Long Time Gone Quotes
Long Time Gone
by
Carl Gottlieb1,592 ratings, 4.03 average rating, 99 reviews
Long Time Gone Quotes
Showing 1-6 of 6
“NEIL YOUNG: If these guys want CSNY, then there should”
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
“endured—whatever it is—if we can be so strong after everything we’ve endured, it would be like fresh water running over the entire audience.”
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
“Asylum Records became a power base for David Geffen, with one of the best artist rosters in the business. It became the home label for what was to be known as the California sound. Elliot continued running the management company, most of whose artists recorded on Asylum, whose corporate philosophy was “benevolent protectionism.” The record company was different from other labels and was proud of its noninterference with the private and artistic lives of its artists, who in turn looked to David Geffen and company to insulate and protect them from the shocks and insults of commercially oriented sales and marketing types, aggressive promotion men, and demanding producers. The opening lineup at Asylum included Jackson Browne, the Eagles, and Joni Mitchell, with Linda Ronstadt joining shortly after. In 1974, the legendary Bob Dylan would leave Columbia and release two Top 10 albums with the company before returning to his original label. That didn’t matter to David. Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young were Atlantic artists and they were doing quite nicely, thank you very much. Besides,”
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
“So indirectly you can say it was Miles Davis who got the Byrds started.”
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
“John Coltrane, still playing at top intensity and volume, totally into it. He blew me out so bad I slid down the wall. The guy was still playing his solo. He hadn’t stopped. I don’t think he ever knew that I was in that room. He never saw that little ofay kid in the corner, you know, but he totally turned my mind to Jell-O at that point and that was my John Coltrane experience.”
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
― Long Time Gone: the autobiography of David Crosby
