Crosby’s older brother was musician Ethan Crosby. His brother inspired his early love of jazz, particularly John Coltrane and Miles Davis; the latter would later recommend that Columbia Records sign the Byrds, and then cover the Crosby composition "Guinnevere." Their parents divorced in 1960, and his father then married Betty Cormack Andrews.
Growing up in California, he attended several schools, including the University Elementary School in Los Angeles, the Crane Country Day School in Montecito, and Laguna Blanca School in Santa Barbara for the rest of his elementary school and junior high years. At Crane, he starred in H.M.S. Pinafore and other musicals but he flunked out. Crosby finished high school via correspondence courses from the Cate School in Carpinteria. He briefly attended Carpinteria Union High School in 1958. Ethan ('Chip') had been at CUHS before David. At CUHS David was given the lead in the Junior Class Play.
In 1966, Clark, who then was the band's primary songwriter, left the group because of stress and this placed all the group's songwriting responsibilities in the hands of McGuinn, Crosby, and Hillman. Crosby took the opportunity to hone his craft and soon became a relatively prolific songwriter, collaborating with McGuinn on the up-tempo "I See You" (covered by Yes on their 1969 debut) and penning the ruminative "What's Happening". His early Byrds efforts also included the 1966 hit "Eight Miles High" (to which he contributed one line, according to Clark, while Clark and McGuinn wrote the rest), and its flip side "Why", co-written with McGuinn.
Because Crosby felt responsible for and was widely credited with popularizing the song "Hey Joe", he persuaded the other members of the Byrds to record it on Fifth Dimension. By Younger Than Yesterday, the Byrds' 1967 album, Crosby began to find his trademark style on songs such as "Renaissance Fair" (co-written with McGuinn), "Mind Gardens", and "It Happens Each Day"; however, the latter song was omitted from the final album and ultimately restored as a bonus track on the 1996 remastered edition. The album also contained a rerecording of "Why" and "Everybody's Been Burned", a jazzy torch song from Crosby's pre-Byrds repertoire that was initially demoed in 1963.
Friction between Crosby and the other Byrds came to a head in early to mid-1967. Tensions were high after the Monterey International Pop Festival in June when Crosby's onstage political diatribes and support of various John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy theories between songs outraged McGuinn. He further annoyed his bandmates when, at the invitation of Stephen Stills, he sat in with Buffalo Springfield's set the following night, after Young had quit the band and was replaced by guitarist Doug Hastings. The internal conflict boiled over during the initial recording sessions for The Notorious Byrd Brothers (1968) that summer, where differences over song selections led to intra-band arguments. In particular, Crosby was adamant that the band should record only original material despite the recent commercial failure of "Lady Friend", a Crosby-penned single that stalled at No. 82 on the American charts following its release. McGuinn and Hillman dismissed Crosby in October after he refused to countenance the recording of a cover of Goffin and King's "Goin' Back". While Crosby contributed to three compositions and five recordings on the final album, his controversial ménage à trois ode "Triad" was omitted. Jefferson Airplane released a Grace Slick-sung cover on Crown of Creation (1968), and three years later, Crosby released a solo acoustic version on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's double live album 4 Way Street (1971). The Byrds' version appeared decades later on the 1987 Never Before release and later on the 1997 re-release of The Notorious Byrd Brothers.
Around the time of Crosby's departure from the Byrds in 1968, he met Stephen Stills at Laurel Canyon in California through Cass Elliot (of the Mamas & the Papas), and the two started meeting informally and jamming together. They were soon joined by Graham Nash, who would leave his commercially successful group the Hollies to play with Crosby and Stills. Their appearance at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair in August 1969 constituted only their second live performance.
In rehearsals for the 1974 tour, CSNY recorded a then-unreleased Crosby song, "Little Blind Fish". A different version of the song would appear on the second CPR album more than two decades later. The 1974 tour was also affected by bickering, though they managed to finish it without interruption. A greatest hits compilation entitled So Far was released in 1974 to capitalize on the foursome's reunion tour.
Full-scale CSNY tours took place in 2000, 2002, and 2006.
Following a November 2015 interview in which he stated he still hoped the band had a future, Nash announced on March 6, 2016, that Crosby, Stills & Nash would never perform again because of his poor relationship with Crosby.
As a duo, Crosby & Nash (C&N) released four studio albums and two live albums, including Another Stoney Evening, which features the duo in a 1971 acoustic performance with no supporting band. Crosby songs recorded by C&N in the 1970s include "Whole Cloth", "Where Will I Be?", "Page 43", "Games", "The Wall Song", "Carry Me", "Bittersweet", "Naked in the Rain" (co-written with Nash), "Low Down Payment", "Homeward Through the Haze", "Time After Time", "Dancer", "Taken at All" (also co-written with Nash), and "Foolish Man". During the mid-1970s, Crosby and Nash enjoyed careers as session musicians, contributing harmonies and background vocals to albums by Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne (whom Crosby had initially championed as an emerging songwriter), Dave Mason, Rick Roberts, James Taylor (most notably "Lighthouse" and "Mexico"), Art Garfunkel, Carole King, Elton John, JD Souther, and Gary Wright.
Renewing his ties to the San Francisco milieu that had abetted so well on his solo album, Crosby sang backup vocals on several Paul Kantner and Grace Slick albums from 1971 through 1974 and the Hot Tuna album Burgers in 1972. He also participated in composer Ned Lagin's proto-ambient project Seastones along with members of the Grateful Dead and of Jefferson Starship.
In September 2017, Crosby announced a solo album (his third one of original material in four years and his sixth in total) entitled Sky Trails, again with Raymond, to be released on September 29, 2017, on BMG.
The first song that Crosby and Raymond co-wrote, "Morrison", was performed live for the first time in January 1997. The song recalled Crosby's feelings about the portrayal of Jim Morrison in the movie The Doors. The success of the 1997 tour spawned a record project, Live at Cuesta College, released in March 1998. There is a second CPR studio record, Just Like Gravity, and another live recording, Live at the Wiltern, recorded at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, which also features Phil Collins and Graham Nash.
After the group split, Raymond continued to perform with Crosby as part of the touring bands for C&N and CSN, as well as on solo Crosby projects, including 2014's Croz and the subsequent tour. Pevar has toured with many artists over his productive career, including CSN, Ray Charles, Rickie Lee Jones, and Marc Cohn. Pevar has a solo record, From the Core, which was improvised and recorded in the Oregon Caves and features the vocalist from Yes, Jon Anderson.
Crosby reunited with the other two members of CPR in 2018 as David Crosby & Friends, performing a series of shows in support of Crosby's new album Skytrails. During the global pandemic, Crosby also hosted a podcast for the Osiris music network with his friend, journalist Steve Silberman.
Crosby and Celia Crawford Ferguson had a son, James Raymond, in 1962. James was placed for adoption and later reunited with Crosby as an adult. Beginning in 1997, Raymond performed with Crosby on stage and in the studio, as a member of CPR, and as part of the touring bands Crosby & Nash and Crosby, plus Stills & Nash. Crosby had three other children: daughter Erika, with Jackie Guthrie, daughter Donovan Crosby, with former girlfriend Debbie Donovan, and son Django Crosby, conceived with wife Jan Dance after extensive fertility treatments while Crosby's liver was failing.
Crosby, then 45, married Jan Dance, then 35, in May 1987 at the Hollywood Church of Religious Science in Los Angeles. His bandmate Stephen Stills gave away the bride.
Crosby's brother Ethan, who taught him to play guitar and started his musical career with him, died by suicide in late 1997 or early 1998; the date is unknown because Ethan left a note not to search for his body but to let him return to the earth. His body was found months later in May 1998.
Crosby, in partnership with longtime friend and entrepreneur Steven Sponder, developed a craft cannabis brand called "MIGHTY CROZ". Crosby, a 50-plus-year cannabis advocate and connoisseur, credited cannabis with contributing to his creative process of songwriting stating, "All those hit songs, every one of them, I wrote them all on cannabis." Crosby also credited cannabis and cannabidiol (CBD) with alleviating his chronic shoulder pain, allowing him to continue touring and making new music well into his seventies. Crosby and Sponder intended to work with licensed cultivators throughout the U.S. and beyond and to also extend the brand to include CBD and hemp products. In 2018, Crosby was invited to join the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) advisory board.
Having had a transformative sailing experience when he was eleven, in 1967 Crosby purchased a 59-foot (18 m) John Alden–designed schooner named Mayan with his Byrds settlement. On Twitter in 2019, Crosby said that the late Peter Tork of the Monkees loaned him the money to buy the Mayan. In the decades before he sold the boat in 2014, Crosby sailed it thousands of miles in the Pacific and Caribbean. He credited the Mayan as being a songwriting muse; he wrote some of his best-known songs aboard the boat, including "Wooden Ships," "The Lee Shore," "Page 43," and "Carry Me."
Crosby was politically active throughout his professional career. He publicly questioned the report of the Warren Commission covering the assassination of John F. Kennedy onstage during the Byrds's appearance at the Monterey Festival in 1967, to the anger of his bandmates. He identified as a pacifist and was a well-known opponent of U.S. participation in the Vietnam War, although he defended the right to own guns.
Crosby spent nine months in a Texas state prison after being convicted of several drugs and weapons offenses in 1985. The drug charges were related to possession of heroin and cocaine.
On March 7, 2004, Crosby was charged with criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree, illegal possession of a hunting knife, illegal possession of ammunition, and illegal possession of about one ounce of marijuana. He left the items behind in his New York City hotel room. Authorities said a "hotel employee searched the suitcase for identification and found about an ounce of marijuana, rolling papers, two knives, and a .45-caliber pistol. Mr. Crosby was arrested when he returned to the hotel to pick up his bag." After spending 12 hours in jail, he was released on $3,500 bail. Crosby pleaded guilty in New York State Supreme Court to attempted criminal possession of a weapon on July 4, 2004; he was fined $5,000 and received no jail time. Prosecutors did not seek a more severe penalty on the weapons charge because the pistol was registered in California and was stowed safely in his luggage when it was found. A charge of unlawful possession of marijuana was dismissed. Crosby was discharged by the court on condition that he pay his fine and not get arrested again.
In February 2014, at the urging of his doctor, Crosby postponed the final dates of his solo tour to undergo a cardiac catheterization and angiogram, based on the results of a routine cardiac stress test.
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If I Could Only Remember My Name: "Dave Crosby | full Official Chart history". Official Charts Company. Archived from the original on July 4, 2020. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
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In Concert (Liner notes). Carole King. Rhythm Safari Records. 1977.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) /wiki/In_Concert_(Carole_King_album)
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Patton, Alli (January 23, 2023). "15 Legendary Albums You Didn't Know Feature David Crosby". American Songwriter. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://americansongwriter.com/15-legendary-albums-you-didnt-know-feature-david-crosby/
Swanson, Dave (October 22, 2016). "Why Elton John Began to Slip on the Experimental 'Blue Moves'". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://ultimateclassicrock.com/elton-john-blue-moves/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Patton, Alli (January 23, 2023). "15 Legendary Albums You Didn't Know Feature David Crosby". American Songwriter. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://americansongwriter.com/15-legendary-albums-you-didnt-know-feature-david-crosby/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Patton, Alli (January 23, 2023). "15 Legendary Albums You Didn't Know Feature David Crosby". American Songwriter. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://americansongwriter.com/15-legendary-albums-you-didnt-know-feature-david-crosby/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Return of the Grievous Angel: A Tribute to Gram Parsons (Liner notes). Various artists. Almo Sounds. 1999.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) /wiki/Return_of_the_Grievous_Angel:_A_Tribute_to_Gram_Parsons
Patton, Alli (January 23, 2023). "15 Legendary Albums You Didn't Know Feature David Crosby". American Songwriter. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://americansongwriter.com/15-legendary-albums-you-didnt-know-feature-david-crosby/
Dorn, Lori (February 2, 2021). "David Crosby and Graham Nash Join David Gilmour in a Harmonic Version of 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond'". Laughing Squid. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://laughingsquid.com/crosby-nash-gilmour-shine-on-you-crazy-diamond/
Patton, Alli (January 23, 2023). "15 Legendary Albums You Didn't Know Feature David Crosby". American Songwriter. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://americansongwriter.com/15-legendary-albums-you-didnt-know-feature-david-crosby/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Patton, Alli (January 23, 2023). "15 Legendary Albums You Didn't Know Feature David Crosby". American Songwriter. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://americansongwriter.com/15-legendary-albums-you-didnt-know-feature-david-crosby/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Shteamer, Hank (February 9, 2016). "Hear David Crosby's Tender New Ballad With Snarky Puppy". Rolling Stone. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/hear-david-crosbys-tender-new-ballad-with-snarky-puppy-82945/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/
Graff, Gary (January 20, 2023). "28 David Crosby Collaborations". Taste of Country. Retrieved January 26, 2023. https://tasteofcountry.com/28-david-crosby-collaborations/