The album was recorded at
Criteria Studios in Miami, Florida in the Spring of 1976. The duo was backed by Stills' backing band of the time,
Joe Lala on percussion,
Joe Vitale on drums,
George "Chocolate" Perry on bass, and Jerry Aiello on organ. The group had all appeared on Stills' previous album
Illegal Stills which had also been recorded at Criteria a few months prior with producer
Don Gehman. During the sessions, Young lived in a houseboat in
Coconut Grove, as he explains in his memoir
Waging Heavy Peace: "Back when I was living in Coconut Grove in Florida in the mid-seventies, there was a houseboat that I slept in that was owned by a lady named Heather. We were recording the Stills-Young Band's
Long May You Run at Criteria Recording Studios, and it was quite a trip from the studio in Fort Lauderdale back to the Grove every night." The schedules of the two artists rarely overlapped during the sessions. Roadie Guillermo Giachetti remembers in
Shakey: "There was a lotta friction from the start. Stills would stay in the studio all night, and then when Neil came back the next day, everybody would be wiped out. Stephen had this majestic mansion with a pool, Greek pillars and a fleet of rental cars, Neil stayed on a funky boat down in Coconut Grove." In March, Young took a break from the sessions to tour Europe and Japan with his band
Crazy Horse. Upon returning to the sessions, he invited Nash and Crosby to participate. The duo were finishing up their album
Whistling Down the Wire, but were able to contribute some of their own songs, including "Taken at All" and add background vocals to the material Stills and Young had already completed. Nash recalls the sessions "flowing beautifully" until he and Crosby took a break to finalize the mixes for their own album, meeting a tight deadline. He remembers in his memoir
Wild Tales: Stills and Young made the decision to excise Crosby and Nash's contributions, and release the album as a duo in order to meet their own deadlines for the upcoming tour. Young quietly bailed on the sessions and returned to California. Nash did not take news well and unleashed a memorable tirade towards Stills and Young: "I think it's his cock he keeps putting in the meat grinder. Stephen's totally stupid, man... I'll thump that fucker right in the nose when I see him again. I see Stephen's career going downhill and I see Neil's career going downhill, and I don't give a shit. I WILL NOT work with them again." Angered, Nash would later refuse to allow Young to include "Pushed It Over the End" on his 1977 compilation
Decade. By 1977, however, tempers would cool enough for Crosby, Stills and Nash to release a
new studio album together. ==Tour==