Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
UK EditionUK US EditionUS AU EditionAustralia SG EditionSingapore
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Music Gear Reviews
  • Synths
  • Guitars
  • Controllers
  • Drums
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Guitar Amps
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About us
Don't miss these
GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND - JUNE 28: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) Danielle Haim of Haim performs on the Park stage during day four of Glastonbury festival 2025 at Worthy Farm, Pilton on June 28, 2025 in Glastonbury, England. Established by Michael Eavis in 1970, Glastonbury has grown into the UK's largest music festival, drawing over 200,000 fans to enjoy performances across more than 100 stages. In 2026, the festival will take a fallow year, a planned pause to allow the Worthy Farm site time to rest and recover. (Photo by Jim Dyson/Redferns)
Artists Danielle Haim names her biggest guitar influences, including the player she calls “the most underrated”
Elton John and Davey Johnstone perform at the piano during their 2012 tour, with Johnstone playing the Les Paul Custom 'Black Beauty' that John originally bought for himself, but gave it to Johnstone after the band had all their gear stolen.
Artists Davey Johnstone on guitar shopping with Elton John – and how he ended up with his iconic Les Paul Custom
Mark Tremonti plays a big chord on his signature PRS electric guitar as he performs a 2025 live show with Creed
Artists “If I sit down with a Dumble, the last thing I’m going to do is do any kind of fast techniques”: Mark Tremonti on why he is addicted to Dumble amps
Steve Morse poses in the studio with his Ernie Ball Music Man signature model – not the guitar synth at the bridge.
Artists “Nobody can play better than that guy, man!”: Steve Morse on the supernatural powers of Petrucci, Johnson and Blackmore
Fender has made an exacting replica of Tom Morello's 'Arm The Homeless' guitar, the mongrel S-style made from parts that became the cornerstone of the Rage Against The Machine guitarist's sound.
Artists Tom Morello’s favourite 'Arm the Homeless' electric guitar has just been recreated by Fender
Josh Freese
Artists “People said, ‘Hey, I saw you’re on that Avril Lavigne record.’ I went, ‘Nah!'”: The drummer who’s played on 400 albums
Neal Schon
Artists “There are players with amazing dexterity”: Journey’s Neal Schon says that “classic guitar records” still matter
PRS SE Fiorre HH
Electric Guitars “These are classy sounds with no danger of single coil hum... a near-perfect function-gig guitar”: PRS Fiore HH Satin review
Jeff Beck in 1969
Artists “Mickie says, ‘Jeff – where's your guitar?’ ‘Oh, it's on its way to Leeds!’”: When Donovan and Jeff Beck made magic
Justin Hawkins
Artists “He wanted it to sound tinny, so he literally put the mic in a tin”: When The Darkness teamed up with Queen’s producer
steve hauschildt
Artists Ambient maestro Steve Hauschildt on the obscure plugins, generative tools and '00s digital synths behind Aeropsia
Wolfgang Van Halen
Artists “Sometimes it sounds like Liam thinks he’s in The Beatles, too!”: Wolfgang Van Halen talks Oasis and killer guitar tones
Davey Johnstone and Elton John are back-to-back as they perform live, with Johnstone playing his Captain Fantastic Les Paul Custom
Artists Davey Johnstone on the making of Elton John’s 1975 masterpiece, Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy
Elton John, bare chested but wearing braces and custom sunglasses, performs with John Lennon at his Madison Square Garden Thanksgiving show in 1974. Lennon plays a Fender Telecaster Deluxe.
Artists “John said we were the best stuff he'd heard since the Beatles”: Davey Johnstone on Elton John’s collab with John Lennon
Greg Mackintosh of Paradise Lost plays his custom 7-string V live onstage with red and white stagelights behind him.
Artists Greg Mackintosh on the secrets behind the Paradise Lost sound and why he is still trying to learn Trouble’s tone tricks
More
  • "The most expensive bit of drumming in history”
  • JoBo x Fuchs
  • Radiohead Daydreaming
  • Vanilla Fudge
  • 95k+ free music samples
  1. Artists
  2. Singles And Albums

David Crosby on his favourite acoustic guitars, alternate tunings and solo album Lighthouse

News
By Matt Frost ( Guitarist ) published 6 March 2017

Plus working with Snarky Puppy's Michael League

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

We catch up with legendary singer-songwriter David Crosby to chat about his new album, his love of alternate tunings and Joni Mitchell’s influence

It’s pretty much impossible to imagine what the last 50 years of guitar music would have sounded like without the untouchable and indelible influence of David Crosby. Through his inspired and forward-thinking contributions to The Byrds between 1964 and 1967, his string of beautiful solo albums and his legendary work with Crosby, Stills and Nash (CSN) and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young (CSNY), there’s little doubt that Crosby helped change the face of 20th century music forever.

On Crosby’s fifth solo record, Lighthouse - released back in October - he once again illustrates what makes him such a joyous player

While his exquisite writing and role in helping craft majestic three-part harmonies have always been celebrated, Croz’s playing has arguably been overshadowed by the six-string heroics of his CSNY bandmates Stephen Stills and Neil Young. 

On Crosby’s fifth solo record, Lighthouse - released back in October - he once again illustrates what makes him such a joyous player. Delicate jazz- and folk-inflected picking, hook-laden melodies and alternate tunings all come to the fore across the album’s nine songs, resulting in what can only be described as a contemporary acoustic guitar masterpiece.

“I am very proud of it and I’m very happy about it - I’m ecstatic!” enthuses Crosby over the phone from across the pond. “I try so hard to make good music but there’s no guarantee it’s going to happen but this time it totally did. The songs are good and I’m just very proud of it.”

I asked Michael League to come to my house. He was here for four days and we wrote three of the best songs I’ve ever written

Lighthouse is actually a collaborative project, co-written and produced by Michael League of experimental instrumental collective Snarky Puppy. For David Crosby, this match-up proved to be a truly creative and inspiring experience. 

“What happened was I guested on a record by Michael League and Snarky Puppy [Family Dinner - Volume 2, 2016],” explains Crosby. “I thought he was a terrific guy and I thought he was a really smart record producer and a really great musician so I asked him to produce this record. I thought, ‘Well, here’s this guy who’s a leader of a band full of terrific musicians. That’s what I need.’ 

“I thought it was sort of like hiring a master carpenter with a huge toolbox because there’s this gigantic band full of great players… but the truth is, he said he didn’t really want to do that kind of record. What he was in love with was my first solo album [If I Could Only Remember My Name, 1971] and he wanted to go more in that direction with more acoustic guitars and vocal stacks.

“And, of course, I love that approach so we went for it that way. I asked him to come to my house and he was here for four days and we wrote three of the best songs I’ve ever written. I loved them. I just feel like I stumbled into really, really fantastically lucky territory and it’s been quite an experience, actually.”

Don't Miss

David Crosby talks Crosby, Stills & Nash's debut album track-by-track

David Crosby talks songwriting, guitars and solo album Croz

Page 1 of 4
Page 1 of 4
Organic processes

Organic processes

So how did Crosby and League approach the song-writing process? “There’s really no set way that it happened,” replies Croz. 

“He and I both write music and he and I both write words and so it was a very organic process. We sort of decided what kind of song we wanted to write and what we were trying to say and then we went for it but it happened in every possible which way.

I said, ‘I’ve never made a record in less than two months so you’ve got to give me a month!’ [In the end] we cut the whole thing in 12 days

“Sometimes we did the music and words both at the same time, sometimes it was the words first and sometimes it was the music first. It was just a very organic process. He’s a great guy to write with and I love writing with him. He and I are already starting to think of the next batch of songs we’re going to write together.” 

The recording sessions for Lighthouse proved just as fruitful and rapid as the writing. “I said to Michael, ‘I want at least a month - I want to block book a month,’” David explains. 

“But he said, ‘No, we don’t need a month!’ I said, ‘I’ve never made a record in less than two months so you’ve got to give me a month!’ So, anyway, we went into Jackson Browne’s Groove Masters studio [in Santa Monica, California] and we cut the whole thing in 12 days and we then mixed it in New York in four days. So, he was totally right and I was totally wrong. 

“It was really, really fun and a very fast process. Part of the joy of it was that he brought in a really great engineer named Fabrice Dupont, who’s very, very good and very, very fast. It was just a joy in the studio and there was nothing in the way of the music.”

About 10 years ago - a guy called Roy McAlister found me. He’s probably my favourite guitar maker in the world

Guitar-wise, Crosby played a variety of beautiful instruments on the Lighthouse album while Michael League also played some six-string in addition to laying down any bass lines and helping out with vocal harmonies. 

“I used several guitars,” says Croz. “I used one of my D-45 Martins from 1969 and I used one of my McAlisters. You know, I’ve always been a Martin guy. I love Martin dreadnoughts, particularly the older ones but all of them, really. I just love them and those are what I played for many, many, many years. But, recently - about 10 years ago - a guy called Roy McAlister found me. He’s up in Seattle and he used to work for Santa Cruz Guitars. I have five of his guitars now and he’s probably my favourite guitar maker in the world. He just has talent and they’re just stunning-sounding guitars. 

“I also used my old Martin 12-string, the one that’s a conversion of a D-18. That was my first 12-string. Then we used several other axes. Michael used the little 12-string that Hammertone make and we used an old ’57 Strat that we borrowed from a friend. Mostly, I played the McAlisters and the Martin though and most of the guitar you hear on the record is me.” 

Page 2 of 4
Page 2 of 4
A musical history

A musical history

What tunings did Crosby utilise? “I used several,” he explains. “I’ve just absorbed a crazy bunch of tunings over the years. I really love them. I used the one that I did Déjà Vu and Guinnevere in - EBDGAD - and about three or four others but I’d have to go back and look and see what they are. 

“I like writing in tunings because it gives you different inversions of the chords than you can get out of a regular tuning and I like the sounds that I get there so it’s something I do a lot.”

The jazz affected me a lot because it made me want those chords that I get out of tunings

As a kid, David Crosby was taught to play guitar by his older brother Ethan, who also gifted David his old instruments whenever he managed to source himself a new one. As far as inspirational and influential guitarists, musicians and writers go, Croz feels there are many who are worthy of a mention. 

“James Taylor is such a brilliant musician and Joni Mitchell is probably the best of all of us,” says Crosby. “She is probably the best singer-songwriter of our time. I don’t think there’s anybody close. Bob [Dylan]’s as good or, if not, a better poet but she sings rings around him so I think she’s won. She’s a tremendous influence on me… as were The Beatles. And Michael Hedges. Earlier, a lot of people were a big influence - Odetta, Josh White, Pete Seeger and The Weavers. A ton of stuff.

You sure as hell didn’t make any money in [Greenwich Village coffee shops] but it was a pretty good experience

“Then, I got turned onto jazz right around the late 50s, Dave Brubeck, Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, that era. And, when you start listening to jazz, all roads lead to Coltrane and Miles [Davis]. The jazz affected me a lot because it made me want those chords that I get out of tunings. As a player, encountering influences as strong as Joni and Michael Hedges, you just get pushed really deeply into the journey.”

Croz’s initial performance education came through playing the coffee shops of Greenwich Village, New York as a solo artist. “It was very poor!” he laughs. “You sure as hell didn’t make any money but it was a pretty good experience. You have to learn how to communicate with people, how to get their attention and how to take them on a little voyage. You do that by playing live and you start at the bottom end. You start in coffee houses and bars. Coffee houses are very tough but they’re a whole lot easier than a bar.”

Page 3 of 4
Page 3 of 4
Taking flight

Taking flight

In 1964, Crosby co-founded The Byrds, for whom he played rhythm guitar, sang and wrote or co-wrote many of their best-loved tracks. including proto-psychedelic anthem Eight Miles High. It was during his three-year stint with the highly influential folk-rock outfit that Crosby first started playing Gretsches. 

“I started out in The Byrds playing the converted Martin D-18,” explains Crosby. “I’d converted it into a 12-string. That had been my main guitar up until then and was my main guitar in The Byrds until we made enough money for me to buy a guitar like George Harrison because we wanted to be The Beatles… so then I got a Gretsch Tennessean and I used that for a long time and then I got a Gretsch Country Gentleman, which I liked better. 

It took a long time for me to figure out that what I really wanted was a Fender Strat but, in The Byrds, I played Gretsches

“It took a long time for me to figure out that what I really wanted was a Fender Strat but, in The Byrds, I played Gretsches. I just love everything about Strats. They’re a great guitar, they feel good and they work good. There’s something about how a Strat feels when you take it out and play it. It’s great - it’s totally wonderful!”

At the end of 1967, Crosby was fired by his Byrds bandmates following a series of disagreements and it wasn’t long before he bumped into Stephen Stills, whose own band, Buffalo Springfield, had also just split up. Soon, the pair began jamming. They then met Graham Nash of The Hollies and the trio bonded instantly over musical direction and intuitive vocal harmony.

Fate had played its trump card and CSN was born. In 1969, the band released their incredible self-titled debut album and it soared to number eight on the Billboard 200 chart. Neil Young would join the line-up later that year.

With CSN and CSNY, Crosby continued his enduring love affair with Martins. “By that time, I’d started making a lot of money!” laughs Crosby. “I went out to Lundberg’s, a guitar store in Berkeley, in 1969. Martin had just started making D-45s again, which they hadn’t done since before the Second World War. They started making them again and there was about 10 of them at Lundberg’s and I picked the three best ones and bought them right then and I’ve still got them.”

If you listen to Croz, it was produced by my son James and he did a fantastic job. He’s the one producing this [next] one

Can Croz sum up what made the dynamics of CSN and CSNY so magical? “I can’t explain it,” he says. “It was three and four very creative people and, when everybody in the band is a songwriter, you have a nice wide palette of song and that’s a very good thing.”

Before we let Mr Crosby go, we just want to ask him about another forthcoming solo record we’ve been hearing rumours about. Like 2014’s Croz album, this next record is apparently set to be another collaboration with James Raymond, David Crosby’s son. 

“That’s right, we’re working on it at the moment,” David enthuses. “I think it’s going to be called Skytrail and it’s going to come out in 2017. Where Lighthouse is an acoustic record pretty much, Skytrail is with a full band. 

“If you listen to Croz, it was produced by my son James and he did a fantastic job. He’s the one producing this one and I think it’s going to be very strong, as strong as Croz or more so. I just think it’s going to be a stunner of a record. There’s a lot of great shit on it!”

David Crosby’s latest album, Lighthouse, is available now on GroundUP Music.

Don't Miss

David Crosby talks Crosby, Stills & Nash's debut album track-by-track

David Crosby talks songwriting, guitars and solo album Croz

Page 4 of 4
Page 4 of 4
Matt Frost
The magazine for serious players image
The magazine for serious players
Subscribe and save today!
More Info
Read more
Jason Isbell with his two new signature acoustics from Martin, the 0-17, a high-end replica of his 1940 model, and the 0-10E Retro, a more affordable version.
Jason Isbell shares unorthodox tone tip for new acoustics as he reveals not one but two signature Martins – and a set of strings
 
 
Derek Trucks takes a slide solo on his Gibson SG as Tedeschi Trucks Band performs live at Madison Square Garden.
Derek Trucks is one of the greatest slide players of all time – here’s how he decides when to use it
 
 
Elton John and Davey Johnstone perform at the piano during their 2012 tour, with Johnstone playing the Les Paul Custom 'Black Beauty' that John originally bought for himself, but gave it to Johnstone after the band had all their gear stolen.
Davey Johnstone on guitar shopping with Elton John – and how he ended up with his iconic Les Paul Custom
 
 
Steve Morse poses in the studio with his Ernie Ball Music Man signature model – not the guitar synth at the bridge.
“Nobody can play better than that guy, man!”: Steve Morse on the supernatural powers of Petrucci, Johnson and Blackmore
 
 
Steve Morse plays live with Deep Purple and takes a solo on on his signature Ernie Ball Music Man, with the band's logo visible in the background
Steve Morse on the time he took power tools to his guitar so he could play a Deep Purple show with a broken wrist
 
 
Taylor Jacob Collier GS Mini: featuring a brightly-coloured rosette graphic designed with the musical polymath, this beginner friendly acoustic has a bold five-string design for his signature DAEAD tuning.
Taylor teams up with Jacob Collier for signature acoustics that declare standard tuning DAEAD – and they’re accessibly priced
 
 
Latest in Singles And Albums
Singers Kirsty MacColl (1959 - 2000) and Shane MacGowan with with toy guns and an inflatable Santa in a festive scenario, circa 1987
“It’s faster, more spunky”: Steve Lillywhite on what he did to brush up a new live version of Fairytale Of New York
 
 
Levon Been of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
"It’s just all smoke and mirrors”: How the Black Rebel Motorcycle Club took on the Trump administration, and won
 
 
American singer, songwriter, and actress, Mariah Carey, at a Chanel lunch and fashion show
“It’s Mariah as you’ve never heard her before”: Carey’s grunge album to finally get a release next year?
 
 
Lily Allen
“I’m definitely having some conversations about it”: Lily Allen’s West End Girl album could end up… in the West End
 
 
Mick Jagger And Norman Cook- Fatboy Slim- At The David Bowie Party At Pop, Soho Street, London
“It is thoroughly road tested and fit for purpose”: Fatboy Slim’s Satisfaction Skank bootleg is finally released
 
 
Santa Claus and Mariah Carey perform during a pre-tape performance for NBC's Christmas tree lighting at Rockefeller Center on November 27, 2012
“Like she almost does not want to admit a co-writer”: The argument over who did what on All I Want For Christmas Is You
 
 
Latest in News
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - OCTOBER 19: Marie Fredriksson and Per Gessle of Roxette perform on stage on the 'Join The Joyride' tour at Wembley Arena on October 19th, 1991 in London, England. (Photo by Pete Still/Redferns)
Roxette’s It Must Have Been Love isn’t what you thought it was, says the man who wrote it
 
 
Piano under a Christmas tree with gifts
5 reasons a gift card is the most stress-free present you can get a musician this Christmas
 
 
TORONTO, ONTARIO - NOVEMBER 14: EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NO STANDALONE PUBLICATION USE (NO SPECIAL INTEREST OR SINGLE ARTIST PUBLICATION USE; NO BOOK USE). Taylor Swift performs onstage during "Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour" at Rogers Centre on November 14, 2024 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/TAS24/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management)
Taylor Swift's bass player Amos Heller says he couldn't believe the "insane" length of the Eras Tour setlist
 
 
kv331
KV331 Audio is giving away SynthMaster One for free until January 4
 
 
Cheering audience at music concert
Only When I’m Dancing Do I Feel This Free: Half of clubbers think phones are “ruining” the dancefloor
 
 
Howie Weinberg
Mastering engineers reflect on the loudness wars, and ponder whether they really are over
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...