Title: Crosby Stills Nash and Young - For What It's Worth -- from the Freedom of Speech Tour2006 Source:
www.youtube.com URL Source:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbdZ-lLFoxc Published:Jan 22, 2007 Author:CSNY Post Date:2007-01-22 13:31:51 by Ferret Mike Keywords:None Views:76 Comments:7
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Poster Comment:
A very classic anthem of unrest and national turmoil.
Attended a concert by them last summer. Blew me away. Was reluctant, expecting a nostalgia soaked concert, but they rocked, showing pictures of all the dead US soldiers, Bush quotes, war footage.
A local repub ditz, the head of Logan Airport on 119, complained of the overt antiwar message - guess she was expecting what I was - a trip down memory lane into the 60's - which they did with their hits, but Neil Young's topical rockers and his "Rockin' in the Free World" literally blew the roof (if it had one) off the outdoor concert venue. As was his "Let's Impeach the President" with the lyrics on the giant TV's for the crowd to singalong.
Bravo, CSNY, for a superlative, phenomenal concert.
I'd like to see them play with James McMurtry. The MSM music promotion machine tries to suck the life out of artists that do not preform escapist, forget they are screwing you without benefit of a reach around music.
I would like to see them give James a boost.
"We seek a free flow of information... a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation afraid of its people." --JFK, Feb 1962
I've been listening to classical radio(just one commercial station) but WGBH does a great job too, and college radio, fairly decent in the Boston area, my new fave is Boston College's WZBC http://www.wzbc.org , proudly proclaiming it's "no commercial potential" attitude.
Thanks for the link. I still surf various university radio stations on the net, just as I did in the 60s. I can't say I like most of the music they play, but the freewheeling atmosphere is still what radio should be.
believers gathered near the ruins of the Temple of Olympian Zeus in the heart of Athens, Greece, to honor Zeus's marriage to the goddess Herathe first such ceremony known to be performed at the site since the Romans outlawed the religion in A.D. 394.
Surrounded by a curious audience, costumed worshipers prayed, chanted, and danced just outside the remains of the 1,800-year-old temple, once the largest of its kind in Greece.
The event held double meaning for the group, since it also celebrated their official recognition as a religion by the Greek government