“It’s just one of those romantic versions of things coming back around.”Ĭollins and Stills first met in Southern California during a recording session for Collins’ eighth album, she says. I think it’s sort of romantic in a lot of ways, and I don’t mean that it’s a romance,” Collins says. Now performing side-by-side at last on their first-ever tour together, Collins considers this an endearing twist of fate. The two couldn’t have known when they first met decades ago that their lives and music would remain permanently intertwined.īeyond an initial passionate romance, Collins and Stills have remained close friends for 50 years, influencing each other’s crafts and bolstering one another’s success as both became acclaimed singer/songwriters in their own right. “I think we’ve helped each other a lot in our careers.” “It’s very nice to have a classic, iconic song written about you,” Collins says with a laugh. It’s singer Stephen Stills’ personal ode to her, a vestige of their brief and fiery romance decades ago. For folk music legend Judy Collins, the nationally beloved song “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes” by Crosby, Stills & Nash represents more than just an iconic melody.