List of Crosby, Stills & Nash concert tours (1980s–90s)

Last updated

Crosby, Stills & Nash have toured for five decades. Since 1982 they toured yearly with a few exceptions. Notably in 1986 when David Crosby was serving a prison sentence. Touring has tended to focus on North America, but the band have also played in Europe and other parts of the world. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

Contents

1984 Tour

1984 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationUnited States
Start dateJune 1, 1984
End dateDecember 6, 1984
Legs2
No. of shows68

Lineup

Dates

Tours
DateCityCountryVenue
Leg 1
June 1, 1984San DiegoUnited StatesJack Murphy Stadium
July 29, 1984LouisvilleLouisville Palace Theatre
August 2, 1984BostonBoston Common
August 4, 1984PhiladelphiaMann Music Center
August 5, 1984
August 7, 1984HolmdelGarden State Arts Centre
August 8, 1984
August 10, 1984MiddletownOrange County Fairgrounds
August 11, 1984North ConwayMount Cranmore Stadium
August 12, 1984NewburySpencer Pierce Little Farm
August 14, 1984New York CityPier 84
August 15, 1984
August 17, 1984WantaghJones Beach Theatre
August 18, 1984Niagara FallsNiagara Falls Convention and Civic Centre
August 19, 1984ClevelandCleveland Stadium
August 21, 1984ChicagoUIC Pavilion
August 22, 1984BristolColt State Park
August 23, 1984St LouisThe Muny
August 24, 1984Bonner SpringsSandstone Amphitheatre
August 25, 1984DenverMile High Stadium
August 27, 1984HoustonThe Summit
August 29, 1984AustinSouth Park Meadows
August 30, 1984DallasPark Center Amphitheatre
August 31, 1984Oklahoma CityZoo Amphitheatre
September 1, 1984San DiegoAztec Bowl
September 3, 1984Costa MesaPacific Amphitheatre
September 7, 1984Las VegasCircus Maximus at Caesars Palace
September 8, 1984San FranciscoCandlestick Park
September 9, 1984Nevada County Fairgrounds CASierra Sun Festival
September 12, 1984Rochester HillsMeadow Brook Music Festival
September 13, 1984
September 14, 1984East TroyAlpine Valley Music Theatre
September 15, 1984St PaulNavy Island
September 17, 1984IndianapolisSports And Media Center
September 18, 1984PittsburghCivic Arena
September 19, 1984HersheyHersheypark Arena
September 20, 1984BinghamtonBroome County Veterans Memorial Arena
September 22, 1984BristolColt State Park
September 23, 1984Glen FallsGlen Falls Civic Centre
September 28, 1984Johnson CityFreedom Hall Civic Center
September 29, 1984LouisvilleLouisville Palace Theater
Leg 2
October 24, 1984RochesterUnited StatesRochester Community War Memorial
October 25, 1984ErieErie Civic Center
October 26, 1984DaytonHara Arena
October 28, 1984LouisvilleFreedom Hall
October 29, 1984South BendAthletics And Covocation Centre
October 30, 1984ColumbusBattelle Hall
November 1, 1984KalamazooWings Stadium
November 2, 1984Lansing
November 3, 1984ChampaignAssembly Hall
November 4, 1984Iowa CityIowa Memorial Union Main Lounge
November 8, 1984OmahaOmaha Civic Arean
November 9, 1984Tulsa
November 10, 1984FayattevilleBarnhill Arena
November 12, 1984AlbuquerqueTingley Coliseum
November 13, 1984Las CrucesCorbett Centre Ballroom
November 14, 1984TucsonMcKale Memorial Centre
November 15, 1984TempeASU Activity Centre
November 17, 1984San BernardinoOrange Pavilion
November 19, 1984Universal CityUniversal Amphitheatre
November 20, 1984
November 25, 1984NevadaUniversity of Reno
November 28, 1984Caspar
November 29, 1984Salt Lake CitySalt Palace
December 1, 1984SeattleSeattle Center Coliseum
December 2, 1984SpokaneSpokane Coliseum
December 4, 1984PortlandCivic Auditorium
December 6, 1984HonoluluNeal S. Blaisdell Arena

1985 Tour

1985 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationUnited States
Start dateJune 28, 1985
End dateSeptember 30, 1985
Legs2
No. of shows56

Lineup

Dates

Tours
DateCityCountryVenue
Leg 1
June 28, 1985SacramentoUnited StatesCal Expo Amphitheatre
June 29, 1985ConcordConcord Pavilion
June 30, 1985
July 2, 1985Costa MesaPacific Amphitheatre
July 3, 1985Los AngelesGreek Theatre
July 4, 1985
July 5, 1985Las VegasThomas & Mack Centre
July 7, 1985Park CityPark West
July 9, 1985MorrisonRed Rocks Amphitheatre
July 10, 1985
July 12, 1985Oklahoma CityZoo Amphitheatre
July 13, 1985PhiladelphiaJFK Stadium - Live Aid

As Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

July 14, 1985HoustonSouthern Star Amphitheatre
July 17, 1985Bonner SpringSandstone Amphitheatre
July 18, 1985St LouisFox Theatre
July 19, 1985SpringfieldPrairie Capital Convention Centre
July 20, 1985Fort WayneAllen County War Memorial Coliseum
July 23, 1985ToledoCentennial Hall
July 24, 1985CincinnatiRiverbed Music Theatre
July 26, 1985East TroyAlpine Valley Music Theatre
July 27, 1985ClarkstonPine Knob Music Theatre
July 28, 1985
July 30, 1985Hoffman EstatesPoplar Creek Music Theatre
August 1, 1985OhioBlossom Music Center
August 2, 1985PittsburghCivic Arena
August 3, 1985BuffaloBuffalo Memorial Auditorium
August 5, 1985ColumbiaMerriweather Post Pavilion
August 6, 1985
August 7, 1985NorfolkScope Arena
August 9, 1985PhiladelphiaMann Music Center
August 10, 1985
August 12, 1985New York CityPier 84
August 13, 1985
August 15, 1985WantaghJones Beach Theater
August 16, 1985
August 17, 1985HartfordHartford Civic Center
August 19, 1985HolmdelGarden State Arts Centre
August 20, 1985
August 22, 1985BristolColt State Park
August 25, 1985LewistonLewiston Raceway
August 27, 1985SaratogaSaratoga Performing Arts Centre
August 28, 1985BostonBoston Common
August 29, 1985AllentownAllentown Fairgrounds - Great Allentown Fair
August 31, 1985RichmondRichmond Coliseum
Leg 2
September 18, 1985GreensboroUnited StatesGreensboro Coliseum
September 20, 1985AtlantaChastain Park Amphitheatre
September 21, 1985
September 22, 1985New OrleansUniversity Of New Orleans Soccer Field
September 24, 1985PensacolaPensacola Civic Center
September 25, 1985TallahasseeTallahassee-Leon Civic Center
September 26, 1985St PetersbergBayfront Center
September 28, 1985MiamiJames L. Knight Civic Center
September 29, 1985
September 30, 1985OrlandoOrange County Convention Civic Center

1987 Tour

1987 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationUnited States
Start dateJanuary 7, 1987
End dateNovember 27, 1987
Legs2
No. of shows76

Lineup

Dates

Tours
DateCityCountryVenue
Leg 1
January 7, 1987SunriseUnited StatesSunrise Music Theatre
January 8, 1987
January 9, 1987Daytona BeachOcean Center
January 10, 1987ClearwaterRuth Eckard Hall

2 Shows

January 15, 1987Upper DarbyTower Theatre

2 shows a night

January 16, 1987
January 17, 1987
January 18, 1987
January 20, 1987BethlehemStabler Arena
January 21, 1987BostonWang Theatre

2 Shows

January 23, 1987WashingtonDAR Constitution Hall

2 Shows

Odd dates
February 6, 1987Santa BarrbaraUnited StatesArlington Theatre - CSNY Show
June 23, 1987BurbankThe Tonight Show with Johnny Carson
Leg 2
July 2, 1987BinghamtonUnited StatesBroome County Veterans Memorial Arena
July 3, 1987HersheyHersheypark Arena
July 4, 1987LandoverCapital Centre - Welcome Home 1987
July 5, 1987ColumbiaMerriweather Post Pavilion
July 6, 1987
July 7, 1987New YorkRadio City Music Hall
July 8, 1987
July 10, 1987RichmondRichmond Coliseum
July 11, 1987CharlotteCharlotte Coliseum
July 13, 1987AtlantaThe Omni
July 14, 1987AntiochStarwood Amphitheatre
July 15, 1987PelhamOak Mountain Amphitheatre
July 17, 1987HoustonThe Summit
July 18, 1987DallasPark Center Amphitheatre - Starfest 1987
July 19, 1987Oklahoma CityFrontier City
July 21, 1987MemphisMud Island Amphitheatre
July 23, 1987LouisvilleLouisville Gardens
July 24, 1987ChesterfieldChesterfield Amphitheatre
July 25, 1987St LouisFox Theatre
July 27, 1987MorisonRed Rocks Amphitheatre
July 28, 1987Park WestPark City Mountain Resort
July 30, 1987SeattleSeattle Center Coliseum
July 31, 1987SpokaneOpera House
August 1, 1987PortlandPortland Memorial Coliseum
August 3, 1987SacramentoCal Expo Amphitheatre
August 4, 1987ConcordConcord Pavilion
August 5, 1987Paso RoblesChumash Grand Stand Arena
August 7, 1987Mountain ViewShoreline Amphitheatre - CSNY
August 8, 1987Irvine Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre
August 14, 1987ClarkstonPine Knob Music Theatre
August 15, 1987Hoffman EstatesPoplar Creek Music Theatre
August 16, 1987West ParkWisconsin State Fair
August 18, 1987OhioBlossom Music Centre
August 19, 1987ColumbusOhio Theatre
August 20, 1987WyomingLamar Park
August 22, 1987CincinnatiRiverbend Music Center
August 23, 1987PittsburghCivic Arena
August 24, 1987New YorkFinger Lakes Performing Arts Center
August 25, 1987Saratoga Performing Arts Centre
August 27, 1987PhiladelphiaMann Music Center
August 28, 1987
August 29, 1987HartfordHartford Civic Center
August 31, 1987New YorkNew York State Fair -
September 1, 1987Old Orchard BeachOld Orchard Beach Ballpark
September 4, 1987East RutherfordBrendan Bryne Arena
September 5, 1987WantaghJones Beach Theatre
September 6, 1987MansfieldGreat Woods Centre
September 7, 1987
September 9, 1987HuntingtonHuntington Civic Center
September 10, 1987IndianapolisSports And Music Center
September 11, 1987East TroyAlpine Valley Music Theatre
September 20, 1987Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara Bowl
September 27, 1987Oklahoma CityCivic Center Music Hall
Club Date
November 21, 1987West HollywoodUnited StatesThe Roxy

1988 Tour

1988 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationUnited States
Start dateAugust 1, 1988
End dateNovember 12, 1988
Legs2
No. of shows38

Lineup

Dates

DateCityCountryVenue
Odd dates
February 8, 1988New OrleansUnited StatesGeneration Hall
May 14, 1988New YorkMadison Square Garden -

Atlantic Records 40th Anniversary

June 3, 1988MontrealCanadaForum De Montreal
Leg 1
August 1, 1988MansfieldUnited StatesGreat Woods Center for Performing Arts
August 2, 1988
August 4, 1988SaratogaSaratoga Performing Arts Center
August 5, 1988BristolLake Compounce
August 6, 1988WantaghJones Beach Theater
August 8, 1988East RutherfordBrendan Bryne Arena
August 10, 1988PhiladelphiaMann Music Centre
August 11, 1988
August 12, 1988ColumbiaMerriweather Post Pavilion
August 13, 1988PittsburghAJ Palumbo Centre
August 15, 1988CincinnatiRiverbend Music Center
August 16, 1988Cuyahoga FallsBlossom Music Center
August 18, 1988Auburn HillsThe Palace at Auburn Hills
August 19, 1988IndianapolisSports & Music Center
August 20, 1988East TroyAlpine Valley Music Theatre
August 22, 1988La CrosseLa Crosse Center
August 24, 1988Hoffman EstatesPoplar Creek Music Theatre
August 25, 1988St LouisFox Theatre
August 26, 1988
August 28, 1988ColoradoColorado State Fair Events Center
August 29, 1988Greenwood VillageFiddler's Green Amphitheatre
August 30, 1988Park CityPark West
September 1, 1988VancouverCanadaPacific Coliseum
September 2, 1988TacomaUnited StatesTacoma Dome
September 3, 1988PortlandPortland Memorial Coliseum
September 5, 1988Mountain ViewShoreline Amphitheatre
September 6, 1988Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara Bowl
September 8, 1988TempeASU Activity Center
September 9, 1988San DiegoSDSU Open Air Theatre
September 10, 1988Costa MesaPacific Amphitheatre
September 11, 1988Las VegasCircus Maximus at Caesars Palace
September 13, 1988AnchorageWest Anchorage High School Auditorium
September 14, 1988FairbanksCarlson Center
September 17, 1988HonoluluWaikiki Shell
September 18, 1988LahainaLahaina Civic Center
Odd dates
November 12, 1988Los AngelesUnited StatesPalace Theater
December 4, 1988OaklandOakland Alameda County Coliseum

Bridge School Benefit CSNY

1989 Tour

1989 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationUnited States
Start dateAugust 25, 1989
End dateNovember 26, 1989
Legs2
No. of shows32

Lineup

Dates

DateCityCountryVenue
Odd dates
July 4, 1989HersheyUnited StatesHersheypark Stadium
Leg 1
August 25, 1989White PlainsUnited StatesWestchester County Center
August 27, 1989Atlantic CityBally's Grand Hotel & Casino
August 28, 1989
September 2, 1989Darien CenterLakeside Amphitheatre
September 3, 1989Auburn HillsThe Palace at Auburn Hills
September 4, 1989AllentownGreat Allentown Fair
September 10, 1989LincolnBob Devaney Sports Center
September 11, 1989MerrillvilleStar Plaza Theatre
September 14, 1989PoughkeepsieMid-Hudson Civic Center
September 15, 1989SpringfieldSymphony Hall
September 16, 1989SyracuseLandmark Theater
September 18, 1989PoughkeepsieMid-Hudson Civic Center
September 20, 1989HalifaxCanadaHalifax Metro Center
September 21, 1989MonctonMoncton Coliseum
September 23, 1989TorontoMassey Hall
September 25, 1989OttawaSoutham Hall
September 26, 1989TampaUnited StatesTampa Bay Performing Arts Center
September 27, 1989OrlandoBob Carr Performing Arts Center
September 28, 1989ClearwaterRuth Eckerd Hall
September 30, 1989SunriseSunrise Musical Theater
October 7, 1989YakimaState Fair Park
October 13, 1989PhoenixArizona State Fair

Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum

October 14, 1989
October 28, 1989Shoreline AmphitheatreBridge School Benefit

CSNY

November 8, 1989Santa CruzThe Catalyst
November 9, 1989
November 18, 1989New YorkUnited Nations General Assembly
November 20, 1989West BerlinWest GermanyBrandenburger
November 21, 1989unknown venue
November 26, 1989Daly CityUnited StatesEarthquake Relief Concert

Cow Palace

1990 Live It Up Tour

1990 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationNorth America
Start dateMarch 31, 1990
End dateSeptember 11, 1993

Lineup

1994 25th Anniversary After the Storm Tour

1994 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationNorth America, Japan
Start dateJanuary 22, 1994
End dateDecember 27, 1995

Lineup

1996 Tour

1996 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationNorth America, South Africa
Start dateJanuary 11, 1996
End dateNovember 13, 1996

Lineup

1997–98 Tour

1997–98 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationNorth America
Start dateFebruary 14, 1997
End dateDecember 2, 1998

Lineup

Dates

DateCityCountryVenue
Leg 1
February 14, 1997Atlantic CityUnited StatesCircus Maximus Theater
February 15, 1997
February 16, 1997
February 21, 1997StatelineCaesars Tahoe
February 22, 1997
February 27, 1997Atlantic CityCaesars Atlantic City
February 28, 1997Las VegasCircus Maximus at Caesars Palace
March 1, 1997
March 2, 1997
March 4, 1997Los AngelesPalace Theater
Leg 2
April 23, 1997FargoUnited StatesCivic Auditorium
April 24, 1997MankatoMankato Civic Center
April 26, 1997MinneapolisOrpheum Theater
April 27, 1997MilwaukeeRiverside Theater
April 29, 1997RockfordCoronado Theater
April 30, 1997DubuqueFive Flags Center
May 2, 1997South BendC. Morris Civic Auditorium
May 4, 1997ClevelandAgora
May 5, 1997KentKent State University
May 8, 1997CincinnatiTaft Theater
May 9, 1997ColumbusPalace Theater
May 10, 1997DetroitFox Theater
May 12, 1997MerrillvilleStar Plaza Theater
May 13, 1997LouisvilleLouisville Palace Theater
May 14, 1997CharlestonMunicipal Auditorium
May 17, 1997WallingfordOakdale Theater
May 18, 1997Upper DarbyTower Theater
May 19, 1997Red BankCount Basie Theater
May 21, 1997New YorkBeacon Theatre
May 22, 1997ViennaFilene Center
May 24, 1997Rio Marr Beach ResortPuerto RicoThe West Inn
Leg 3
June 11, 1997United States
June 13, 1997
June 14, 1997
June 15, 1997
June 17, 1997
June 18, 1997
June 21, 1997
June 24, 1997
June 26, 1997
June 27, 1997
June 28, 1997
June 30, 1997
July 1, 1997
July 3, 1997
July 5, 1997
July 6, 1997
July 8, 1997
July 9, 1997
July 11, 1997
July 12, 1997
July 13, 1997
July 15, 1997
July 16, 1997
July 17, 1997
July 18, 1997
July 19, 1997
July 20, 1997
August 22, 1997
Leg 4
September 14, 1997United States
September 15, 1997
September 16, 1997
September 18, 1997
September 19, 1997
September 20, 1997
September 22, 1997
September 23, 1997
September 26, 1997
September 27, 1997
September 28, 1997
Leg 5
February 1, 1998United States
February 5, 1998
February 20, 1998
February 21, 1998
February 27, 1998
February 28, 1998
March 13, 1998
March 14, 1998
March 20, 1998
March 21, 1998
March 22, 1998
September 4, 1998
September 6, 1998
September 18, 1998
October 2, 1998
October 3, 1998
October 4, 1998
December 2, 1998

1999 Tour

1999 Tour
United States tour by Crosby, Stills & Nash
LocationNorth America
Start dateFebruary 12, 1999
End dateMarch 3, 1999
Legs1
No. of shows10

Lineup

Dates

DateCityCountryVenue
February 12, 1999Atlantic CityUnited StatesCircus Maximus Theater
February 13, 1999
February 14, 1999
February 19, 1999TahoeCaesars Tahoe
February 20, 1999
February 21, 1999Santa MonicaSanta Monica Civic Auditorium
February 25, 1999Las VegasCircus Maximus at Caesars Palace
February 26, 1999
February 27, 1999
March 3, 1999Thousand OaksFred Kavli Theater

Related Research Articles

<i>Long May You Run</i> 1976 album

Long May You Run is a studio album credited to the Stills–Young Band, a collaboration between Stephen Stills and Neil Young, released in 1976 on Reprise Records. It peaked at #26 on the Billboard 200 and was certified gold in the United States by the RIAA. The album is the sole studio release by Stills and Young as a duo.

<i>Daylight Again</i> 1982 studio album by Crosby, Stills & Nash

Daylight Again is the fourth studio album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, and their third studio album in the trio configuration. It peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, the final time the band made the top ten before the death of David Crosby in 2023. Three singles were released from the album, all making the Billboard Hot 100: "Wasted on the Way" peaked at No. 9, "Southern Cross" at No. 18, and "Too Much Love to Hide" at No. 69. The album was certified platinum by the RIAA with sales of 1,850,000.

<i>Oh Yes I Can</i> 1989 studio album by David Crosby

Oh Yes I Can is the second solo studio album by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young member David Crosby. It was released on January 23, 1989, 18 years on from his previous solo release, If I Could Only Remember My Name.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Southern Cross (Crosby, Stills and Nash song)</span> Song performed by Crosby, Stills & Nash

"Southern Cross" is a song written by Stephen Stills, Rick Curtis, and Michael Curtis and performed by the rock band Crosby, Stills & Nash. It was featured on the band's Daylight Again album and was released as a single in September 1982. Stephen Stills sings lead throughout, with Graham Nash joining on the second verse. Because David Crosby did not reunite with Stills and Nash until the album was well underway, his vocals are not featured on the album version, although he did appear in the video and subsequently sang the song with the group in live performances. The single was a success on the charts, reaching No. 18 on the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks in late November and early December 1982. As of 2022, it was the group's final hit in the Billboard Top 40.

<i>Looking Forward</i> 1999 studio album by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

Looking Forward is the eighth and final studio album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, and their third with Neil Young. It was released on Reprise Records in 1999 and peaked at number 26 on the Billboard 200, with total sales nearing 400,000.

<i>Replay</i> (Crosby, Stills & Nash album) 1980 compilation album by Crosby, Stills & Nash

Replay is a compilation album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, appearing in 1980 on the Atlantic Records label. It contains no material with Neil Young, but does include CSN solo projects. It peaked at No. 122 on the Billboard 200, their first album not to chart in the top ten.

<i>American Dream</i> (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album) 1988 studio album by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young

American Dream is the fifth studio album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, and their second with Neil Young. Released in 1988 on Atlantic Records, it peaked at No. 16 on the Billboard 200 and has been certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. To date, it is their final album of original material to receive either a gold or platinum citation by the RIAA. It is the highest-selling album by Neil Young in the 1980s. The album is dedicated to Jan Crosby, Anne Stills, Susan Nash and Pegi Young.

<i>Live It Up</i> (Crosby, Stills & Nash album) 1990 studio album by Crosby, Stills and Nash

Live It Up is the sixth studio album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, and their fourth studio album in the trio configuration, released on Atlantic Records in 1990. It peaked at No. 57 on the Billboard 200 with current sales of 300,000. It is the first of their studio albums not to gain either a gold or platinum certification by the RIAA. It was issued in all formats at the time and was later released for streaming.

<i>Greatest Hits</i> (Crosby, Stills & Nash album) 2005 compilation album by Crosby, Stills & Nash

Greatest Hits is a compilation album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, released by Rhino Records in 2005. It peaked at No. 24 on the Billboard 200, debuting at that position on April 2, 2005 with first week sales of 33,000 copies, and spending eight weeks on the chart. Its current sales sit at over 640,000. The album was dedicated to Cass Elliot with great thanks to Neil Young.

<i>Man Alive!</i> (Stephen Stills album) 2005 studio album by Stephen Stills

Man Alive! is the 8th studio album by Stephen Stills, released in 2005. It is a mixture of old and new recordings. Some were dated in the notes of the box set Carry On as follows: "Ain't It Always" from December 1976, "Spanish Suite" from April 1979 during the sessions of his unfinished 1979 album, "Feed the People" from 1989 but with everything but the backing vocals replaced later, and "I Don't Get It" in 1991. Zimmer's biography of Crosby, Stills & Nash places "Acadienne" with songs for the CSNY Looking Forward album, and based on the personnel it is from April 1998. Dates of the others are unknown. "Drivin' Thunder" appeared the CSNY album American Dream in 1988, but Stills wrote new lyrics for the version on this album. Stills introduced "Heart's Gate" as a new song in concert in 2003. Graham Nash sings on "Acadienne", "Feed the People", and "Wounded World", which he co-wrote. Neil Young plays on "Different Man" and "Round the Bend", while Herbie Hancock plays on "Spanish Suite". Stills drew the back and front cover.

<i>CSN</i> (box set) 1991 box set by Crosby, Stills & Nash

CSN is a box set by Crosby, Stills & Nash, issued on Atlantic Records in 1991. It features material spanning from 1968 through 1990 from their catalogue of recordings as a group in addition to selections from Crosby & Nash, Manassas, and their individual solo albums. It peaked at No. 109 on the Billboard 200, and has been certified platinum by the RIAA. The set is "dedicated to the loving memory of Cass Elliot, without whom most of this music may not have been made." A two-disc distillation of the box was released for other markets later in the year.

<i>Allies</i> (Crosby, Stills & Nash album) 1983 live album by Crosby, Stills, & Nash

Allies is a live album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, released on Atlantic Records in 1983. A live concert clip for "Wasted on the Way" received some rotation on MTV at the time, as did the single "War Games". It peaked at No. 43 on the Billboard 200.

<i>Innocent Eyes</i> (Graham Nash album) 1986 studio album by Graham Nash

Innocent Eyes is the fourth solo studio album by British singer-songwriter Graham Nash, released in 1986. The influence of reggae shows in the hit song "Chippin' Away".

<i>Illegal Stills</i> 1976 studio album by Stephen Stills

Illegal Stills is an album released by American musician Stephen Stills on 7 May 1976. This was Stills second album on Columbia Records and his fourth solo album overall. After it was released he would start an album and tour with Neil Young. It was released on CD in 1991 (Columbia CK-34148). The album charted at number 31 in the US on release, but wasn't a critical success.

<i>Thoroughfare Gap</i> 1978 studio album by Stephen Stills

Thoroughfare Gap is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Stephen Stills, released in 1978. It was a critical and commercial disappointment that only charted at number 84 in the US. This album is now available as a three-album set on two CDs with Stills & Illegal Stills, having never been released on its own on CD.

<i>Right by You</i> 1984 studio album by Stephen Stills

Right by You is the sixth album by American singer-songwriter Stephen Stills, released in 1984. This is his last solo recording released on a major label, and was a critical and commercial failure peaking at number 75 on the US charts. It was also his only solo album of the 1980s.

"Wasted on the Way" is a 1982 song by American folk rock band Crosby, Stills & Nash, featuring harmony vocals by Timothy B. Schmit. It was their first top 10 hit in five years, and peaked at #9 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles charts in August 1982. On the Adult Contemporary chart, "Wasted on the Way" was the group's biggest hit on the chart, peaking at number two for five weeks. It appeared on the band's 1982 album Daylight Again. The B-side was the David Crosby composition "Delta".

<i>Carry On</i> (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album) 1991 compilation album by Crosby, Stills & Nash

Carry On is a compilation album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, issued on Atlantic Records in 1991, generally for the European and Australian markets. It is a two-disc sampler of their four-disc box set, CSN, released two months previously in the United States and the United Kingdom. It features material spanning 1968 through 1990 from their catalogue of recordings as a group in addition to selections from Crosby & Nash, Manassas, and their individual solo albums. It was reissued on 30 June 1998 on the WEA International record label. This compilation should not be confused with the Stephen Stills box set of the same name released in 2013.

These tours were the third tours as the trio of Crosby, Stills & Nash, without Neil Young. They were in support of the 1982 album Daylight Again, and the 1983 live album Allies.

References

  1. Herbst, Peter (June 17, 1977). "CSN". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 11, 2020.
  2. Nash, Graham (2016). Wild Tales.
  3. Crowe, Cameron (June 2, 1977). "The Actual, Honest-to-God Reunion of Crosby, Stills and Nash". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 11, 2020.
  4. Roberts, David (October 28, 2016). Stephen Stills: Change Partners. This Day in Music Books.
  5. Zimmer, Dave (2008). Crosby, Stills & Nash: The Biography. Da Capo Press.