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Stephen Stills Concert

Auditorium Theatre (Chicago, IL)

Stephen Stills concert at Auditorium Theatre on Jul 2, 1974

Concert Details

  • Date:
    07.02.1974
  • Tracks:
    8
  • Total Time:
    36:49
  • Catalog:
    King Biscuit
  • Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

Following the collapse of Manassas and prior to the monumental 1974 reunion tour of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Stephen Stills hit the road with one of the hardest rocking bands he ever assembled. Stills was arguably at his peak as a songwriter, with a wealth of strong material in his performing repertoire. He retained the services of Manassas percussionist, Joe Lala, but otherwise recruited a whole new aggregation of talented musicians. To provide his trademark lead guitar interplays, he brought in Donnie Dacus, a talented guitar player who would play a major role on the studio sessions…entire summary

  • Marty | Friday, March 27, 2009 | 10:05 pm

    I have read alot of comments on the poor sound quality of these live shows. Don't forget that none of this stuff was ever meant for the discerning ear. These recordings were only meant for posterity. We are lucky that they didn't end up in the trash like so much else of our history. Thank you, Wolfgang! Marty

  • CAPTAIN AMERICA | Sunday, January 18, 2009 | 12:00 am

    stills co-wrote wooden ships with crosby and paul kantner from jefferson airplane(who was not credited on csn album). stills is awesome. i always look forward to his part of the show, when he tours with cn,y. it's nice to hear stills, when his vocals were as strong as his guitar. this is a good band. it's nice to compare with other stills shows and manassas. i think i like the all acoustic show thats on wolfgang the best.

  • jboyaquar | Friday, September 12, 2008 | 3:55 am

    Thank wolfgang's for their unparalleled recap and historic perspective to every show they graciously release. Certainly listening to the Creamesque opener "Black Queen" is proof that this outfit was Stills's hardest sextet. Strange Stills would cover "Wooden Ships" as I always thought twas Crosby's and he's certainly had enough material not to rely on the other bandmates. It's dark, gritty and moody - much like Nixon's 1974 America. The "Jet" medley rocks. Keen remarks precede "Blackbird." Both that and "Everybody's Talkin" are nice but superfulous. The percussion and organ drive "49 Bye-Byes," the drums break up that number from the rushed through closing selection. 3 1/3 stars

  • austinpickers | Wednesday, August 13, 2008 | 4:50 am

    Sure wish the audio didn't SUCK!

  • Anonymous | Tuesday, July 08, 2008 | 2:11 pm

    trax 1, 2 and 6 are a must listen! sometimes he is brilliant, sometimes not

  • incubus | Friday, July 04, 2008 | 1:14 pm

    shame the sound quality is so bad!

  • Jersey Greg | Thursday, July 03, 2008 | 6:10 am

    Cool Stills -saw him at about that time.

  • Anonymous | Wednesday, July 02, 2008 | 6:16 am

    I love this selection, particularly the acoustic numbers. The version of Everybody's Talkin' is brilliant. He was still able to hit the high notes here and his vocals are really on the mark. I saw him five years later, March 1979 also at the Auditorium Theater in Chicago, another very good show but he hit his peak during this period and the '77 CSN shows.

  • Rose Dog | Tuesday, July 01, 2008 | 4:11 pm

    Stephen Stills' live album is unforgettable. Have not listened all the way through, but what I have heard sounds much better than the Manassas show put up last week, which I thought sounded like the over-blown supergroup Manassas was criticized for being at the time. This sounds much better from Stills in his prime. The guy can really play . . .

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