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Older archive Magazine Articles located and submitted, dates unknown.
by
Paul
Higham.
Considering
the wastage rate in the higher echelons of rock ‘n’ roll, it’s not
difficult to accept as the norm a situation in which an averagely healthy
musician can be suddenly and eerily transformed into a rakish,
semi-demised being — usually with the help of a little white powder and
the banzai trek from, one town to the next. Even so, the
photograph of Graham Nash that Rolling Stone carried a few weeks ago took
more than a little getting used to.
What the hell
had Nash been up to since he cut "Better Days" and "We Can
Change The World"? The face
looked like it had been dredged round-the-clock for all signs of living
tissue; the arms and body were just hanging there in a benign state of
barely-conscious repose. Who was this guy? Wasn’t Nash
supposed to be the sensible kid from Manchester who wrote sensibly
beautiful Songs like "Marrakesh Express" and "Our
House" and had a talent for projecting an unfuzzy brand of Northern
calm suitable for straightening out enraged warhorses like Crosby, Stills
and Young? And if our
Graham has caught fire, what hope is there for the New Jerusalem? Come to
think of it, what hope is there for the reactivation of Marin County’s
own Fab Four ?
STILLS HAD
told NME (march 16) that it was definitely on, starting with a concert in
Tampa, Florida, July 4. And although Nash had a marginally different story
to tell in London last week, he was just as positive as Stills. Twelve
concerts are already vaguely arranged, he says — only now the starting
date has been shifted forward to June 29 and the opening locale has moved
west to Phoenix, Arizona. At this point
it must be stated that Nash, in person, is not the wasted wreck so
adamantly portrayed in Rolling Stone. True,
there’s hardly a ripple of flesh to spare anywhere, but it truns out
that the quasi mortified look had little to do with Nash and a lot to do
with the photographer’s use of lights an his eager straight-up-the-nose
sense of direction.
Nash says he
actually feeling strong and wonders how he looks.
"I feel
excellent. . .don’t I look it ?!"
Sure.
"No, I
meant that seriously. You can tell when some people are wasted or they're
down."
Well, be
honest I saw that photograph in Rolling Stone and you looked kind of…
"Let me
tell you what happened man, It was the worst, man…"
He jabs the
tape recorder shut to cut out the bad words and tells the whole thing into
photographer Pennie Smith’s ear, returning with ". . . so I feel
excellent. I’ve gotten a lot out of me this last year and I’ve come a
long way from where I used to be."
NASH, BY ALL
appearances, has just completed another approximately infinite revolution
of his style of doing things. There's the move to a house on the edge of
Haight Ashbury with all those Return To The Beginning connotations; a
reunion with former clubmate and dancing partner Joni Mitchell (strictly
aesthetic): and a strengthened bond with Hollie Allan Clarke. Then, of
course, there’s the re-cycling of CSNY — an enterprise that promises
to be the season’s most precarious, next to Dylan’s
farewell/comeback/rebirth American tour.
Nash senses
all kinds of expectations in people’s minds and can guess at the kind of
elaborate inventions that’ll be going on as to the band’s motives for
getting back together. The correct
answer, he says, is that all four of them have gone through a period of
intense ego-kill, personal, maturation and so on; and no, they’re not
likely to be doing all the old material again since each Initial has been
constantly writing; especially Neil Young, who Nash personally witnessed
compiling seven songs in the space of two days.
"And
they’ve all been monsters, man. I can’t believe how much Neil writes. "We’d
been meaning to get together before but for some reason it just never
happened. Whether it was the four of us doing individual trips that
wouldn’t finish in time for the four of us to get together, I don’t
know. But we’ve always known we have this beautiful music we could make
- if we could ever get ourselves together in our heads. "What
happened this year is that the same sort of changes I’ve been going
through, the others had been going through too, and now some of the ego
conflicts that slopped the music before aren’t going down anymore.
"There
are subtle versions of them but they’re much more controllable now, and
I think we all realise that the most important thing is the music. We
always did, but we always somehow got sucked into the other side of
things, management and that whole bit." We’re at a
low-lying hideaway-hotel in Kensington, called Blakes, staffed by
inconspicuous Nordic women. Nash’s room juts out onto a balcony with
just enough space for a couple of overworked chairs. We’re lounging
cross-legged in the centre of the room with his newly-acquired manager, a
drawler homesteading type with receding yellow hair.
Nash says
he’s known Leo MacKota for years but only just launched him into the
corporate end of things. His new
lady friend is flopped on the bed, observing the day’s media business and
chatting with the record company's Official Representative. It a refined
afternoon all round, and Nash has declared open-house to all parts of his
psychic whereabouts. He’s been
going through those Id-contracting West Coast changes, tapping and
tapering and filing away at what he sees to be personality disorders. Like
how he used to expect people to be what he expected people to be instead
of having them be au naturale and "loving them through it."
He’s pretty
hard on himself — and applies the rigourous thumbscrews to his CSNY
stablemates who’ve gone through a parallel psychic excursions Now they
can all afford to relax and cut back on the mind wrestling for a while.
The purge has worked its tricks and cleaned away most of those unsightly
blemishes. "We got
together last summer. We tried a few things and it turned out interesting.
But it wasn’t as exciting as we wanted. That is why we didn’t come
out. And Neil and Stephen came to play on me and David’s concerts in San
Francisco and in Denver’ and stuff. So we’ve all remained in musical
contact with each other.
"Neil has
20 new songs, 20 fine new songs. Stephen has got some and I’ve got some
and David has got some and now we’ve got enough to do it and make it
really different. "We
can’t go out and do ‘Southern Man for 18 minutes — or ‘Our
House’ again. We’ve got to go out and say something we mean now. Not
what we meant then. And it’s gonna be difficult but I think we can pull
it off ‘cos I’ve heard the new music and I’ve heard where we are
now." They were just
an Initial short of a full reunion when, prior to Nash’s departure for
Britain, he and Crosb gathered together in L.A. with Levon Helm, Tim
Drummond and Ben Keith at a session for Neil Young’s follow-up album to
"Time- Fades Away’.
PRIORITIES FOR
the current British visit are various promo activities plus an informal
glance at the newest British raveoids and, in particular, a close-up
examination of the curious baubled phenomena of Glitter and Stardust — a
success story Nash finds so baffling that he keeps asking, "What’s
all this Glitter business, then" and, "Is that really what’s
happening here?" Ever since he
landed, people have been pleading, "When’re you guys going to play
Britain?’. So this morning he called Los Angeles and passed on the word. "Everyone
is saying, ‘remember us over here?’ And I’m gonna have to take that
message back."
He was
impressed to discover the Hollies were still putting together chart
topping singles 10 years after their opening salvos, and that morning he
had been trying to contact Allan Clarke. "Allan
came to Los Angeles to hang out recently when we were playing. It’s
really strange. Allan and I are the same person in a lot of ways, but
he’s the me that didn’t leave for the States, and I’m me that did.
But our musical relationship has been going on ever since we were five
years old, so he’s like a thermometer to me. "I go and
find out where he’s at and then I can sort of judge where I’m at. It
was really interesting. When I met him in the States he was confused a
little as to what he wanted to do, where he was going and about his
acceptance. He’s a little insecure, I think. "But it
was interesting meeting because there’s no bullshit with me and Allan.
We’ve known each other for 30 years almost, and how much bullshit can
there be between people who’ve known each other that long," Nash still
carries brittle memories of his last days with the Hollies and talks
edgily about how the band shut out all his best ideas and turned down
songs like’ "Lady Of The Island", "Marrakesh
Express" and "Right Between The Eyes"; how they finally
slinked off into a laundered prinkishness and recorded that Best Of Dylan
album that spiralled to the top of the British charts and confounded all
reasonable assumptions on good taste.
"I gave
it everything I could. I really tried to move that band in a direction I
thought we should be going and with the ‘Evolution’ album we started
going in a direction that was really neat. Then they got bombarded with
commerciality and wanted to do the greatest rock ‘n’ roll hits of Bob
Dylan and that was so awful. "They
made that record in white suits and everything. I just couldn’t do it. "That,
compounded with not wanting to do my tunes, which was my self-expression,
and troubles with my old lady, made me just give the whole scene up. It
was all feeling really bad. "I think
they were sorry to see me go, because I was a good energy in that
band."
ANOTHER
SUBDUED voice from the past is LA songstress and bird on the wire Joni
Mitchell, who showed up briefly for Nash’s latest album, "Wild
Tales", and, by coincidence, is over for concerts here in Britain. Nash says he
might or might not go to them depending on how convenient it all turns
out. "I like
‘Joan’s concerts," he confirms. "She’s real good. Her new
album’s real good and her music’s constantly evolving. She blows my
mind with the way she constantly keeps growing." The romancing
side of the partnership is all through, he says. "The
romance between us finished long ago and right now it took a couple of
years before I could even be her friend because we both hurt each other a
lot. But now we’re getting to be friends without either of us wondering
whether we want it to get heavy. "She’s with somebody else. She’s
with other people and so am I and she’s a friend of mine. That’s
what’s happening. It took me a long time to get to there, but past
relationships are always a bit, you know. Yeah. It’s
kinda the same on a musical level, we discovered, and musicans like CSNY,
the Beatles and Zimmerman can soar away into their private amped-up
visions of multiple child-rearing and organic record farms, but when the
time comes to put on another show for the people who’re you supposed to
listen to?
Nash says if
Dylan wants to sing about his wife having great tits and how the fish
don’t bite no more instead of how we’re all gonna catch it in the end
inside a big mushroom cloud, that suits him. Dylan owes nothing to nobody.
The Beatles owe nothing to nobody and likewise CSNY. "It’s
strange, I personally can’t get into what the people are going to feel,
and I’m sure it’s the same for the four Beatles.
"They
probably don’t care what people think. The important thing is how they
think and inter-react themselves. And once they’re together and people
hear it they’re going to think whatever they’re going to think
anyway." Sure. But that
still doesn’t explain why heavy musical persons like yourselves should
be chancing it the second time around if the audience is that close to
being dispensible. I mean, if it’s all down to what Graham and Steve and
Neil and David feel why don’t the four of you play for the goblins and
your old ladies? (But I never did ask him that one.)
Do you feel
the Beatles have been kind of drifting since the split, and that if they
did get together there would be a level of desperation involved, and
couldn’t the same apply to yourselves. (That’s what I actually asked
him.) "What
happens is you get four people, CSNY or the Beatles say. . .and I can’t
equate CSNY with the Beatles because, frankly, I think the Beatles are the
best rock ‘n’ roll band that ever existed when they were together and
playing it. Those early albums like Pepper, I mean, they were classic rock
‘n’ roll music you know and. . .what was the question. I’ve
forgotten the question." Drifting and
the like. "Yeah.
What happens is you have four people who are playing music but it
doesn’t add up to four. It’s like one plus one plus one plus one
equals 28, you know, because of the combination of the four. When you all
separate and go your separate ways it’s only one of you and it’s only
quarter as effective. "I can
see what you mean by drifting around doing solo albums and stuff. I think
we’re stronger as a band. . I think CSNY is stronger than Neil is
stronger than Stephen is stronger than David is stronger than me."
And no-one’s
going to pull that ego horseradish anymore, he says, because three years
have already been wasted. And no more of that
see-what-you-can-get-up-your-nose-in-a-single-night frolicking (well, not
very much of it, anyway.) ‘I’ve been
very private these last couple of years, just building a new start
whatever it is. Sometimes you have to do that. You just have to do that.
It just feels good to have a really solid base that isn’t crazy, where
there aren’t a million people around, where there aren’t rock‘n’
rollers shoving coke up their noses till all hours in the morning.
There’s no freakout. It’s a very quiet, solid, substantial
happening." He wasn’t
quite ready for L.A.’s new, golfing fraternity, featuring Lennon,
Nilsson, Alice and Johnny Mathis, although he plays a lot of ping pong and
once went skin diving with David Crosby off the coast of Hawaii.
He’s not
interested in the fat-boy guru or other alarming manifestations of the
First Executive. In fact he’s content with his ping pong and cameras and
linoleum art collages while Crosby sails off to Hawaii to keep away the
crazies, Stills skis or shoots in Colorado and Neil Young writes songs.
Neil Young is always writing songs.

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