David Van Cortland Crosby

David Van Cortland Crosby

August 14, 1941 – January 18, 2023

Wherever one stands regarding David Crosby, we cannot deny that he was, at the least,  in the right places at the right times.

He was born in Los Angeles and like so many artistically-inclined young people, found the conventional educational system discomforting. He enjoyed and participated in art programs offered by schools, but the traditional “Three Rs” not so much.

He graduated from high school via correspondence and eventually found his way to Greenwich Village at the same time that that young man Bob Dylan was there.

As his musical abilities grew, particularly regarding vocal harmonies, he went back west and became part of what would become the Byrds with Jim (later Roger) McGuinn and Gene Clark. They called themselves the Jet Set.

David Van Cortland Crosby

Mr Tambourine Man

Most are aware that their 1965 cover of Bob Dylan’s “Mr Tambourine Man” put the Jet Set, now the Byrds, on the musical map. The Byrd’s sound we first think of is McGuinn’s 12-string guitar, but the Crosby-influenced harmonies stand strong beside it.

Artistic differences led to an erosion of Crosby’s and other band members’ cohesion. Crosby, in particular, became more vocally political. Not unusual at the time, of course.

In mid-1967 Crosby and the Byrds separated.

David Van Cortland Crosby

Stephen Stills

Crosby and then Buffalo Springfield’s Stephen Stills had become friends and when Springfield broke up, the two hung out more together. Together with ex-Hollies Graham Nash, the three formed the now legendary Crosby, Stills and Nash (no Oxford comma).

While “it was only there second gig, man” at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, that appearance, their critically acclaimed first album, and the addition of Neil Young combined to again put Crosby in the middle of a musically successful maelstrom.

C, S, N (and sometimes Y) continued as a solid unit into the early 1970s with each of them doing solo work as well.

Once again artistic differences let to a breakup that have occurred regularly since.

David Van Cortland Crosby

David Crosby

David Crosby and Graham Nash have worked together. Crosby continued solo work. Formed and disbanded CPR or Crosby, Pevar & Raymond with session guitarist Jeff Pevar, and pianist James Raymond, Crosby’s son.

In April, Graham Nash and Crosby had a falling out. Among his many comments, Nash reportedly said, ““I don’t like David Crosby right now. He’s been awful for me the last two years, just fucking awful…. I’ve been there and saved his fucking ass for 45 years, and he treated me like shit. You can’t do that to me. You can do it for a day or so, until I think you’re going to come around. When it goes on longer, and I keep getting nasty emails from him, I’m done. Fuck you. David has ripped the heart out of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.”

Critical comments by Crosby regarding Neil Young’s wife Daryl Hannah also led to a Crosby-Young rift, though Crosby did apologize.

In 2014, Crosby released his first solo album in 21 years, “Croz,” which debuted in the Billboard Top 40. It ushered in one of the most prolific periods in his career, in which he released five solo albums, the last, “For Free,” in 2021.

He is one of the columns in the 1960s Pantheon of counter cultural music,

Crosby is in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice: as a Byrd and a member of C, S, N and Y.

Crosby died on January 18, 2023 after a long illness [NYT obituary]

David Van Cortland Crosby

1965 San Francisco Matrix

1965 San Francisco Matrix

3138, Fillmore Street, San Francisco, CA
Opened August 13, 1965

1965 San Francisco Matrix

1965 San Francisco Matrix

Venues

Rock venues slowly became part of the music scene and one of the first, before the Fillmore Auditorium, before the Fillmore East or Fillmore West, and before the Straight Theater, there was the Matrix.

1965 San Francisco Matrix

Marty Balin

The Matrix was Marty Balin‘s idea.  And a clever idea it was. He converted a pizzeria into a club and used his band, the Jefferson Airplane,  as the house band.

1965 San Francisco Matrix

Great Society

One of the other bands that played there at the start of the Matrix was the Great Society. Fans of Grace Slick will immediately recognize the name of the band she left to join Balin and the Airplane.  Here she is with the Great Society at the Matrix in 1966 singing a song that would also become a staple of the Airplane:

1965 San Francisco Matrix

San Francisco Sound

The Matrix became the early hub of what would become the San Francisco Sound, but the venue featured bands from all over during it’s relatively brief life until 1972.

Dozens of unknown upcoming bands played there including:

  • Big Brother and the Holding Company
  • The Blues Project
  • Boz Scaggs
  • The Chambers Brothers
  • The Charlatans
  • Charlie Musselwhite
  • Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airment
  • Country Joe & the Fisth
  • Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks
  • The Doors
  • Electric Flag
  • Elvin Bishop Band
  • Grateful Dead 
  • Harvey Mandel
  • Hot Tuna
  • Mickey Hart
  • Moby Grape
  • New Riders of the Purple Sage
  • Quicksilver Messenger Service
  • Santana
  • Taj Majal
  • Velvet Underground 
1965 San Francisco Matrix

After closing

The club re-opened at 412 Broadway, but closed in fall of 1973.

Later new renters remodeled the space the first Matrix occupied and turned it into a nightclub with only a DJ, and no live music.

Today the space is called the Matrix/Fillmore, evoking the glory days of the San Francisco sound, though there is no live music.

According to the Matrix/Fillmore site the venue is “one of San Francisco’s most intimate, boutique-style music venues where you can enjoy handcrafted cocktails, bottle service and premium champagnes while dancing to a range of dance music, from House to 70s, 80s, 90s genre. Located in San Francisco’s Marina district, MatrixFillmore is also a stylish venue for private corporate and social events.”

1965 San Francisco Matrix

1965 San Francisco Matrix

 

Sha Na Na Scott Powell

Sha Na Na Scott Powell

  • Helped found Sha Na Na
  • Woodstock alum
  • TV star
  • MD

Sha Na Na Scott Powell

Sha Na Na Scott Powell

Scott Powell

Scott Powell was born in Dallas, Texas, on August 13, 1948.

Yes I know. Scott Powell is not a household name. Unless, of course, you are in his house.

Sha Na Na was not a household name at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair either, but that Sunday morning they came out and performed for the many thousands of fans who had stuck it out and awaited Hendrix.

From his site: “ He performed with the group at the Woodstock Festival, Fillmore East and West, in Europe and Japan, on the syndicated television series, Sha Na Na, and in the movies.”

Movies!

  • 1970 – Woodstock – as himself with Sha Na Na
  • 1972 – Dynamite Chicken – as himself with Sha Na Na
  • 1978 – Grease – with Sha Na Na as Johnny Casino and The Gamblers
  • 1980 – Caddyshack – Gatsby
  • 1994 – Woodstock Diary – as himself with Sha Na Na
  • 2003 – Festival Express – as himself with Sha Na Na

He left the band in 1980 and  returned to Columbia to pursue a career in medicine.

To say that that’s not where many of the Woodstock performers went is an understatement, of course.

Sha Na Na Scott Powell

Dr Powell

  • Dr. Powell attended the Albert Einstein College of Medicine
  • He interned at St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital.
  • His residency was in Orthopedics at Hospital for Joint Diseases in New York City.
  • He completed his Fellowship in Sports Medicine at the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopedic Clinic in Los Angeles.
  • Dr. Powell is Board Certified by the American Board of Orthopedic Surgery.

Still musically involved

Again from his site: Dr. Powell has partnered with MusiCares, the charity arm of the Grammys, to bring free medical care to musicians who cannot afford insurance, at the Pierre Cossette Center at Stetson Powell Orthopedics….  Dr. Powell has been elected to the Board of Directors of MusiCares and serves as Chair of the Health and Human Services Committee.

Sha Na Na Scott Powell