Crosby and Nash – Another Stoney Evening
Music: B+ PCM 2.0: B- MLP 5.1: B+ DTS
96/24: B+ Extras: C
Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young all had a superb career
as a group as well as individually.
Their efforts collectively especially as CSNY, versus just as CSN, are
amazing. Combining beautiful harmonies
with rich vocals supported by passionate writing that was just as beautiful as
it was truthful, which was not always a beautiful picture to paint. It is fair to say that their observations of
the 60’s and 70’s are heard with every note, every word, and in everything that
they stood for.
Crosby and Nash contained
just as much zest as the larger group, which is quickly heard from their 1971
show Another Stoney Evening, which
featured the two working with acoustic guitars and piano arrangements doing
some of the classic CSNY numbers as well as material from their solo
projects. Check out Graham Nash’s Song for Survivors DVD-Audio review on
this site.
Track Listing
Anticipatory Crowd
Déjà vu
Wooden Ships
Man in the Mirror
Orleans
I Used to be a King
Traction in the Rain
Lee Shore
Southbound Train
Laughing
Triad
Where Will I Be?
Strangers Room
Immigration Man
Guinevere
Teach Your Children
Exit Sounds
What is always a challenge
when listening to a live performance is comparing it back and forth with its
studio form. There are some musicians
who can actually pull off a live sound that is similar to what would be
achieved in a studio setting. The
hardest part of course is making everything clear and accurate, but then again
there can be something raw about the live setting that makes it more authentic,
since its not as polished. With
musicians like those in CSNY they certainly had an edge playing live since
their studio wound was very organic and raw to begin with. Take for example Neil Young’s solo project
with his Harvest album, which was
recorded in a barn! That type of setting
allowed for a richer, more wholesome sound that a studio would have glossed
over. This particular session for Another Stoney Evening is similar
allowing all the intimacy to be felt and heard.
As a DVD-Audio, this is
one of the few to date that captures a live session, so expectations are
reserved for something different than what a normal studio album would be on the
format. The audio options are PCM 2.0,
high resolution MLP 5.1, and the DTS 96/24.
The PCM delivers a very solid presentation that some fans might prefer
especially since it cuts back on some of the reverb and other ambience that
gets thrown into the 5.1 mixes. However,
those 5.1 mixes deliver a very authentic recreation of a live session with the
guitars dominating out of the left and right front, while vocals are more
centralized. There has been very little
tampering done to the mix for the 5.1 in order to try and make it sound fancy
as the case with some of DVD-Audios. The
DTS 96/24 does not sound as clear as the MLP, but there is a slightly more
prominent low end in the DTS that some might favor. Although this recording is over 30 years old
it does not sound as dated as some might expect. The advantage of the evening consisting in
what would be now considering an ‘unplugged’ session is that no fancy equipment
was used that typically dates material.
Instead the instruments come across full, rich, and as invigorating as
they did then.
In any case this marks a
very early effort at bringing forth some live material into the format and with
pleasing results as this, we can only hope for more. DTS Entertainment is bringing forth more
titled with the higher 96/24 bit rate, which is making a bigger difference
since Queen’s A Night at the Opera
debut. One can only hope for more
material from CSNY on the format as well, which has been on hiatus in the world
of DVD-Video as well. Neil Young has the
most amount of work available both DVD-Video and DVD-Audio.
- Nate Goss