los Angeles’ KCRW, he noted).

Promoters like Bill Graham, Larry Magid and Ron Delsener could take an artist from the club to the 3,000-seater to the sheds. And, as Peter Asher noted, there’s few artists that break at a proper speed these days, with Modest Mouse and its decade-long climb to its current level being an exception.

“Now you don’t have a promoter,” McGhee said. “You’ve got a marketing guy that markets out of somewhere – I don’t know – but there are no good promoters anymore. “The biggest problem is not that the artist doesn’t want to put on the show they want to put on, it’s because they won’t let us. They throw money at you, and you say, ‘Cool.’ And then you end up doing shit you shouldn’t be doing.”

If all this sounds negative, negative, negative, Roberts was quick to shift to the positive.
“I was listening to the other panels talk about the sorry state of the business,” he said. “To me, it’s never been better. There’s more quality young acts now than in 15, 20 years (who have long-term potential).”

In contrast, the ’90s didn’t produce too many long-term acts, with the exception of Red Hot Chili Peppers and Pearl Jam, he said.

McGhee got applause for explaining how greed has destroyed too many young bands. “They have a radio hit and they’re doing the 16,000 seats and the girl can’t sing or the guy can’t sing and people only know three songs ... and they’re charging them out the ass, and all of a sudden, nobody wants to go see them again. Just over the greed factor, we kill new artists.”

McGhee, known for his wit, continued with the zingers. “I didn’t ask for 900 grand; the phone rang,” he said, talking about how, hypothetically, his artist might get a high guarantee. “Would you take that? I say, ‘why not?’ “Then the ticket prices fall into that, and then you lose the settlement. Nowadays, you have to go into the settlement with a lava lamp and a masseuse because the accountant’s sitting in there sobbing. And they go, ‘Doc, is there anything you can do for us?’ And I go, ‘How ‘bout a hug?’”

Speaking of the usual complaint about radio shows and how tough it is to get artists to play free shows, McGhee waxed nostalgic. “It was so much better in the old days when you could buy an 8-ball and give it to the guys, or buy hookers for them.”

As far as guarantees go, the consensus was, if you offer a manager an ungodly amount, they’ll take it. After all, if they don’t take the offer, the artist will probably fire them. And, as Roberts pointed out, the artist might be going through a divorce or financial crisis. They might actually need that money.
“We need to go back to the egg, go back to personal responsibility,” McGhee said.

Artists need to be taught that. For instance, they need to return to the promoters who worked their butts off the first time around. And the artists need to be taught how to be nice to people. Some are so bad as to treat their fans poorly and refuse to put on a good show.

“They’ll ask, ‘Why are there only 3,500 people out there?’” McGhee said. “(And I’d answer) ‘I don’t know; let me take a look at the ticket. Nope, it’s got your name on it. I thought maybe they put my name on it because I could probably draw 3,500.’”

WEEK 2 on BILLBOARD



This week 4/04/05 - CSN's Greatest Hits moves up the charts and sits @
# 14 for Top Internet Album sales.

In the
Top 200 Chart they are now @ #83.

Everything old is new again...

WEEK 1 on BILLBOARD

CSN GREATEST HITS was released 03/15/05, and

sales for the Greatest Hits are already charting! in the

BILLBOARD Top 200

and

BILLBOARD Top Internet Sales!

Congrats!!!

Charting #24 on the Top 200 for 1 week

Logging in at #19 for Internet Sales!

SUITELORRAINE.COM WISHES NEIL YOUNG

MANY GOOD THOUGHTS, BLESSINGS and GOOD HEALTH!

Neil Young @ the 2005 RNR HOF Ceremony NYC ©

Neil Young recuperates from surgery

NEW YORK, April 5 (UPI) --

A week after undergoing surgery for an aneurysm, singer Neil Young is expected to make a full recovery, according to his New York City doctors.he's doing very well," said Young's spokesman, Bob Merlis.

The 59-year-old Young will recuperate a week in New York and then return to Nashville to continue work on his album, according to Merlis, MTV.com reported.

Young has said he first realized something was wrong when his vision became blurry at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony March 14. He was subsequently diagnosed with the aneurysm, or what doctors called a "vascular anomaly."

He then returned to Nashville for a week of recording prior to the surgery in New York City last week.
Copyright 2005 by United Press International. All Rights Reserved.

Here are some photo's from

FRANCESCO LUCARELLI ©

For more pix please visit his site.

Thanks Franz!

Crosby & Nash - Fillmore, Cortemaggiore, ITA - 5 March 2005



On the Cover of ROLLING STONE Magazine.

RS 971, April 7, 2005

CHRIS STILLS makes the cut...on the fold out...

Chris Stills on tour w/ mom Veronique Sanson 2005©

Billboard advert for Stephen Stills 2

Here are some tremendous shots from photographer

JACK ROBINSON ©

Please check his website to view more of his work and purchasing information.

H E R E

_Thanks to acb for making me aware of this gentlemans' work_

All photos Copy Righted - All Rights Reserved Jack Robinson©


The Black Crowes

Just finished a 7 nite residencey @

THE HAMMERSTEIN BALLROOM in NYC.


The closed out their 1st series of shows, together since 2001 with a cover on

March 23rd, 2005

of

PRE-ROAD DOWNS

Lorraine of couse caught the band on the previous nite, sans Pre-road Downs....

Back with the band on lead guitar is guitarist extraordinaire MARC FORD.