Stephen Stills - "Treetop Flyer" from "Just Roll Tape" video free download


35,824
Duration: 07:09
Uploaded: 2014/01/01

In April of 1968, after leaving Buffalo Springfield, but before joining CSN, Stephen Stills found himself in a New York recording session with then girlfriend Judy Collins. Stills wandered down the hall with an engineer and an acoustic guitar, and laying down a couple hundred-dollar bills, told the engineer Just roll tape. What he recorded in the ensuing hours was the first ever versions of what would become classics for Stephen Stills, CSN, CSNY, and Manassas. Almost 40 years later the tapes, rescued decades ago from a garbage bin, are finally remastered and released to the public.

The title and cover art effectively tell the story of this dusty gem. Captured fly-on-the-wall style in an impromptu live-in-the-studio burst after a Judy Collins session on which the 23-year-old Stephen Stills played, the soon-to-be ex-leader of Buffalo Springfield (and Collins's ex-boyfriend) unleashes unplugged, occasionally incomplete versions of songs he had recently written and wanted to get on tape. Discovered in 1978 and nearly discarded, the reels found their way to Graham Nash in 2003, who encouraged Stills to release them. He finally did so in 2007, nearly 40 years after the original session, and the result is the most revelatory album in Stills's bulging catalog. Even with remastering, the sound is on the crude side. Nevertheless, early takes of "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," "Helplessly Hoping," and "Wooden Ships," all of which would appear in far more polished versions on Crosby, Stills & Nash's self-titled debut, are sung with a passion and honesty seldom exposed by the singer/songwriter. Stills's voice sometimes cracks, his guitar work intermittently sounds muddy, and these are definitely works in progress, some of which never appeared on an official release. Yet the artist is caught arguably at the peak of his substantial talents, laying down soon-to-be-classic melodies while they were fresh in his head. Folk/rock historians and Stills fans will surely be thrilled with this nascent, unvarnished set. Though Just Roll Tape may be too raw for some, it finds Stills at the crucial stage right before superstardom changed his--and popular music's--future forever. --Hal Horowitz

Comments

8 years ago

Peter Jacobsen

This recording was rescued from a garbage bin, and released almost 40 years after...... : )

9 years ago

Cathy Moore

Wow...just, wow.

9 years ago

Pete Nelson

All the cats from Vietnam thought he was against them-he was singing about them, and was an Army brat kid growing up. I love Stills, and always will. That this is from '68 proves his genius. Around the same time he did Super Session, with Bloomfield and Kooper, pre-Woodstock. 

9 years ago

jim clare

...this is the way I like it...with the bark still on...just great

9 years ago

Dylan Scott

this is my all time favorite song. first heard it on (country gold saturday night). who ever says you have to be old to like this music is a total liar. I'm only in middle school and i love this song.

9 years ago

19DRS66

This is incredible.True raw feeling

10 years ago

Anne Hassell

This sounds exactly as it should! I love it!

Related Videos

Crosby, Stills & Nash (Live)

Crosby, Stills & Nash (Live) - Treetop Flyer