“…So I was saddened, as were many, by
the news of David Crosby’s passing at the age of 81. Reading and
listening to many of the tributes and obituaries that appeared after his death,
though, I’ve been struck by how little most have said about his politics.
“Yes, he deserves our attention for
his seminal role in two great bands, the Byrds and then CSN; and forgive me,
for his seminal role in helping singer Melissa Etheridge artificially conceive
two children. His battles with drug addiction and the law also belong in any
balanced appreciation of his life.
“But if you read the New York Times,
the Washington Post,
the Wall Street Journal or
any number of other obituaries, you’d know more about his consumption of drugs
along with his defense of menages a trois than you would about
his fierce radical politics.
“Over the years, he poured his musical
stature into unpopular causes like opposing the
Iraq War in 2006, when CSNY played 33 venues (a
project that was instigated mainly by Neil Young); he sang benefit concerts for
causes like opposing nuclear
power and weapons, for the 50th anniversary of
the Kent State shootings, to fight an anti-union
campaign finance initiative in California in 2012, as
well as performing at Occupy Wall Street in
2011; and in 2022 he along with his old
bandmates took their music off of Spotify to protest its spreading of COVID
misinformation. None of that got mentioned in any of the obits I saw.
“I suppose this is old
news; corporate mainstream media long ago sanded the politics off the edges of
the Woodstock Generation to make it easier to sell jeans and anniversary
concert tickets. But Crosby, like his former bandmate Young, never abandoned
his political values.
“When I saw him perform
a solo show at New York City’s Town Hall in 2015, between songs he ranted
(perhaps a bit too long) about how the Warren Commission had covered up the
truth of who killed John F. Kennedy and he lambasted America’s ever-increasing
military budget.
“His 2019 NPR ‘Tiny Desk
Concert’ with The Lighthouse Band includes a beautiful new song, Half
the Light, about letting women run the world, along with a great rendition
of Joni Mitchell’s anthem Woodstock. On Twitter, where Crosby
developed a whole new following, he expressed strong support for
climate activist Greta Thunberg, he decried despotism,
he slammed far-right
Republicans, he bashed rightwing billionaires — and that was all just a
sampling from his posts in the last few weeks.
“For me, Crosby’s
singing stands for remembering and honoring those young people who dared to
change the world and shake America open by not conforming, at a minimum, or, at
a maximum, by giving their lives for causes like civil rights and ending the
Vietnam War.
“These were not small
fights and it’s a shame to see them ignored, belittled or condensed into tidy
little packets of pablum. Young people are always the innovators and the cannon
fodders of movements for social change, then and now. I can still hear Crosby
crying, ‘Why? How many more?’ in the counterpoint to
the ‘Four Dead in Ohio’ chorus of Young’s protest anthem Ohio, and
know that the question is still as relevant today as it was when that song was
written in 1970, days after the Kent state shootings.”
Micah Sifry is co-founder Civic Hall. Publisher of The Connector newsletter (find it on Substack). Board member Consumer Reports.
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