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50 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the CSN owner's manual
The nice thing about this 1990 VHS recording (now being offered on DVD) is the absence of narration. All you are getting is all you probably want... live footage of Crosby, Stills and Nash in the studio, on stage, and in sound bites culled from interviews. The music and the performers tell their own story. Here's how it all breaks down:

Of the twenty tracks...
Published on July 3, 2005 by Don Schmittdiel

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26 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Never Before Released?
This is the same 60 minute program that was released on VHS in 1990, and shown on cable TV. It's pretty sleazy of them to try to pass this off as something new. At least they could have added some extras, or expanded it. That said, there is some good stuff on here, but the concert material is mostly from the 80's, and it's so frustrating when they show only half of a...
Published on February 18, 2005 by Randy Remote


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50 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the CSN owner's manual, July 3, 2005
This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
The nice thing about this 1990 VHS recording (now being offered on DVD) is the absence of narration. All you are getting is all you probably want... live footage of Crosby, Stills and Nash in the studio, on stage, and in sound bites culled from interviews. The music and the performers tell their own story. Here's how it all breaks down:

Of the twenty tracks listed, there are eleven complete performances. `Long Time Gone' opens the tape, live from their 1977 tour. This track includes some archival shots of the artists from performances not featured on the rest of the tape, and the credits are rolled over it as well. An acoustic `Marrakesh Express' follows from the 1969 Woodstock Festival. Next up is an interview/performance with Stephen and David from The Dick Cavett Show in 1969. Joni Mitchell and others are present as Stephen debuts `4+20' with a miscue in the opening verses (no one notices though as `Deja vu' was yet to be released). Later in the tape we have `Helplessly Hoping' and `Teach Your Children', two pristine studio performances sans audience. Further into the tape we have more tracks from the 1977 tour, `Wooden Ships', `To The Last Whale: Critical Mass and Wind On the Water' complete with the large screen video footage of dolphins and whales that supplemented the stage presentation on the tour, `Just a Song Before I Go', `Dark Star' and `Wasted On the Way'. `Suite: Judy Blue Eyes' can also be considered a complete track, two-thirds of the song drawn from the 1969 Woodstock Festival, spliced together with one-third of the 1989 Bridge School performance. The best track is the intense `Dark Star', which at one point transforms Stills into a lead-guitarist-whirling-dervish, and the two studio tracks. All of these recordings are of excellent sound and video quality. Stephen introduces `Wasted On the Way' as an autobiographical song about the band, and the Bridge School (run by Neil Young's wife, Pegi), benefit performance, though quite inspired, reveals that both Stills and Crosby had ascended to a critical mass of poundage by the late 1980's.

There are a number of fine tracks that are incomplete. Among them are The Byrds lip-synching a black and white `Mr. Tambourine Man' on the Hollywood A-Go-Go television show from 1966, an excellent live `Carrie-Anne' from The Hollies on The Smother's Brother's Show in 1967, and the classic `For What It's Worth' from Buffalo Springfield, also from The Smother's Brothers in 1967. The Tom Jones Show kicks in a visually and audibly beautiful `You Don't Have To Cry' from 1970, with Dallas Taylor on drums, Greg Reeves on an upright bass, and Neil Young adding a second acoustic guitar, but no vocals. The intro is cut from Neil's `Down By the River', performed by CSN&Y in 1970 for The Music Scene television series. Perhaps there were some copyright issues with showing these television performances in their entirety, but the 'Cavett' performance somehow made it. Aside from the hokey Byrds track, fans will certainly want complete copies of the other performances.

There are also snippets from various sources that really don't deserve to be credited as featured songs, most of them running less than a half minute. We have a home recording of Stephen performing `Black Queen', probably the lowest quality recording on the entire tape, but there is no questioning its historic value. There is a recording studio segment featuring `Find the Cost Of Freedom', and the tape concludes with a portion of `Carry On', the officially released version, playing while the credits roll.

As noted the tape also features interviews with the band members (and one brief segment with Joni Mitchell) discussing their origins as a band, their conflicts, their thoughts on composing socially relevant music, and their personal integrity as artists. Obviously if you are a fan of the band this tape is precious. You simply cannot obtain such a diverse selection of material from the three decades this tape traverses anywhere else. The only drawback is that so many of the tracks are not presented in their entirety. The tape will undoubtedly leave fans wanting more from the vault of studio performances and concert recordings. It would only make sense to release the available material as the CSN fan base is aging out. Remember, producers... fans can't buy a DVD from their grave, at least not given the limits of today's technology.


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39 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A harmonious display (3.5 stars), November 26, 2004
By 
Clare Quilty (a little pad in hawaii) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
Yes, after a brief delay (I, too, was disappointed when the DVD suddenly dropped off the market) "Long Time Comin'" is available again.

This is a string of live performances by Crosby, Stills and Nash that skips around chronologically, "Kids are Alright"-style, with brief interviews peppered in here and there.

How much you like it will depend on how much you like each individual song and time period. I love seeing the fledgling group making appearances on TV variety shows like "The Smothers Brothers" and "Dick Cavett." There's one spot on Cavett, right after Woodstock, where the stage is crowded by fans, Joni Mitchell, Grace Slick and the band and Cavett asks for a song and a mud-stained Stills, without waiting for a soul, launches right into a really cool solo version of "4 + 20." It's funny, it's tuneful, it's good old-school TV.

There's also a deleted scene from Woodstock and some footage of Stills raging at an apparently catatonic Crosby for being out of it, plus a brief appearance by Neil Young doing "Down by the River."

Other footage, particularly the stuff from the 80's, finds the band a little synthed out and suited up, clearly not working in their best mode. It's not bad, it just didn't interest me as much as the clips of the group in their prime.

A solid overview of the group, with several worthwhile moments and lots of their signature harmony.
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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Flashes of "Golden CSN Age", March 31, 2005
This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
If you think of CSN&Y as the "unfulfilled American Beatles" you'd want this to see this DVD of the boys in their early 70's youthful and creative vigor. Sadly, the performances also include 80's performances including a glassy-eyed-catatonic and very drugged drenched David Crosby.

Read the group's authorized bio "Crosby, Stills & Nash" (St Martin's Press) by Dave Zimmer and Henry Diltz and get background about each song while watching. The 1969 mystery of why Tom Jones is singing lead on "Long Time Gone" in a TV performance with the band is revealed that David Crosby was still grieving over the automobile death of girlfriend Christine Hinton. Many more great tidbits about how "Long Time Gone", "Teach Your Children", "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes", and other classic songs came to be will enhance your listening pleasure.

This snapshot DVD doesn't "sugar coat" the volitility of young talented egos on the rise. Stills summed it up (sic): "(we were) 23 years old with more money than you can imagine and incredable adolation will do a number on your head". At its worse, it's a "Vh-1" docudrama of the rise-fall-redemption that the entertainment industry cranks out so regularly. However, as Crosby and Nash always sums it up, "It's about the music man" which is undeniably brilliant and stands the test of time that makes this fun to watch.

Ultimately, CS&N is about friendship, art, and people trying to grow up and be decent and true to loved ones and themselves. Sometimes the process isn't pretty but we have the benefit of the music as the soundtrack of their lives and the era.

I've seen clips of early 70's CSN&Y performing "Ohio" in an indoor venue (Fillmore East?) and would love to see more from it. Is it from Neil's Journey Through the Past movie? Seeing them performing in their glorious ascent period that the live "Four Way Street" album only hints at would be the ultimate video by this band. (Anyone in the CSN&Y clan listening?)

I've seen the other two recently released CS&N DVD's but they capture them in the 80's and they comes across more as nostalgia. Seeing them as middle aged musical professionals performing their "classic" songs is like looking at pictures of someone in midlife. However, "Long Time Comin'" shows glimpses of them when their music was fresh, viberant, full of youthful energy (at least most of the performances culled from late 60's-early 70's do), and ready to change the world. Those early career performances alone make this DVD worth watching.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great video-fun to watch, May 15, 2004
By 
Maryellen May (Crested Butte, Co USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
Take a fun ride along with this video from woodstock to more recent concerts.Most songs are complete,but there are a few parts of songs that do not detract from the overall effect. Also mixed in are clips from different interviews,none too long,that adds perspective to their careers.Highlights of this video include "the lost performance" at woodstock of Nash's marakesh express, an acoustic version i like way better than the album version and an appearance on the Dick Cavett show with Stills doing 4 and 20.The other highlights are songs performed by CSN with just acoustic guitars and no overdubs,Helplessly Hoping,Teach your children,and Wasted on the way.If you are a fan ,this is a must!
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26 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Never Before Released?, February 18, 2005
By 
Randy Remote (Laytonville, CA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
This is the same 60 minute program that was released on VHS in 1990, and shown on cable TV. It's pretty sleazy of them to try to pass this off as something new. At least they could have added some extras, or expanded it. That said, there is some good stuff on here, but the concert material is mostly from the 80's, and it's so frustrating when they show only half of a vintage TV performance of "You Don't Have To Cry" with Neil Young-it is the best thing on there! Also, they could have included the full Woodstock performance, instead of only two songs. This is one opportunity that was wasted on the way....
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars disappointing, December 29, 2005
This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
I bought this DVD with great anticipation and came away very disappointed. The two tracks that I wanted to view the most were For "What It's Worth" and "Down By The River". Both tracks were cut up by interviews. I haven't found "Down By The River" anywhere on DVD and thought I finally had found this great song. When a DVD is made about a groups history it would be nice if all the complete songs were included. I had the same bad experience with an ABBA DVD I recently purchased.Some of the music was great but again you would think that the interviews could be placed on the DVD after the song was over
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Pretty cool visual representation of CSN, August 19, 2006
By 
This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
"Long Time Comin'" is a 1990 documentary summing up the first 20 years of Crosby Stills and Nash that was re-issued on DVD in 2004. What makes it different from most documentaries is that it simply tells the band's story through their music and some interview snippets, without any narration -- which is also probably its strength, as very few bands have been able to produce such powerful music.

What you do get is a nicely flowing compilation of TV appearances, previously unseen footage like a "lost" performance of "Marrakesh Express" from the Woodstock concert and clips from live shows, especially a 1977 gig at The Summit in Houston and a 1982 show at the Universal Amphitheatre in LA that one would love to see more of.

Among the TV appearances are clips from "The Tom Jones Show", "Smother Brothers" and "Dick Cavett Show", which features David Crosby and Stephens Still fresh from their gig at Woodstock joining a studio audience including Grace Slick and Joni Mitchell. Stills even shows off his mud-stained jeans before launching into a solo version of "4+20".

Neil Young pops up on a few clips, including "You Don't Have To Cry" and "Down By The River", but doesn't feature in the interview clips, which have the three proponents just talking about their music, inspirations and their outlook on various issues. As Graham Nash puts it at one point, their have been other bands with three-part harmonies, but something about the voices of the three man makes their music unique.

The sound quality on the 5.1 track ranges from tinny (on the Dick Cavett clip) to gorgeous (on "Long Time Gone" and "Wooden Ships" taken from the 1977 show). But the quality of the sound notwithstanding, this DVD is all about the performances.

Despite the lack of narration, the film also gives insights into the sometimes turbulent relations between the three men, with one clip capturing an angry Stills telling off Crosby for his ways!!

The video, however, doesn't seem to have been cleaned and appears very, very soft for most of the time. A little remastering could have helped. Also the fact that it ends in 1989 means there is little about the band in the period after that.

If you're a hard-core CSN fan, this is a must buy. Otherwise, just rent it for a few spins.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Don't purchase unless you use it on a computer, December 25, 2010
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
I am soooo disappointed. I heard this was the best DVD on Crosby, Stills, & Nash.I am unable to play this DVD on any DVD player I have. I have a sony, zenith,and a panasonic. The only place it will play is on the computer. The DVDs do not recognize the region it is from. On the computer I was able to click on a region outside of the USA and it worked. It is not a lot of fun watching a concert on a computer. I wish there was something I could do like return it but I didn't play it until I had time a month or so after purchase.
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5.0 out of 5 stars CSN - Long Time Comin', October 23, 2009
By 
Gregory Evans (Greenbelt, Maryland, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
This is a great DVD. It has a lot of their early work. They have their Woodstock performance of Sweet Judy Blue Eyes and Marrekesh Express; 3 pre-CSN performances - David Crosby doing Mister Tamborine Man with the Byrds, Graham Nash doing Carrie Ann with the Hollies, and Stephen Stills doing For What It's Worth with Buffalo Springfield. They also have Neil Young doing Down by the River and playing back-up on some of the songs. Stills does 4 and 20 on the Dick Cavett show. The other songs on the DVD are also great and they have some good interviews with each of the members. I highly recommend it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars CSN behind the scenes and raw, January 19, 2007
By 
Paul D. Ladendorf "Paul L." (Griffith, IN United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Crosby, Stills & Nash - Long Time Comin' (DVD)
This is a great DVD. It's not a concert but has footage from the very early years of CSN all the way into the 90's. From woodstock to the Dick Cavett show to vintage home studio footage, you really feel like you know these guys better after watching this video. My favorite music DVD by far.
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