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The shore that is a lee shore changes based on the reference point, which is the vessel from which the island or lake shore is viewed, and of which the island or lake shore is in the lee. The leeward shore does not change based on the position of the vessel. This means that the "leeward side" of the vessel and the "lee shore" of the land face ...
Their name was taken from a song written by David Crosby for Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, called "The Lee Shore", which is a nautical term for a sheltered shoreline. The band members liked the idea of a place that can be close to but protected from stormy weather, so they changed Lee to Lea , to make it sound more pastoral and British.
The first release of the double album came packaged in a gatefold sleeve without a track listing. On the gatefold was a black-and-white picture of the band sitting on a bench, with the heads of Graham Nash and David Crosby framed by a wire clothes hanger hanging in front of them, with recording information and credits in the lower-right-hand corner.
Track 1 & 3 - Garden State Art Center, Homdel, NJ on 28 August 1976; Track 2 recorded at Syria Mosque, Pittsburgh, PA on 24 August 1976 and the Shaefer Music Festival, Central Park, NY on 11 September 1976;
Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney recorded the song for their radio show in 1958 [5] and it was released on the album Bing & Rosie – The Crosby-Clooney Radio Sessions (2010). [6] Wes Montgomery – One Night in Indy (recorded 1959, released 2016) Sarah Vaughan – After Hours at the London House (1959) Nina Simone – Nina Simone at Newport ...
Graham Nash David Crosby is the first album by Crosby & Nash, the partnership of David Crosby and Graham Nash, released on Atlantic Records in 1972, catalog SD 7220. It peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, and a single taken from the album, "Immigration Man", peaked at No. 36 on the Billboard Hot 100 on June 17 and 24, 1972. [3]
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The song is an extended reference to a famed 1870 race down the Mississippi River between two steamboats, the Robert E. Lee and the Natchez.. It imagines a fictional steamboat, the Whippoorwill, captained by "Mr. Steamboat Bill," who is determined to beat the record of the Robert E. Lee.