Harvest Moon Gathering: Benefit for The Painted Turtle & The Bridge School - September 14, 2019
UPDATE:

"I Am A Child" by Neil Young
2019-09-14 - Painted Turtle Camp, Lake Hughes, California, USA
via rjrjr8
Setlist via Sugar Mountain
Neil Young
2019-09-14
Painted Turtle Camp, Lake Hughes, California, USA
Harvest Moon - A Gathering
Solo
1. Sugar Mountain (acoustic guitar)
2. I Am A Child (acoustic guitar)
3. Comes A Time (acoustic guitar)
4. Heart Of Gold (acoustic guitar)
5. Old Man (acoustic guitar)
6. Rainbow Of Colors (acoustic guitar)
7. I Do (acoustic guitar)
8. Eternity (piano)
9. Green Is Blue (piano)
10. Only Love Can Break Your Heart (acoustic guitar)
11. Tell Me Why (acoustic guitar)
12. War Of Man (acoustic guitar)
13. New Mama (acoustic guitar) (first time played since Aug 12, 1977)
14. Harvest Moon (acoustic guitar; accompanied by Norah Jones and her band)
---
15. The Losing End (acoustic guitar; accompanied by Norah Jones)
Neil Young - Bridge School and Painted Turtle Benefit - FULL SHOW 09-14-19

"Harvest Moon" by Neil Young w/ Norah Jones and her band, & Father John Misty
2019-09-14 - Painted Turtle Camp, Lake Hughes, California, USA
via rjrjr8
Also, see comments below for more concert updates.
Tomorrow, Saturday, September 14, a special benefit concert will happen under a full Harvest Moon, the Harvest Moon Gathering: Benefit for The Painted Turtle & The Bridge School.
Father John Misty, Norah Jones, and Neil Young will perform at the Harvest Moon Gathering benefit concert.
For the first time since 2000, #FridayThe13th coincides with the full moon. 🌚 https://t.co/h5qcZBQXYt
— Twitter Moments (@TwitterMoments) September 13, 2019
And in other Harvest Moon news, today is Friday The 13th/#FridayThe13th. For the first time since 2000, a full moon falls on Friday The 13th and the next full moon to land on Friday The 13th won't happen until 2049. Only about 1% of full moons fall on a Friday the 13th. This one is even rarer occurring near apogee, the furthest point in the Moon's orbit. This last happened in 1832 and won't happen again for more than 500 years. So enjoy the night!
Neil Young's 1992 "Harvest Moon" is the followup to his most commercially successful album "Harvest" - 20 years later.
"Harvest Moon" was recorded with many of the same original musicians who appeared on "Harvest", such as Ben Keith, on pedal steel guitar, and Linda Rondstadt and James Taylor on backing vocals. The intentional sequel nature of "Harvest Moon" created high expectations which for the most part were fulfilled. The album was accompanied with music videos and extensive interviews. All indicators of both the record label Reprise's support and even the normally reticent Young himself.

On a Canadian radio interview, Young denied that 'Harvest Moon' was a sequel to 'Harvest':
- "The whole idea of following up the 'Harvest' album is something that's contrived more from the standpoint of record companies, and mostly questions. You know, people see the correlation between the two, and it's kind of a plus to be able to refer back 20 years and see the same people and do that. But the thrust of the albums is different, even though the subject matter is similar, so I tend to shy away more from comparisons between them - they're reference points for one another. I mean, people who have never heard of 'Harvest' may really like Harvest Moon and may end up referring back to 'Harvest' because of all this conversation about how the two of them go together..."
So why is a Harvest Moon so special to Neil Young fans?
Many may recall back in 2008, when Steve and his girlfriend Danielle made a request for "Harvest Moon" to played when Neil Young visited Brisbane, Australia. And by some extremely wonderfully little miracle, Neil Young actually did perform "Harvest Moon" that night and it brought a tear of joy for many around the world.
Then in 2009, Gavin in Ireland Requested "Harvest Moon" in memory of his father. Wish granted. And shortly thereafter, another Wish for "Harvest Moon" was Granted to Liza in Germany.
So we here at Thrasher's Wheat hold the song and this night very dearly. 3 fans that we've never met, on 3 continents touched by Harvest Moon magic. We know that some of you may not understand.

Let's go dancin' in the light
We know where the music's playin'
Let's go out and feel the night.
Some instructions for best viewing: "Keep an eye on the Moon as it creeps above the eastern skyline. The golden orb may appear strangely inflated. This is the Moon illusion at work. For reasons not fully understood by astronomers or psychologists, a low-hanging Moon appears much wider than it really is. A Harvest Moon inflated by the moon illusion is simply gorgeous."
Reviews of Neil Young's Harvest Moon.
Also, see:
Moons and Neil Young Songs by Anne - Lady of Northern Moons
Review: Neil Young's Dreamin' Man - A live "Harvest Moon" album.
"Harvest Moon" - Neil Young, MTV Unplugged - 1993
From a Harvest Moon review in FUNHOUSE!:
- "Harvest Moon is the quintessential down-home-mom's-apple-pie  American folk album. It's one of the few Neil Young albums that you can share  with the one you love, along with a bottle of something nice, without having  to apologetically hit the fast forward button or move the tracking arm  forward. 
But not all fans agreee that "Harvest Moon" is one of Neil's finest albums.  Dave Sigler writes in a Harvest Moon album  review : 
- "In my opinion, there is not a single cut on 'Harvest Moon' that does not sound better in its 'original state: solo acoustic. Neil has always said he prefers simplicity. Always the advocate of live recording whether it be in the studio or the concert hall, Neil has always been able to capture the essence of his music at its most spontaneous. There is nothing on 'Harvest Moon' that strikes me as spontaneous...or even close. It is the kind of slick, overly produced product that record companies dream about. Reprise must certainly be happy with it. With its heavy country sound, 'Harvest Moon' arrives just in time to (hopefully) capture a share of the market in the current country/western music fad/phase we seem to be in the midst of. "
From a Jack Feeny  review: 
- "'Harvest Moon'  is often regarded as the follow-up to 'Harvest'  but I hardly think it is a clear-cut affair. It is less ambitious in its scope (after Young's genre confusion in the eighties) but its modesty is also the key to its success. I guess the fact that the Stray Gators return to the fore echoes 'Harvest' but the arrangements on here are mainly acoustic based and only at times sound like his unfairly critically savaged watershed release. 'Comes a Time' is a more accurate comparison, if you ask me, although the musical themes on this album are more varied. The songwriting is certainly as strong as Comes a Time although not every song is a veritable masterpiece."
From a review on Nude as the News by Ben French: 
- "The 'simple man' image of Harvest Moon may become a tad overplayed at times -- especially on songs like 'Dreamin' Man' and 'One Of These Days' -- but it never seems to become overbearing. Neil Young often misrepresents himself as a plain man, but this album proves his more simple approaches to songwriting can often yield his most perfectly enjoyable results."
From a review onQ Music Magazine by Mark Cooper:
- "Simplicity has always been one of Young's greatest strengths and weaknesses, so while he occasionally merely re-creates the moon-eyed dreamer of yore, he has surrounded his meditations in some of his simplest, most gorgeous melodies in years. This is Young taking stock, recalling old friends in One Of These Days, paying tribute to a departed hound in Old King and apparently re-evaluating his marriage in a succession of heartwarming, sometimes troubled love songs.   
Best of all are the opening Unknown Legend and the title track, tender shuffles with celebratory choruses that rekindle old flames while acknowledging the passing of time. Nostalgia is often the last resort of scoundrels but Harvest Moon is ultimately not content to be Harvest 2, even as it re-affirms and re-examines Young the naif romantic, still dreaming after all these years."
From RollingStone.com on comparing "Harvest Moon" and  "Harvest": 
- "Harvest Moon, on the other hand, is a chronicle of survival, focusing on loss and compromise and the ultimate triumphs of being a married father approaching fifty. It's full of bittersweet tributes to lost friends, dead hounds and love grown old. 'What this album is about is this feeling, this ability to survive and continue and grow and get higher than you were before,' says Young. 'Not just maintain, not just feel well. Not just 'I'm still alive at forty-five.' You can be more alive.'"
Also, here's a collection of album reviews and commentary of Neil Young's Harvest Moon.  
- Harvest Moon review in FUNHOUSE! by Uncle Dave and track listing 
 
- Harvest Moon - Review by Dave Sigler
- Harvest Moon - Re: Harvest Cartoon? - Oct 10, 1996 From: Zain Patel
- Neil Young Songs on Moons
What better way to commemorate #FridayThe13th than with a #HarvestMoon? 🌕🌾 pic.twitter.com/GWbu02TyEy
— The Weather Network (@weathernetwork) September 12, 2019
Labels: #FridayThe13th, album, benefit, bridge school, concert, harvest moon, neil young, reviews























 
  
  
  
 

























 
 




 
 
 







 
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