From “Teach Your Children” to “Ohio,” David Crosby, Graham Nash, Stephen Stills, and, later, Neil Young, frequently demonstrated a clear penchant for writing songs to and about other people. However, there were plenty of autobiographical tunes in their discography, if one was willing to dive deeper and find them. According to Crosby, one song stood out among the rest as the most indicative of who Nash was as a person.
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Not a rockstar, not a founding member of the Hollies, not even his bandmate: just Graham Nash, pre- and post-fame.
David Crosby Said This Song Revealed The Most About Graham Nash
Even though their folk tradition led them to write songs outside their purview, CSN (and CSNY) tucked plenty of deeply autobiographical songs into their repertoire. As is so often the case with bandmates, these tracks sometimes revealed parts of an individual member that their colleagues might not have been privy to previously. For David Crosby, the song that revealed the most about Graham Nash was “Cold Rain,” which appears in the middle of the B-side of their third album, CSN.
“David would frequently tell people, ‘If you want to know anything about Graham Nash, listen to “Cold Rain,”” Nash revealed in a 2025 interview with Vulture. “He thought it was incredibly personal and informative about who I am as a person. I wrote it on the steps of the Midland Hotel in Manchester. I was visiting my mom, who was a little sick and in the hospital.”
Nash recalled watching people pass him by on their commute from work. “Most of them had a lost look in their eyes,” Nash recalled. “It seemed like they hated their jobs. They hated their bosses. And they hated what they were doing. It began to make me question, ‘Why me? Why, out of everybody in Manchester, was I the one who got to go to America thousands of miles away and start a brand-new career?’ I’ve always asked myself that question. I hope I never get the answer to it.”
A Different Song Helped The Songwriter Find Himself
What helps someone else understand you better might not be the same thing that helps you understand yourself more deeply, and the same is true of Graham Nash and David Crosby’s favorite songs the former artist wrote for Crosby, Stills & Nash. To Crosby, “Cold Rain” revealed the most about Nash. But for Nash, the song that helped him reacquaint himself with his true identity was a different song from the same album: “Cathedral.”
“I had just come from lying in the middle of the grass in Stonehenge,” he recalled to Vulture. “A little further down the road was a small church, and on the wall of the church was the Round Table of King Arthur. Now, it’s possible that it’s fake. But if that’s the case, it’s been fake for 400 years.” Nash said a man dressed like a Beefeater shoved a plate of water and bread in his direction and said, “Wait a second. You are a traveler. Don’t you know? Don’t you know it’s just okay to be?”
“That was an incredible statement to make to me at that moment,” he continued. “I walked up to the nave toward a statue of Jesus, and I felt this incredible feeling in my legs. It made me look down. It was like I was standing on the grave of a soldier who had died in 1799. Ever since that moment, I’ve tried to be me. I began to realize that we were a ball of mud spinning in space in a galaxy that has a hundred million suns, which is one of billions of galaxies. I realized at that moment that everything was meaningless in a way, but at the same time, it was meaningful.”
Photo by Andre Csillag/Shutterstock
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