Lady of the Island
"Lady of the Island" is a folk song written by Graham Nash in the late 1960s. The song appears on Crosby, Stills & Nash's critically acclaimed, self-titled debut album. The song is notable for taking its inspiration from fellow folk musician Joni Mitchell, with whom Nash was romantically involved at the time.
"Lady of the Island" | |
---|---|
Song by Crosby, Stills & Nash | |
from the album Crosby, Stills & Nash | |
Released | 1969 |
Recorded | February 11, 1969 |
Genre | Folk, soft rock[1] |
Length | 2:39 |
Label | Atlantic |
Songwriter(s) | Graham Nash |
Producer(s) | David Crosby Graham Nash Stephen Stills |
Personnel
- David Crosby–harmony vocals
- Graham Nash–lead vocals, acoustic guitar
gollark: It can generate ~100MHz square waves and you can connect up an antenna, which is *basically* what a radio transmitter would do but stupider and worse.
gollark: Yes, a clock or something.
gollark: A quirk of the raspberry pi means it can transmit FM radio with horrible interference because it can only broadcast square waves or something, because of happening to have a somewhat adjustable ~100MHz clock exposed on external pins or something.
gollark: Technically I *could* transmit FM radio. Also technically, I can't transmit it at any significant power and doing so would be illegal.
gollark: idea: replace osmarks internet radio™ with a constant 440Hz buzzing noise.
References
- Oregonian/OregonLive, David Greenwald | The (April 3, 2014). "The top 10 '70s soft-rock seduction ballads (playlist)". OregonLive.
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