"Bluebird" is a song recorded by the American
rock group
Buffalo Springfield. It was written and produced by
Stephen Stills
Stephen Arthur Stills (born January 3, 1945) is an American musician, singer and songwriter best known for his work with Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. As both a solo act and member of two successful bands, Stills has com ...
, with co-production by
Ahmet Ertegun
Ahmet Ertegun (, Turkish spelling: Ahmet Ertegün; ; – December 14, 2006) was a Turkish-American businessman, songwriter, record executive and philanthropist.
Ertegun was the co-founder and president of Atlantic Records. He discovered and ch ...
. In June 1967,
Atco Records released it as a single to follow-up their hit "
For What It's Worth" (1966).
"Bluebird" reflects various influences and musical approaches. Stills conceived of it as a multi-part song, which developed over time. A key feature is the contrasting solos, which alternate between Stills's fingerpicked acoustic and
Neil Young's distorted electric guitars. Three different studio versions have been released: a two-minute
folk rock single focused on the intro vocal verses; a four and a half minute album version (featured on ''
Buffalo Springfield Again'') incorporating
hard rock
Hard rock or heavy rock is a loosely defined subgenre of rock music typified by aggressive vocals and distorted electric guitars. Hard rock began in the mid-1960s with the garage, psychedelic and blues rock movements. Some of the earliest hard ...
and
country elements; and an extended nine-minute
jam version, released on the band's
self-titled compilation in 1973.
The song was a feature of Buffalo Springfield performances, usually as their closing number. Shortly after its release, they played the song at the
Monterey Pop Festival. Improvised live versions of the song could last up to twenty minutes and showed a very different side of the group. After they disbanded, Stills and Young revisited the song several times in studio and live settings.
Although the single reached number 58 on the ''Billboard'' chart, some critics see the song as their most accomplished piece. They usually comment on Stills' and Young's guitar interplay and the stylistic shifts undertaken on the different arrangements. The lyrics reveal "a slightly psychedelia-tinged array of emotions and revelations of nature and perception", according to
AllMusic critic Matthew Greenwald.
Background
By the end of 1966, Buffalo Springfield was still a relatively new band. Formed in April, their
self-titled debut album was released in November 1966. Two singles and the
LP had not generated much interest on the record charts and the group's performances were largely confined to the Los Angeles area. A
crackdown by police on crowds of young music club goers along the
Sunset Strip
The Sunset Strip is the stretch of Sunset Boulevard that passes through the city of West Hollywood, California. It extends from West Hollywood's eastern border with the city of Los Angeles near Marmont Lane to its western border with Beverly H ...
inspired group singer and guitarist
Stephen Stills
Stephen Arthur Stills (born January 3, 1945) is an American musician, singer and songwriter best known for his work with Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. As both a solo act and member of two successful bands, Stills has com ...
to write "
For What It's Worth". Encouraged by their managers, the song was quickly recorded and released in December 1966. Local radio picked up the single and soon it became Buffalo Springfield's first hit on the charts, eventually reaching number seven on the
''Billboard'' Hot 100.
Eager to capitalize on the success of "For What It's Worth",
Atco Records was pushing for a follow-up album featuring the song. The label began printing album jackets with the title ''Stampede'', but the group did not have enough songs for a new LP. Instead, Atco reissued their debut album, with Still's song added as the opening track. Meanwhile, Buffalo Springfield began to fracture, with the three main singers and songwriters (Stills,
Neil Young, and
Richie Furay) each pursuing his own compositions. Young, who wrote the first two Buffalo Springfield singles, was hoping for success with his new rocker, "
Mr. Soul". However, with the popularity of "For What It's Worth", Stills was seen as the new voice of the group by some, including Atco. "Bluebird" became Buffalo Springfield's fourth single, with "Mr.Soul" as the B-side. There was always a rivalry between Stills and Young; although the latter contributed the electric lead guitar parts to "Bluebird", he left the group soon after.
Composition and recording
Stills developed "Bluebird" from a song titled "The Ballad of the Bluebird".
[
] The lyrics reflect on a melancholy figure:
Music writer
Tom Moon describes the song as "Stills's
Laurel Canyon meditation", although it does not contain any reference to a place or location. Stills met folk singer
Judy Collins
Judith Marjorie Collins (born May 1, 1939) is an American singer-songwriter and musician with a career spanning seven decades. An Academy Award-nominated documentary director and a Grammy Award-winning recording artist, she is known for her ec ...
at a party in Laurel Canyon later in June 1968, but
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young biographer
Peter Doggett sees "Bluebird" as "an ode to the imaginary woman in his Judy Collins fantasy". Collins later became the subject of Stills' "
Suite: Judy Blue Eyes".
"Bluebird" was recorded at
Sunset Sound Recorders in Hollywood with Stills, Young, Furay, and drummer
Dewey Martin. Original Buffalo Springfield bassist
Bruce Palmer had been deported to Canada and, for the session, was replaced by Bobby West. Stills originally approached
Jack Nitzsche to produce the song, but Nitzsche declined, citing his involvement with Young. Instead, Stills produced it himself, with
Atlantic Records
Atlantic Recording Corporation (simply known as Atlantic Records) is an American record label founded in October 1947 by Ahmet Ertegun and Herb Abramson. Over its first 20 years of operation, Atlantic earned a reputation as one of the most i ...
/Atco chief
Ahmet Ertegun
Ahmet Ertegun (, Turkish spelling: Ahmet Ertegün; ; – December 14, 2006) was a Turkish-American businessman, songwriter, record executive and philanthropist.
Ertegun was the co-founder and president of Atlantic Records. He discovered and ch ...
serving as co-producer. There is only one session date that has been identified, April 4, 1967, although the song required multiple overdubs. Stills had recently purchased an acoustic 1937
Martin D-28
The Martin D-28 is a dreadnought-style acoustic guitar made by C. F. Martin & Company of Nazareth, Pennsylvania.
History
This guitar is a dreadnought design, a naval term adopted and used by many to describe its larger body dimensions, hence t ...
and "Bluebird" was the first song he recorded with it.
[
] It is also one of the first of his songs to use an alternate guitar tuning, which he referred to as a "
D modal" tuning.
Stills wanted to maintain an acoustic foundation within a rock setting.
So he and audio engineer
Bruce Botnick
Bruce Botnick (born 1945) is an American audio engineer and record producer, best known for his work with the Doors, the Beach Boys, Eddie Money, Love and film composer Jerry Goldsmith.
Early work
Botnick engineered Love's first two albums, and ...
experimented with
sound processing, using audio
limiter,
compressor
A compressor is a mechanical device that increases the pressure of a gas by reducing its volume. An air compressor is a specific type of gas compressor.
Compressors are similar to pumps: both increase the pressure on a fluid and both can transp ...
, and
equalizer technology to enhance the acoustic guitar signal so it could compete with the electric guitars, bass, and drums.
The result is an unusually bright, upfront sound for a finger-picked acoustic guitar, described as "metallic", "crystal clear", and "absolutely massive".
AllMusic critic Matthew Greenwald describes Stills's songwriting process as placing less emphasis on a fixed outcome than on an ongoing exploration of arrangements.
A key feature of the song is Stills and Young trading guitar solos, in what Greenwald calls "a vehicle for Stills and Young to weave their intense guitar tapestry around."
Ultimately, three different arrangements of the song were released. Although the production chronology is unclear, Doggett places the single version first. At 1:59, it ends shortly after the "Do you think she loves you, Do you think at all" verse, creating a radio-friendly
folk-rock tune, made up mostly of vocals. The longer versions include a second section with trade offs between Stills's acoustic and Young's
fuzz-toned electric guitar solos. They also feature two very different third sections, after the acoustic guitar drops out.
According to Doggett, Stills prepared a ten-minute "jam" edit "with feral howls, random dialogue and all". Biographer John Einarson describes an extended version "featuring an eastern flavored
raga
A ''raga'' or ''raag'' (; also ''raaga'' or ''ragam''; ) is a melodic framework for improvisation in Indian classical music akin to a musical mode, melodic mode. The ''rāga'' is a unique and central feature of the classical Indian music tradit ...
middle electric guitar passage with Stephen and Neil at their most ferocious." However, Stills continued to refine the arrangement; he abandoned the third section jam and replaced it with the vocal coda "Soon she's going to fly away, Sadness is her own" verses over a simple banjo and acoustic guitar accompaniment. Charlie Chin, a musician from Stills'
folk music days in New York City's
Greenwich Village, performed the
bluegrass-style banjo part. Stills later explained, "I wanted it to start as a rock & roll song and slowly develop into what it really is, which it does in the third verse when the banjo comes in. That's the kind of music I started out doing in the Village in little coffee houses". With the second section and the banjo ending, it more than doubled the length of the single version to 4:28.
Releases and charts
Atco issued the two-minute version of "Bluebird" on June 15, 1967, on the then-standard 7-inch
45 rpm record
In music, a single is a type of release, typically a song recording of fewer tracks than an LP record or an album. One can be released for sale to the public in a variety of formats. In most cases, a single is a song that is released separate ...
single. Initially, it performed well on area radio, reaching number two on
KHJ (AM), a highly ranked
Top 40 station. The single entered the U.S.
''Billboard'' Hot 100 on July 15, 1967, at number 78 and three weeks later it peaked at number 58.
[
] By September 2, "Bluebird" had exited the chart, having spent only seven weeks on the Hot 100.
With Young's departure and Palmer's recurring immigration problems, the group was already in an uncertain state and "the failure of 'Bluebird' became a turning point for the Springfield", according to Einarson. Richie Furay elaborated:
In November 1967, the four and a half minute version was released on the group's second album, ''
Buffalo Springfield Again''. It is also included on ''
Retrospective: The Best of Buffalo Springfield'' (1969), the ''
Buffalo Springfield'' box set (2001), and ''
What's That Sound? Complete Albums Collection'' (2018).
In 1967, an extended version, variously identified as being nine, ten, and twelve minutes in length, began to be regularly aired on so-called "underground"
FM rock radio. Disc jockey
B. Mitchel Reed
B. Mitchel Reed (June 10, 1926 – March 16, 1983) was a successful American disc Jockey on both Top 40 and album-oriented rock radio stations, working in New York and Los Angeles during his 25-year career.
Career
Born Burton Mitchel Goldberg in ...
, at the time involved with the start-up
KPPC-FM
KROQ-FM (106.7 Hertz, MHz) is a commercial Radio broadcasting, radio station licensed to Pasadena, California, serving Greater Los Angeles. Owned by Audacy, Inc., it broadcasts an alternative rock format known as "The World Famous KROQ" (pronou ...
, discovered a tape of Buffalo Springfield's long version while house-sitting for Stills. Critic
Richie Unterberger described it as "an underground airplay hit of sorts", which was officially released in 1973 on the ''
Buffalo Springfield'' anthology double album. Einarson notes the FM version was released "with slight editing" on the
1973 album (the album version running time is listed at 9:00). Although the 2001 four-CD box set contains many song demos and some alternate versions, Young, who was largely responsible for the track selection, chose not to include the extended version of "Bluebird".
Critical reception
Two weeks after its release, "Bluebird" received a plug in
''Billboard'' magazine's "Pop Spotlights" column: "Following up on their 'For What Its Worth' hit, the West Coast group offers an intriguing folk-rock item that should prove to be a sales giant." A contemporary review of ''Buffalo Springfield Again'' in ''
Rolling Stone'' magazine noted "Bluebird" as a highlight of the album. A critic for ''
The New York Times'' was more effusive: "'Bluebird' is a masterpiece of episodic eclecticism that seems to travel backwards through history... It starts off like a piece of contemporary west coast rock, and after four and a half minutes of imperceptible mutations, winds up with a back-country banjo solo."
In a retrospective song review for
AllMusic, Matthew Greenwald writes " 'Bluebird's sense of forward momentum is, in a word, devastating. Lyrically, it appears to be a slightly psychedelia-tinged array of emotions and revelations of nature and perception."
Unterberger commented "Stills's 'Bluebird' might have been a smoky
hard rock
Hard rock or heavy rock is a loosely defined subgenre of rock music typified by aggressive vocals and distorted electric guitars. Hard rock began in the mid-1960s with the garage, psychedelic and blues rock movements. Some of the earliest hard ...
tune, but the arc of its harmonies and the sparkle of its acoustic guitar runs were folk-fried, and the drumless banjo-led section that ends the track is pure bluegrass... The rich acoustic-electric guitar textures... had little parallel in previous rock music in their sheer density." In a separate review of ''Buffalo Springfield Again'', he added "'Bluebird' and 'Rock & Roll Woman' are Stills' toughest rock songs... masterpieces of economic, intelligent Californian 60s rock."
While Young biographer James McDonough writes of "layers of virtuoso acoustic/electric guitar" and a "meticulously crafted studio creation", he is critical of the extended version: "An overwrought nine-minute version, complete with Stills's moaning-groaning bluesman posturings, mercifully went unreleased until 1973, but it hardly constitutes any kind of real jam—Young's intermittently berserk guitar was overdubbed."
Live performances
Three days after the single release, Buffalo Springfield performed "Bluebird" at the
Monterey Pop Festival on June 18, 1967. Young, who had left the group, was replaced by Doug Hastings on guitar.
David Crosby of
the Byrds also provided back-up on guitar: "Neil left about a week before Monterey, so I rehearsed with them for a few days and I said that I'd sit in with them to cover. I was just trying to help." However, bassist Palmer, who was back in the group, remembered it differently: "He
rosbydidn't know what he was doing. He didn't rehearse, thought he knew what he was doing,
utdidn't and embarrassed us to the max, and that's why you won't see our segment in
irector D. A. Pennebaker's film ''
Monterey Pop''." Hastings added: "David had a gorgeous voice but his problem was that he couldn't play rhythm very well, though he thought he could." The song was played as the second half of a medley with Stills’s as yet unrecorded song, "Rock and Roll Woman". What had become a disorganized jam ended with an upbeat performance "transformed in something of a
boogie", according to Einarson.
In late June, Crosby again performed with group members and added harmony vocals (normally sung by Furay alone) in a Sunset Strip club. Young rejoined the group in August 1967 and "Bluebird" became a highlight of the group's performances.
They usually played the song as their last number and with the extended jam ending, it could last twenty minutes. McDonough notes a perceived influence by the
San Francisco Sound and a concert review in the ''
Los Angeles Times'' compared Buffalo Springfield favorably to "the
psychedelic
Psychedelics are a subclass of hallucinogenic drugs whose primary effect is to trigger non-ordinary states of consciousness (known as psychedelic experiences or "trips").Pollan, Michael (2018). ''How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of ...
efforts" of San Francisco's
Grateful Dead
The Grateful Dead was an American rock music, rock band formed in 1965 in Palo Alto, California. The band is known for its eclectic style, which fused elements of rock, Folk music, folk, country music, country, jazz, bluegrass music, bluegrass, ...
and
Blue Cheer, who also performed at the concert. On several occasions, Young described the group's live performances of "Bluebird", including one in Portland, Oregon in 1967:
During Stills's and Young's guitar solo excursions, there were changes in tempo and rhythm, including touches of
Ravel's ''
Boléro
''Boléro'' is a 1928 work for large orchestra by French composer Maurice Ravel. At least one observer has called it Ravel's most famous composition. It was also one of his last completed works before illness forced him into retirement.
Co ...
''. "Bluebird" was the final song performed by the Buffalo Springfield during their farewell concert at the
Long Beach Arena on May 5, 1968.
Other versions
Over the years, both Stephen Stills and Neil Young revisited "Bluebird". While preparing a follow-up to his first solo album, Stills recorded an
R&B-influenced version of the song with
the Memphis Horns as "Bluebird Revisited". Released as the closing track on ''
Stephen Stills 2
''Stephen Stills 2'' is the second solo album by Stephen Stills, released on Atlantic Records in 1971. It peaked at number eight on the Billboard 200 and was certified as a gold record by the RIAA. Two singles were released from the album, both ju ...
'' (1971), music writer
David Browne describes it as a "stab at the big-band rock newly being popularized by acts like
Chicago eworking itinto an overwrought but passionate breakup song". During their collaboration as the
Stills-Young Band in 1976, live performances of "Bluebird" became a highlight. While touring in 2012, Crosby, Stills, & Nash revived the song; a six-minute recording is included on ''
CSN 2012''.
[
]
In the mid-1980s, Young wrote a
country music-influenced song titled "Beautiful Bluebird". Biographer Martin Halliwell calls it "a revival... in a more lyrical mode
sYoung reaches for a similar metaphor to Stills when the song turns from a musing on home to reflect on a lost love that has flown away." "Beautiful Bluebird" was originally intended for Young's ''
Old Ways'' (1985) album, but finally released as the opening track on ''
Chrome Dreams II'' (2007).
The American hard rock group
James Gang recorded the song for their 1969 debut album, ''
Yer' Album''.
Music writers have described their 6:02 version as an "extended workout"
and an "inspired reading".
Footnotes
References
Bibliography
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{{authority control
1967 songs
Songs written by Stephen Stills
1967 singles
Buffalo Springfield songs
Stephen Stills songs
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young songs
American hard rock songs
Country rock songs
Song recordings produced by Ahmet Ertegun
Song recordings produced by Stephen Stills
Atco Records singles