Wind on the Water

Wind on the Water
Studio album by Crosby & Nash
Released September 15, 1975
Recorded Rudy Records, San Francisco, CA
Sound Labs and Village Recorders, Los Angeles, CA
Genre Rock
Length 40:57
Label ABC Records
MCA Records (1979)
Producer David Crosby, Graham Nash, Stephen Barncard
Crosby & Nash chronology
Graham Nash/David Crosby
(1972)
Wind on the Water
(1975)
Whistling Down the Wire
(1976)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

Wind on the Water is the second album by Crosby & Nash, released on ABC Records in 1975, although cassette and 8-track tape versions of the album were distributed by their previous label, Atlantic Records. It peaked at #6 on the Billboard 200 album chart, and has been certified a gold record by the RIAA.[2] Three singles were released from the album, "Carry Me," "Take the Money and Run," and "Love Work Out," of which only the first charted, peaking at #52 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.[3]

Background

After the summer 1974 tour by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, the quartet made a second attempt at a new CSNY studio album. Like the attempt from 1973, this proved fruitless, although the track "Through My Sails" showed up on the 1975 Zuma album by Neil Young. The quartet pursued their own directions, Young forming a new version of Crazy Horse to record Zuma, and Stephen Stills resuming his solo career with a new album in early 1975. David Crosby and Graham Nash opted to reactivate the partnership that had yielded a tour and an album in 1971 and 1972. This time they made it a going concern rather than a one-off happenstance, signing a three-album deal with ABC Records, of which this album was the first of their contract.

Content

As on their debut album, most of the instrumental backing was provided by the group of session musicians known as The Section. This quartet consisting of keyboardist Craig Doerge, guitarist Danny Kortchmar, bassist Leland Sklar, and drummer Russell Kunkel, along with multi-instrumentalist David Lindley and bassist Tim Drummond, would be dubbed by Crosby as 'The Mighty Jitters' and provide support for the duo both on stage and in the studio for the remainder of the decade. Sessions for the album took place at Rudy Recorders in San Francisco, and the Sound Lab and Village Recorders in Los Angeles.

Entering their mid-thirties, Crosby and Nash explored darker, trenchant themes in their lyrics for this album, "Carry Me" referencing the death of Crosby's mother, with "Wind on the Water" an elegiac plea concerning the slaughter of whales. As usual, songs topics included personal issues and friends: "Mama Lion" purportedly about Joni Mitchell; "Cowboy of Dreams" about Young; and "Take the Money and Run" concerning the financial aftermath to the mammoth CSNY 1974 tour.

Two songs feature the first issued writing collaborations of Nash and Crosby. The one on side two that closes the album, "To the Last Whale...," links two separate compositions: an a cappella sketch by Crosby "Critical Mass," into the title track by Nash.

Wind on the Water was reissued for compact disc on January 11, 2000, on MCA Records. On April 24, 2001, the album was repackaged as Bittersweet on the budget label Hallmark Records from a second-generation master tape and issued in Europe.

Track listing

Side one

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Carry Me"  David Crosby 3:35
2. "Mama Lion"  Graham Nash 3:17
3. "Bittersweet"  David Crosby 2:39
4. "Take the Money and Run"  Graham Nash 3:23
5. "Naked in the Rain"  David Crosby, Graham Nash 2:27
6. "Love Work Out"  Graham Nash 4:45

Side two

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Low Down Payment"  David Crosby 4:54
2. "Cowboy of Dreams"  Graham Nash 3:30
3. "Homeward Through the Haze"  David Crosby 4:06
4. "Fieldworker"  Graham Nash 2:47
5. "To the Last Whale..." (A. Critical Mass B. Wind on the Water)David Crosby, Graham Nash 5:33

Personnel

Additional personnel
Production personnel

References

  1. Elias, Jason. Wind on the Water at AllMusic
  2. RIAA database retrieved 16 August 2014
  3. Wind on the Water MCA 088 112 043-2, 2000 reissue, liner notes.

External links

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