Elyse Weinberg

[2][3] She moved briefly to New York, and then to Los Angeles to meet up with her friend Neil Young, who had just formed Buffalo Springfield.

With Young on guitar, a studio band called Touch, and produced by Don Gallucci, the album was described as a "mixture of death-fixated medieval folk, imaginative pop arrangements and very 60's psychedelic rock".

[2] According to some sources it reached the Billboard album chart,[2][3] but this is not confirmed by Joel Whitburn's books which do not mention it.

[1][2] Weinberg recorded a second album, Greasepaint Smile, produced by David Briggs and featuring both Young and Nils Lofgren.

[4][3] She gave up her music career, later saying: "I kept writing songs, but as I entered onto a spiritual path, I just drifted away from that lifestyle, which was fortunate.

"[2] Developing an interest in numerology, she changed her name to Cori Bishop, and continued to live in Los Angeles before moving to Santa Fe, New Mexico in the early 1990s, and then to Ashland, Oregon, where she worked in insurance.