Originally published in Uncutโ€™s June 2016 issue

With a new album, This Path Tonight, and a new partner, Graham Nash is happier at 74 than he has been in years. โ€œIโ€™m in a very good place now,โ€ he tells Uncut. โ€œI am totally in love with this woman, and Iโ€™m [creatively] on fire, and I hope the album shows it.โ€

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Here, looking back over his half century in music, Nash recalls other good times with his many illustrious collaborators โ€“ from cutting beat hits with The Hollies in London, to revelatory singing sessions with David Crosby and Stephen Stills in Joni Mitchellโ€™s Californian living room.

However, Nash has found himself newly energised by This Path Tonight, only his sixth solo album, and is clearly looking forward to future work on his own. โ€œThere wonโ€™t be any more CSNY,โ€ he explains, โ€œand there wonโ€™t be any CSN, either. Thereโ€™s no magic there any more. Well, we had a good run, a good 35, 40 years.โ€

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THE HOLLIES
STAY WITH THE HOLLIES
PARLOPHONE, 1964
The Manchester quintetโ€™s fab beat debut

GRAHAM NASH: Oh, my God, is this really 52 years old? Good Lord. Recording in Abbey Road was exciting, it was all brand new to us. Engineers wore white overalls and youโ€™d have to tell [producer] Ron Richards to bring up the bass, then he would tell the engineer, who would then bring up the bassโ€ฆ This first album was done pretty quickly, in a couple of sessions. It was just our 45 minutes of dynamite that we used to do live: we did that twice and then the album was done. Youโ€™ll notice there are lots of cover versions on there, because thatโ€™s what everyone was doing. Youโ€™d have an uncle or a cousin who went to America and brought all the Rโ€™nโ€™B records back, then the band would learn those. There was a lot of song-swapping. We used to do โ€œAnna (Go To Him)โ€ by Arthur Alexander โ€“ one night we were playing the Twisted Wheel in Manchester and The Beatles were at The Oasis. We all met up at this after-hours drinking club and I actually taught John Lennon the words to โ€œAnnaโ€ [The Beatles recorded their own version for Please Please Me]. We werenโ€™t pushing to do our own songs much then because we didnโ€™t think we could โ€“ although there is one original on here, โ€œLittle Loverโ€, but thatโ€™s only because we were testing the water. We wrote all our B-sides, but they didnโ€™t trust us with the A-sides, not until โ€œWeโ€™re Throughโ€. That was probably a good decision on Ron Richardsโ€™ part. He had a great set of ears, Ron. Donโ€™t forget, he produced The Beatlesโ€™ โ€œPS I Love Youโ€ as George Martin wasnโ€™t there that day.

THE HOLLIES
BUTTERFLY
PARLOPHONE, 1967
On his last album with The Hollies, Nash was writing and singing the majority of the material

There were a lot of original songs on this album, a lot from me. I was trying to move forward. An album had been a collection of A-sides and a few B-sides, just to make money for the record company and for the band. Then Rubber Soul came out, and Brian Wilson said โ€œholy shitโ€ and came up with Pet Sounds and then The Beatles in retaliation wrote Sgt Pepper. By 1967, the concept of an album had changed drastically โ€“ it was no longer just a collection of A-sides and B-sides, but an actual journey that you could plot. I think we were coming into our own as songwriters then. I thought [contemporaneous single] โ€œKing Midas In Reverseโ€ was a great record, but I guess it was seen as a bit complicated, so it got into the Top 30 when The Hollies were usually getting into the Top 10. Was I trying to push our sound? I think I may have pushed it a little too far! It wasnโ€™t that I wanted to move on from The Hollies, it was that Iโ€™d heard me and David and Stephen sing. Once Iโ€™d heard that sound, you know, I wanted it. When that first happened, in Joni Mitchellโ€™s living room, when we sang โ€œYou Donโ€™t Have To Cryโ€, I knew instantly that I would have to go back to England and leave The Hollies and leave my money and equipment, and my family and my friends, and follow that sound โ€“ which is, of course, what I did. People thought I was fucking crazy, frankly. But Iโ€™d heard that sound and I wanted it.