Manassas Steve Stills

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CD

  • Release Date: 12/12/1995
  • Original Release: 1972
  • Sales Rank: 10,823
  • Label: ATLANTIC / WEA
  • UPC: 075678280825

Listener Rating: (5 ratings)

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CD$36.99

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Manassas

Disc 1
1LISTENSong of Love 3:28
2LISTENRock and Roll Crazies/Cuban Bluegrass 3:34
3LISTENJet Set 4:25
4LISTENAnyway 3:21
5LISTENBoth of Us 3:00
6LISTENFallen Eagle 3:00
7LISTENJesus Gave Love Away for Free 2:53
8LISTENColorado 4:00
9LISTENSo Begins the Task 2:46
10LISTENHide It So Deep 2:31
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Disc 2
1It Doesn't Matter
2Johnny's Garden
3Bound to Fall
4How Far
5Move Around
6The Love Gangster
7What to Do
8Right Now
9The Treasure Take One
10Blues Man

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

A sprawling masterpiece, akin to The Beatles' White Album, the Stones' Exile on Main St., or Wilco's Being There in its makeup, if not its sound. Rock, folk, blues, country, Latin, and bluegrass have all been styles touched on in Stephen Stills' career, and the skilled, energetic musicians he had gathered in Manassas played them all on this album. What could have been a disorganized mess in other hands, though, here all gelled together and formed a cohesive musical statement. The songs are thematically grouped: part one (side one on the original vinyl release) is titled "The Raven," and is a composite of rock and Latin sounds that the group would often perform in full live. "The Wilderness" mainly centers on country and bluegrass (Chris Hillman's and Al Perkins' talents coming to the forefront), with the track "So Begins the Task" later covered by Stills' old flame Judy Collins. Part three, "Consider" is largely folk and folk-rock. "Johnny's Garden," reportedly for the caretaker at Stills' English manor house and not for John Lennon as is often thought, is a particular highlight. Two other notables from the "Consider" section are "It Doesn't Matter" (later redone with different lyrics by the song's uncredited co-writer Rick Roberts on the first Firefall album) and "Move Around," which features some of the first synthesizer used in a rock context. The closing section, titled "Rock & Roll Is Here to Stay," is a rock and blues set with one of the landmarks of Manassas' short life, the epic "The Treasure." A sort of Zen-like meditation on love and "oneness," enlivened by the band's most inspired recorded playing it evolves into a bluesy groove washed in Stills' fierce electric slide playing. The delineation lines of the four themed song groupings aren't cut in stone, though, and one of the strengths of the album is that there is a lot of overlap in styles throughout. The CD reissue's remastered sound is excellent, though missed is the foldout poster and handwritten lyrics from the original vinyl release. Unfortunately, the album has been somewhat overlooked over the years, even though Stills considers it some of the best work he has done. Bill Wyman (who guested on "The Love Gangster") has said he would have quit the Rolling Stones to join Manassas. ~ Rob Caldwell, All Music Guide All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Stephen Stills greatest album and a country rock classicby JohnQ

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July 25, 2009: If you like seventies country rock you really ought to own this album. This is one of the very best albums made by any of the members of CSN&Y outside of that collaboration. It is a shame that the band that created Manassas didn't stay together longer, but it is hard to imagine them improving on this album even if they had.

Desert Island Materialby Anonymous

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January 25, 2004: I discovered CSNY's Déjà vu and weed at the same time in my senior year of high school, when these four guys were reaching their creative zenith. Their power, intensity and passion in the early 70's was about at the peak of music as I knew it. I think I recognized (déjà vu) right then that these men and their friends would be the soundtrack of my life. As I systematically collected all I could get my hands on of C's, S's, N's & Y's material over the next several years, I find that Steve Stills Manassas double album (along with Crosby's "If I Could Only Remember My Name", Dave Mason's "Alone Together" and the New Riders of the Purple Sage's "NRPS") has withstood the test of almost 30 years of replay on my turntables, cassette decks and cd-players, and these four albums are at the top of my Desert Island Scenario. I was always a fan of what the Lords of Rolling Stone dubbed "country-rock", so I was thrilled with the sound of "The Wilderness" (section 2 of this album) coming from one of my rock'n'roll heroes. But if I had to pick only one "side" of this multi-faceted lp as my favorite, it would be "Consider"......no, wait, it would be "Rock & Roll is Here to Stay".....no, wait, I have to have it ALL! The hair on the back of my neck still prickles when I hear Stills on the wah-wah pedal (The Love Gangster, The Treasure), even though I know every note of every song by heart. Every man on this lp is a consummate professional, and the combination of talent became a force all its own, exceeding the individual efforts. Interesting that the liner notes say, "In Tribute: Jimi Hendrix-Al Wilson-Duane Allman". For me, this music still sparkles, it's "the treasure of the one-ness, that like sand becomes a diamond before the wind".....thru the years I've fantasized about being Stills' "gypsy woman, deepest in the world", I've always been intrigued by Capricorns. I've invested in a spare cd of this one, that I put away without even opening. It is beyond my comprehension why no classic rock stations give airplay to any of the songs on this album. This one will be a lifelong companion for me.


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