“A 21-YEAR-OLD WATCHED POLICE ARREST HIS FRIENDS ON SUNSET STRIP. HE DROVE HOME AND WROTE ONE OF THE GREATEST PROTEST SONGS IN HISTORY — IN 15 MINUTES.” November 12, 1966. Stephen Stills was 21. His band Buffalo Springfield was nobody yet — playing a residency at the Whisky a Go Go with Neil Young. That night, he headed to Sunset Strip for live music. What he found was a thousand teenagers outside Pandora’s Box — a little rock and roll club the city had voted to demolish. LA had imposed a 10 p.m. curfew for anyone under 18. The kids carried signs: “We’re Your Children. Don’t Destroy Us.” Three busloads of LAPD showed up in riot gear. Peter Fonda got handcuffed. But here’s what nobody expected — Stills didn’t stay. He drove home and wrote a song in 15 minutes. It didn’t even have a title. Just a first line: There’s something happening here. They recorded it December 5 in a single session. On Christmas Day, Pandora’s Box reopened one last night — and Stills performed the song inside a building already marked for destruction. When he played it for his label, he shrugged: “I have this song, for what it’s worth.” That became the title. It appears nowhere in the lyrics. It hit Number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100. Grammy Hall of Fame, 2000. Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Songs, Number 63. Pandora’s Box was demolished in August 1967. That corner is now just another intersection. No plaque. Nothing left but the song.

The Night Stephen Stills Turned a Sunset Strip Arrest into a Song for a Generation A protest, a curfew, and…

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