My bro tells me he saw an interview with Stephen Stills where he said something like “it was fantastic loving Joni, but man - does she have to write a f*cking song about it??”
It was news to me that she’d had a relationship with Stills as well as Nash (I guess poor old Dave Crosby missed out?), but if this is true, anyone know which song it was?
Stephen Stills was involved with Judy Collins, about whom he wrote “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes.” The song indicates that Judy is a very difficult woman to be in a relationship with.
Stills’ bandmate Graham Nash used to live with Joni Mitchell. Though that relationship ended, it seems to have been a very happy one while it lasted. Nash wrote “Our House” about his relationship with Joni.
I met David Crosby and his wife while I was working at a theater. He came up the aisle whistling, and I said, “I guess you aren’t superstitious.”
He didn’t understand and his wife said, “whistling in a legit theater is bad luck. You have to go outside, turn around and spit.”
I spent two months doing nothing in Matala, Crete. That is where Joni Mitchell spent a lot of time writing one of her albums.
I actually liked the song, “Both Sides Now” when it first came out. Of course, I also thought Carly Simon was groovy back then.
Actually paid to see both in concert.
Carly Simon wrote, “You’re So Vain” and it is supposedly about Mick Jagger.
I don’t believe Kevin Bacon ever performed with any of them.
None of the above has anything to do with a song written by a songstress about Stephen Stills, but I just knew you would want me to share nonetheless.
Either you’re too drunk to post or I’m too tired to read, but that made no sense to these synapses. Maybe Carly Simon’s cat’s breath smells like American Pie. Wouldn’t put it past her.
I always pictured Stills in at least two of her lyrics (maybe projecting things onto the lyrics they won’t support):
In “Just Like This Train,” the line “Dreaming of the pleasure I’m going to have/Watching your hairline recede, my vain darling…”–Stills started losing his hair as early as Buffalo Springfield, and he did in fact have a receding hairline, not a bald spot, and he was as vain as any performer.
In “California” she writes, obviously addressing her lover,
“Oh make me feel good, rock’n roll band,
I’m your biggest fan”
On his first solo album (from memory, it may be called just “Stephen Stills”–anyway the one with “4 + 20” on it) Stills played many instruments, including drums, and I always thought "Rock “n’ Roll Band” was a private nickname for Stills on that basis.
I got this as analagous - that California was her lover. I believe this was after her tour of Europe, so she’d have been feeling homesick (presuming she thought of California as her home at that time).