Southern Cross (Crosby, Stills and Nash song)

"Southern Cross"
Single by Crosby, Stills & Nash
from the album Daylight Again
B-side "Into the Darkness"
Released September 1982[1]
Recorded 1981
Genre Soft rock[2]
Length 4:41 (album)
3:55 (single)
Label Atlantic
Writer(s) Stephen Stills
Rick Curtis
Michael Curtis
Producer(s) Crosby, Stills and Nash
Audio sample
file info · help

"Southern Cross" is a song written by Stephen Stills, Rick Curtis and Michael Curtis and performed by the rock band Crosby, Stills & Nash. It was featured on the band's Daylight Again album and was released as a single in September 1982. Stephen Stills sings lead vocals throughout, with Graham Nash joining the second verse. Because David Crosby did not rejoin the band until the album was already underway, his vocals are not featured on the album version of the song, although he did appear in the video and subsequently sang the song with the group in live performances. The single was a respectable success on the charts, reaching #18 on the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks in late November and early December 1982.[3][4]

The song is about a man who sails the Pacific following a failed love affair. During the voyage, the singer takes comfort in sailing ("We got 80 feet of waterline. / Nicely making way."), in the beauty of the sea, and particularly in the Southern Cross, a constellation by which sailors in the Southern Hemisphere have traditionally navigated (the Southern Cross is not visible from most of the Northern hemisphere, the more tropical latitudes being the exception). But his final consolation is music ("I have my ship / And all her flags are a flyin' / She is all that I have left / And music is her name."). The last lyric is filled with sad irony as he tries to convince himself that he will forget this love, knowing that will never happen any more than he can forget the beauty of the Southern Cross (Somebody fine will come along make me forget about loving you / And the Southern Cross).

The video for the song, which got heavy play during the early years of the MTV and VH1 cable networks, featured Stephen Stills sailing a large boat (called Southern Cross), intercut with images of the band singing.[5]

Southern Cross is based on the song "Seven League Boots" by Rick and Michael Curtis. Stills explained, "The Curtis Brothers brought a wonderful song called 'Seven League Boots,' but it drifted around too much. I rewrote a new set of words and added a different chorus, a story about a long boat trip I took after my divorce. It's about using the power of the universe to heal your wounds. Once again, I was given somebody's gem and cut and polished it."[6][7]

Original recording

Cover versions

"Southern Cross" has also been covered by:

Locations

The song mentions a number of locations that one may visit on a sailing voyage from Southern California to the South Pacific, following the "Coconut Milk Run".[8] In order of appearance in the song (and reverse order of the sailor's southwestward journey), they are:

Notes


  1. http://www.45cat.com/record/789969
  2. http://www.shsu.edu/lis_fwh/book/hybrid_children_of_rock/Soft%20Rock2.htm
  3. http://www.billboard.com/charts/hot-100/1982-11-20
  4. http://www.billboard.com/charts/hot-100/1982-12-04
  5. http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=3004
  6. CSN Boxed Set
  7. "Southern Cross by Crosby, Stills & Nash". songfacts.com. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  8. "A starlit revel on the Coconut Milk Run". OceanNavigator.com. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.