Rhino/Atlantic's 2005 compilation
Greatest Hits collects the hits and signature songs of
Crosby, Stills & Nash -- not
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, which is a subtle difference, and one that would seem to make a greater difference than it actually does. Apart from their debut,
CSN always was a bigger deal -- more popular, more critically respected -- when
Neil Young was on board, but he only cut one studio album with them in the '70s, so there aren't that many songs from
CSNY that really would have made the cut on a
Greatest Hits. Then again,
CSN themselves didn't cut that many studio albums during their late-'60s/'70s peak. Just three: 1969's eponymous debut, 1970's
Déjà Vu with
Young, and 1977's
CSN. If you were charitable, you could count 1982's
Daylight Again as the coda to that peak, since it did produce two excellent (and big) hits in "Wasted on the Way" and "Southern Cross," and it feels more of a piece with the group's classic work than the quartet of albums from 1988 to 1999. That is certainly the perspective taken on this 19-track compilation, which concentrates entirely on material from
Crosby, Stills & Nash,
Déjà Vu,
CSN, and
Daylight Again. Even if this means that charting singles from 1988's
American Dream and 1990's
Live It Up are missing, it does make for a better listen than if they were forced into this set. That said, there are still a couple of major songs missing --
Young's "Helpless" and "Ohio," of course, but also "Woodstock," "Fair Game," and "Almost Cut My Hair" -- but the great majority of the big hits and signature songs are here. When broken down to sheer numbers, this contains seven of the ten songs from
Crosby, Stills & Nash, five of the 12 from
CSN, four from
Daylight Again, and three from
Déjà Vu, making this a generous, well-balanced collection that will satisfy the tastes of those who want a good overview of
CSN's biggest and best. It may not have everything -- you'll need
Déjà Vu or
So Far or perhaps just
Neil Young's
Greatest Hits for that -- but it has enough to be satisfying. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine