Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts114/v4/09/c1/88/09c188b2-9bef-869a-3b5b-6fed520b1c1b/mza_8263700863752499302.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Past Prime
Past Prime
25 episodes
6 days ago
Wherein middle-aged men assess the music of middle-aged men. Past Prime is a series of conversations about the music that artists make after their youthful peak. Middle age can be like an inverse puberty for Rock stars. Do they all “lose it”? Can they rediscover it? Will they ever be great again? Often these albums are flaccid. Sometimes they are just sad. But, every once in a while they can be glorious. And so, we keep on listening. Join middle-aged dads, Matty Wishnow and Steve Collins as they consider albums by Lou Reed, James Taylor, Van Morrison and many more.
Show more...
Music Commentary
Music
RSS
All content for Past Prime is the property of Past Prime and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Wherein middle-aged men assess the music of middle-aged men. Past Prime is a series of conversations about the music that artists make after their youthful peak. Middle age can be like an inverse puberty for Rock stars. Do they all “lose it”? Can they rediscover it? Will they ever be great again? Often these albums are flaccid. Sometimes they are just sad. But, every once in a while they can be glorious. And so, we keep on listening. Join middle-aged dads, Matty Wishnow and Steve Collins as they consider albums by Lou Reed, James Taylor, Van Morrison and many more.
Show more...
Music Commentary
Music
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/production/podcast_uploaded_nologo/12465800/12465800-1612316371378-30b987f29c847.jpg
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young "American Dream"
Past Prime
59 minutes 50 seconds
4 years ago
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young "American Dream"

On episode 10 of Past Prime, Steve and Matty lift the veil off of one of the great cold cases of American Classic Rock. The co-hosts first travel back to 1988 and pull on the thread of CSNY's "American Dream." And then they keep pulling and pulling, all the way back through "Deja Vu" and through CSN's (minus Y) 1969 debut. They shed their Gen X biases, the decades of Boomer propaganda and cast a sober look at the 80s comeback and everything that came before it. What they discover is grisly -- not for the faint of heart. And especially not for avid CSN fans. Ultimately, they find that CSNY was a folksy "boy band," highly competent at three part harmonies and not a whole lot more (except for the Young songs). They discover that CSNY were elevated to Hippie Rock Mt. Rushmore on the basis of great timing and bad drugs. And, for nearly fifty years, most of us bought the story. But, no more.

"American Dream" is quickly dispatched with. The songs are mostly awful. Croz struggles with competence, Nash with depth and Stills with self-awareness. The longer, winding journey, however, is the investigation of how the band ascended and who was to blame for the fraud? If you are curious about late 60s fin de siecle moment when the Hippie dream was on the line, then this is the episode for you. On the other hand, if you still believe that American bands of the 60s and 70s made the best Rock and Roll (we don't mean Soul, Funk, Jazz, Country or Folk) in the world, please brace yourself before pressing play.

To read more about CSNY's "American Dream" check out the full essay at Past Prime.

Past Prime
Wherein middle-aged men assess the music of middle-aged men. Past Prime is a series of conversations about the music that artists make after their youthful peak. Middle age can be like an inverse puberty for Rock stars. Do they all “lose it”? Can they rediscover it? Will they ever be great again? Often these albums are flaccid. Sometimes they are just sad. But, every once in a while they can be glorious. And so, we keep on listening. Join middle-aged dads, Matty Wishnow and Steve Collins as they consider albums by Lou Reed, James Taylor, Van Morrison and many more.