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Wednesday, March 05, 2025

"Mother Earth": An Important Reassessment of Neil Young's Song | Scotsman

Mother Earth
image via Adobe Stock
 (Click photo to enlarge)


A special guest posting from the irrepressible Scotsman.

Mother Earth


Out in the musical wilderness, life can be harsh.

In this discriminatory world, charming Neil Young ditties like “Till the Morning Comes” get cheerfully waved through the door of authenticated musical excellence. Meanwhile, less fortunate songs (Mother Earth, for example) are forced to walk through a metal detector and are submitted to an aggressive strip search.

Fan comments about the closing track from Ragged Glory are not always pretty. It’s been described as “a truly awful gift”, “putrid”, and “perhaps Neil’s worst song to this point”.

When criticism is this fierce, we must read between the lines.

After all, whatever you think about the lyrics and musical arrangement of Mother Earth, they’re clearly not as terrible as the over-the-top negative reviews would have you believe. So what can this song possibly have done to earn such scathing criticism?

When we look at fan discussions dedicated to “rating” Neil’s tracks (an entertaining but nonetheless foolhardy endeavour), arguably a trend emerges:

People give high ratings to tracks that make them feel safe, comfortable, and in control.

They give low ratings to tracks that create a sense of unease, discomfort or unresolved tension.

(The Earth album, I have no doubt, will be on the receiving end of harsh ratings simply because people have no idea how to “judge” an album of car horns, mosquitos, church bells and thunderclaps. The inner unease translates into a damning rating).

This all makes a song like Mother Earth— one full of supposedly misguided “hippie” vibes about saving the planet—a sitting duck.

The problem isn’t that it’s poorly written. It’s that, for many people, it’s a bitter pill to swallow. And it’s easier to discard it as a bad pill than to tolerate it.

One fan review hits the nail on the head:  

“Not exactly a particularly pleasant listen”.

But of course, not every track is intended to be a pleasant listen. If we rate music on the scale of “easy listening”, then a great many of the most moving, most generous albums and songs are thrown into the reject pile. A tragedy!

Mother Earth is also particularly noteworthy for being the track where Neil Young starts to directly tackle the subject matter that, in some ways, feels like his true calling.

It’s a crucial link in the chain between After the Goldrush, Vampire Blues, Greendale, Who’s Gonna Stand Up, the Monsanto Years, Colorado and World Record.

And, while I can enjoy ditties like the much-lauded Till the Morning Comes, I’m also relieved Mr Young has dedicated his time to tackling more substantial topics with equal creativity and generosity, too.

First released a full 13 years before Greendale, Mother Earth is a song that’s part stark warning, part prayer, part motivational speech. Perhaps, though, it’s most noteworthy for being an early iteration of the type of song that aims to inspire the real-life Sun Greens of the world.

That’s why Neil sings Mother Earth in concert so frequently. It’s a recruitment drive.

And of course, not everybody is interested in saving Mother Earth. But that doesn’t make it a bad song. It just means it’s not for everybody.

Lyrically, it’s not necessarily among Neil’s most razor-sharp creations of all time, but it works, and it’s certainly not the disaster zone some would like you to believe. Meanwhile, the concept of transcending nationalist concerns with a shared empathy for the planet is both inventive and worthwhile.

Still, like many fans I suspect, I cheerfully admit I tend to skip this track when listening to Ragged Glory. Not because it’s a bad song (it isn’t!), but because it’s a good song buried on the wrong album, and in a bad arrangement.

The idea of mimicking Jimi Hendrix’s version of Star Spangled Banner is a clever one. But after Ragged Glory’s multiple tracks with drum and bass, the solo-guitar arrangement feels like we’re being forced to ride a horse and cart after doing a few laps in a Ferrari.

The more pressing problem, though, is the production can’t decide whether it wants to go for safe slickness or fragile, meaningful connection. As such, the lyrics are buried in glossy harmonised vocal overdubs that sound too much like a chorus of unfeeling robots.

The message the audience receives is a) “this sounds pretty”, and b) “this isn’t a personalised communication aimed directly at me”.

Like Children of Destiny, Mother Earth is a song that works best when it’s whispered, person to person, heart to heart. There needs to be a sense of the listener and singer both leaning in, trying to establish a connection in a chaotic world.

Overlaying Mother Earth with extra vocals makes it safer, more impervious to attack. But it also neuters the very vulnerability that makes the song special.

The superior version from 2015’s Earth (a concert/studio hybrid) completely solves this issue. And it does so in a very unconventional, very inventive way.

Not only is it a compelling performance musically, but the wonderfully creative overdubs add a sense of musical sparkle and sustained interest that can sometimes be lacking in the in-concert solo renditions on pump organ.

Listen to the sheer breadth of sounds (and feelings) Neil conjures up. The opening pump organ and harmonica instrumental has a fittingly ominous, almost funeral-like vibe... but certainly church-like.

The intention here is both clear and effective: to put us in a meditative, prayer-like state of feeling. We’re in nature’s church.

We’re not in row #212 of the O2 Arena, or Madison Square Garden. Spiritually, we’re in the front row at a service.

The musical arrangement sets us up to really listen, to hang on every word. And those who want to check their phones can go next door and grab a beer, instead. Switch the record off. But please, don’t interrupt the service.

So far, this approach is effective but also fairly straightforward. But then, the real genius kicks in. Overdubbed, “robot-style” backing vocals contribute something else entirely — something that it’s hard to put a finger on.

It’s the first example of a recurring, very strange, very wondrous feeling on Earth:

Where deliberately synthetic vocals, when offset against a more “organic” performance, somehow contribute a sense of rich emotion that’s completely at odds with their artificial character.

The synthetic vocals don’t drown out the human being, as they do on the Ragged Glory version. Instead, they complement him. They somehow add a beauty all of their own.

How exactly does this work? Maybe in much the same way that caramel and salt combine into a flavoursome combo — the two extremes exaggerating the beauty of each other.

But it goes beyond that. The overdubbed “electro” vocals on Earth do something that’s both unusual and profound. So profound it’s hard to pin down exactly what it is. (Hah! That’s a bit of a cop-out from me, isn’t it!).

Meanwhile, the Sun Green of tomorrow is sitting in the audience — possibly with her Mum and Dad.

And she hears the message. It’s not buried like it is on Ragged Glory. Nor is it too direct, too ham-fisted, too shouty.

Instead, it’s transmitted quietly, from person to person, soul to soul.

At that moment, the crowd doesn’t matter. The cheering, the whooping, the booing might as well be silent. The fan discussions have subsided. Even the car horns and mosquitos and guitar solos have settled down.

No gunshots. No artillery fire.

Instead, there’s a sensation that real, deep, profound communication has taken place. A supremely skilled artist, standing in a studio—thousands of miles away, and perhaps even many years away, too—has inspired us. He’s passed on the baton, motivated the next person in the chain to run with it.

In the world of the 21st century, where so much supposed communication is either malicious or just mere noise, this sort of connection isn’t just very special. It’s practically a miracle.

Scotsman.



Thank you so much Scotsman for sharing your writings with TW and the rustie-grains communities.

Yes, "Respect Mother (Earth) and her giving ways". Honor the treaties, indeed.

Your Neil passion sparkles through and through.  We know you sent this article much earlier for publication before our sabbatical. Apologies for not getting posted sooner. But the timing seems immaculate still.

Oh "Mother Earth" indeed.  BTW, what do you think of image selection above?  Lots of images of "Mother Earth" out there.  If you have something else in mind, please pass along.

And while on the subject of Guest Posts, the door is always open here @ TW.  Express theyself, freedom of speech über alles, etc. Use it or lose it. Say something, submit something.


Neil Young - "Mother Earth", Calgary, Jan 20, 2014

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Thursday, November 14, 2024

The Last 20 Seconds of Neil Young's “Cinnamon Girl” | Recliner Notes

cinnamon-girl-single-cover-3-7-70.jpg
Rare Neil Young "Cinnamon Girl" 45 RPM Picture Sleeve
Recorded Live at The Fillmore East, New York City, March 7, 1970

  (Click photo to enlarge)

 
"I wanna live with a cinnamon girl
I could be happy the rest of my life
With a cinnamon girl"

Everyone  wants to live with a cinnamon girl so that they can be happy the rest of their life, right?  Who wouldn't?

From The Last 20 Seconds of  Neil Young's “Cinnamon Girl” | Recliner Notes

There is one aspect of “Cinnamon Girl” that remains overlooked: the last 20 seconds.

“Cinnamon Girl” is powered by a riff that launched a thousand ships as countless bands and Young himself have adopted the same crunchy, guitar-based template. A heckler once yelled at Young that all of his songs sounded the same and Young famously responded: “It’s all one song.” There’s a strong argument that “Cinnamon Girl” is in fact that one song, serving as an urtext for grunge and indie rock for generations to come.

Young plays the song in a drop-D tuning, meaning that he starts with a guitar’s standard tuning and lowers the low and high E strings to D notes. Young had employed the tuning before on Buffalo Springfield’s “Mr. Soul,” but it is in “Cinnamon Girl” that he grasps the true power of this technique, providing Young with a low drone, whether heard or implied, that permeates the song with a deep intensity and weight.

The drone is heard plainly at the 2:37 mark of “Cinnamon Girl” as Young and Crazy Horse finish playing the central riff of the song one last time. Young holds the low D after the other guitar and bass fade out. The last 20 seconds of the recorded time of “Cinnamon Girl” acts as the coda of the song. In music theory, a coda is a concluding statement within a song or larger movement. It’s a wrap-up and usually serves as an addition or extension of the principle motif or arrangement of the piece. In this coda, Young plays a flurry of notes by hammering the strings on the fretboard of the guitar to produce the sound rather than using a pick. Over the course of these 20 seconds, he plays 11 different flurries, each a variation on a theme. It’s not the central riff of “Cinnamon Girl” anymore, but this new theme feels connected and even an enhancement on the song’s main riff. This outbreak of notes played by Young in the coda is tumultuous and frenzied and then suddenly finishes as Young lets the sustained drone of the low D ring out. As the drone continues towards its vanishing point, Young hits natural harmonics on the guitar twice just before the song ends, providing a twisted high complement to the drone. 

With that, the music fades out, ending the coda and “Cinnamon Girl.”

Full post @ The Last 20 Seconds of  Neil Young's “Cinnamon Girl” | Recliner Notes.

 

More on Is This The Story of "Cinnamon Girl"?  The Story Behind Neil Young's Iconic Song Revisited


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Sunday, August 04, 2024

"EARTHALUJAH": A Devotional Journey with Neil Young’s ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ and Finding Freedom

image via bgodinspired 
 (Click photo to enlarge)

 

As Reverend Billy and The Church of Stop Shopping Choir would say during this summer's aborted “Love Earth Tour” by Neil Young w/ Crazy Horse: "EARTHALUJAH"! 

Happy Sunday morning to all of our rustie grain friends. Here's a little something different than maybe your typical TW fare.

From "Rockin’ in the Free World" by Neil Young - Finding Biblical Freedom through Music |


Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World” strikes a chord with many listeners, both musically and thematically. 

The song’s passionate call for freedom and its socio-political commentary resonate deeply, echoing the timeless desire for true liberty—a theme equally profound in the Bible. But how can we connect the cry for freedom in Young’s lyrics to the biblical principles of liberation, love, and justice?

In "Rockin’ in the Free World," Neil Young highlights the struggles and disparities within society, asking listeners to reflect on what freedom truly means. The Bible also speaks extensively about freedom but in a way that transcends political and social realms.

Consider John 8:36 (NIV): "So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed." Here, Jesus offers a profound freedom that surpasses any societal construct—a spiritual liberation through His sacrifice.

Full article @ Finding Freedom: A Devotional Journey with Neil Young’s ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ and Biblical Promises | bgodinspired .

More on  Neil Young’s ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ @ Why It Works: Neil Young's “Rockin’ In the Free World".

 
Neil Young (as a homeless person)
(frame from "Rockin' In The Free World" music video)

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Monday, February 12, 2024

Time Capsule: Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Rust Never Sleeps | Paste

Rust Never Sleep! (sic)
Unreleased Rust-oleum Commercial w/ Neil Young
(Click photo to enlarge)

 

By now, we all know that one of the most fundamental universal laws of physics -- in the immortal lyrics of Neil Young -- is that Rust Never Sleeps

With that, we bring you Time Capsule: Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Rust Never Sleeps  | Paste by Matt Mitchell.  Every Saturday, Paste  revisits albums that came out before the magazine was founded in July 2002 and assessing its current cultural relevance. This week, they’re zeroing in on Neil Young’s theatrical, enigmatic career resurrection that became an epitaph for a decade of grief.

While the immediate cornerstones of Rust Never Sleeps are obvious anti-pastorals of the dense nuances of America’s widened and, sometimes, consequential utopia— “Powderfinger,” “My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue),” “Ride My Llama”—it is on “Thrasher” where Young uses the frontier to make the most sense of his own morality with allusions to farmland, passerine birds, full moons and hightailing across the country before dawn. 

“Thrasher” is, in no short terms, a song about Danny Whitten. 

And it’s a particularly damning and heartbreaking one at that—a text that conjures allusions to heroin use and the $50 plane ticket Young gave to Whitten when he kicked him out of the Stray Gators ahead of the Harvest tour. The entire second verse, in particular, remains a crucial tableaux of Young’s grief: “I searched out my companions, who were lost in crystal canyons when the aimless blade of science slashed the pearly gates,” he sings; “Headed out to where the pavement turns to sand with a one-way ticket to the land of truth and my suitcase in my hand. How I lost my friends, I still don’t understand,” he continues. 


Full article @ Time Capsule: Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Rust Never Sleeps  | Paste by Matt Mitchell.

DOUBLE FEATURE REVIEW: 

 

Also, answers to the quintessential question: "Why does Rust Never Sleep?" ... or "Out of the BLUE and into the BLACK" .

 

Rust Never Sleeps - Rust Repair Shop Sign
Photo by Mimi R.

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Thursday, January 11, 2024

Comment of the Moment: Neil Young & Crazy Horse's "Cortez the Killer"

Hernán Cortés
16th Century Spanish Conquistadore
 

With all of the excitement over the DUME album's vinyl release (see DUME Coming Feb 23rd - Another "Lost" Neil Young & Crazy Horse Album)  it seemed like as good a time as any to revisit what  many consider to be one of Neil Young and Crazy Horse's finest moments in the studio: "Cortez the Killer".

 Dume - Release date: Feb 23rd
Neil Young & Crazy Horse
 (see  DUME Coming Feb 23rd - Another "Lost" Neil Young & Crazy Horse Album)

 

Our Comment of the Moment is from the post 1st REACTION & ANALYSIS: Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer" by Classical Musician Amy Shafer by Ron:

Late to this but really enjoyed watching and listening to this today. Then again I could quite happily listen to Cortez all day long...

A great comment by LeeKennison and I share some of his reactions to Amy's comments and analysis. 

Like many over the years I have often wondered about the pivot from 3rd person to 1st person which comes as such a surprise when you first listen to the song. I think this comment from @ronaldwilhelm3449 might be the answer though - sounds quite plausible to me.

"This song has many layers of depth to it.

It is a song about Cortez and the Aztecs, but in the context of the whole album, Zuma, it also serves as an allegory to human relationships, which is what the entire Zuma album is about. 

The theme of the album follows the singer's emotions as he deals with a personal break-up. How he blames the woman (Don't Cry No Tears, Danger Bird, Pardon my Heart), how he tries to restart his life (Looking for a Lover, Barstool Blues), how he shows contempt for the women in his life (Stupid Girl, Drive Back) and how he realizes, finally, that the fault is his (Cortez) dancing in and destroying the life of another person ("I still can't remember when or how I lost my way"). 

"Through my Sails" ends the album, with the singer reaching a new realization about himself and relationships. In the context of the album, it all makes sense. It is amazing to me, that the climax of the album, when he finally realizes that he is Cortez, Neil uses an allegory to the destruction of the Aztec civilization. 

What happens when a selfish spirit, invades the tranquility of another person and destroys their world. Since individual relationships, and civilization relationships are all "human relationships", Neil is giving the Zuma singer the ultimate moment of realization. 

[Neil Young] is Cortez." 

Thanks so much for sharing this comment Ron.  Agree. Ronald seems to nail ZUMA themes and tie them in together with the song Cortez quite nicely. Obviously, another one of the more fascinating Neil songs.

Here's a nice 18+ minute "Cortez The Killer" from Barcelona, Spain Concert of Neil Young + Promise of the Real on June 20, 2016 .  What makes this interesting -- awesome performance aside -- is the concert location in Spain.  

Why you ask? 

Did you know that in the 1970's, Neil Young's  song “Cortez The Killer” was banned in Spain because it offended General Franco’s regime. In Spain, Hernando Cortez (or Hernán Cortés) is considered a national hero as the conquistador who conquered Mexico's Aztec Empire for Spain. 

cortez-the-killer.gif
Lyrics Analysis of 'Cortez the Killer'


More on "Hate was just a legend, And war was never known": Critical Analysis of Neil Young's Song 'Cortez the Killer'.

 
"Cortez the Killer" 
 J Mascis & Warren Haynes
Music Hall of Williamsburg, New York - 12-2-23
(see VIDEO: Dinosaur Jr., Warren Haynes, Kurt Vile Cover Neil Young’s Cortez the Killer )
A First Reaction To Neil Young's Music - "Cortez The Killer"
 

 More analysis of Neil Young's song  "Cortez The Killer".

Also, see Perhaps the Longest Version of "Cortez the Killer"  Ever @ 22 minutes?! 


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Sunday, January 07, 2024

1st REACTION & ANALYSIS: Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer" by Classical Musician Amy Shafer

Neil Young's "Cortez the Killer" 
Reaction by Classical Musician Amy Shafer


Here's another one of those "Reaction" videos that seems to be a "Trend" on the Tube of You's these days.

Amy Shafer, LRSM, FRSM, RYC, is a classical harpist, pianist, and music teacher, Director of Piano Studies and Assistant Director of Harp Studies for The Harp School, Inc., holds multiple degrees in harp and piano performance and teaching, and is active as a solo and collaborative performer.  (Thanks Bob G.!)

Here is reaction and analysis of Neil Young's song "Cortez the Killer". 
 

If you haven't checked out these types of reaction videos before, they're pretty cool to watch just for the physical reactions themselves. 

More analysis of Neil Young's song  "Cortez The Killer".

More on "Reaction" videos:

 
First Listen Reaction: 
"Danger Bird" by NEIL YOUNG and CRAZY HORSE | PERK'S reCAP
 
A First Reaction To Neil Young's Music - "Cortez The Killer" 
 
Reaction To Hearing Neil Young For The 1st Time
 

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Sunday, December 17, 2023

ANALYSIS: Neil Young's Song "TIME FADES AWAY" & "fourteen junkies too weak to work”



 

In honor of the historic 50th anniversary of the legendary Neil Young album "TIME FADES AWAY", here is a deep dive into the album's title song "TIME FADES AWAY" by George K.



Nothing is too arcane to discuss for the hard-core Neil Young fan, it seems - especially for this group of fine people. 

I was thinking about the song, TIME FADES AWAY, and wondering just exactly why Neil chose to use the numbers 14 and 13 “junkies too weak to work” in the lyrics to this great song from the live album by the same name. 

We all know that it took decades for this great album to finally be released on CD, and now it’s also available as a remastered vinyl record album as well as a high quality digital audiophile download at 192 kHz / 24 bit from Neil Young Archives and the Greedy Hand Store online: Time Fades Away (50th Anniversary Edition) LP
 
As a songwriter and a lyricist,  Neil is a master craftsman of putting poetry to the service of the muse of music. I often wonder if it’s the words or the music that comes first for him. Either way, his genius is undeniable. 

So, it makes one wonder exactly why he chose the numbers fourteen and thirteen to include in his song about time fading away and all that it implies in this life. 

Was it based on a true and factual event or scene that he saw? Probably not - but who knows? How would he know that they were all heroin addicts? 

Most likely, he took poetic license and increased the number of down-and-out junkies on the street in order to add emphasis to the problem, by exaggerating it. 

Also, as a musician and an experienced recording artist, he knows that certain syllables create sss-ey sibilant sounds in studio condenser microphones and that certain other syllables like P’s and B’s create puffy and bassy sounds in live dynamic microphones with proximity-effects. 

So, most likely, he chose a number with two syllables - that fit with the rhythmic structure of the lyric - that was a word that started with a sound that was neither sibilant nor puffy. Fourteen and thirteen both hit the mark! 

He could not use a one syllable number, or a number larger than two syllables. Those would not work - like the number nine or the number seventeen (which begins with an S and has 3 syllables). 

If you’re a singer, certain words and sounds are easier to sing - and remember on stage - than others. Fourteen and thirteen must have worked well for Neil in this regard. They just sound good! 

There’s also the important matter of the imagery that’s conveyed. Let’s face it, the first time you ever heard this song on the radio, that powerful and unique image of “fourteen junkies too weak to work” left a very strong impression in your mind! Songwriters are masters of matching lasting lyrical imagery with catchy melodic hooks and rhythmic repeating riffs! Neil does this all the time! 

Anyway, these are just some of the thoughts that I was having about this great song that I wanted to share with you all. 

Thanks for listening! 

- George Nicholas Koumantzelis 👍🌵🌅🌲😇
 

 
Thanks for the deep dive here George! Most appreciate the detailed analysis of why we arrived at “fourteen junkies too weak to work”.

Afterall, we all know definitely that numbers add up to nothin'. :)

Seriously, we actually forgot about the whole arithmetic equation here.  The songs starts with 14 junkies but ends with 13?!  We lost Danny ... he was too weak to work.

Much more on the Neil Young album TIME FADES AWAY and fan's multi- decade struggle to have album re-released with petitions to record companies, beseeching the artist and his management. All of which culminated in a performance art attempt by fans  at the end of a Neil Young concert in Philadelphia.

As one petitioner wrote all the way back in 2005 when we started the Release "Time Fades Away" Petition, not releasing TFA was "... like stashing Mona Lisa in the basement."



"It's like stashing Mona Lisa in the basement."
Petition Signature Signer #6628 by Gareth D.

 

A lot has happened since Thrasher's Wheat began the campaign to release Neil Young's 1973 album Time Fades Away way back in 2005.

  • Neil Young's Time Fades Away on CD: "50 years have passed"
  • Finally! Time Fades Away About to be Re-released
  • MASTER PRESSING SHEET: "Time Fades Away" by Neil Young
  • 7th Anniversary of Release "Time Fades Away" Petition 
  • Neil Young's Ditch Trilogy -- Or is it a Quadrilogy? Or Quintology?
  • 3rd Year Anniversary: Release "Time Fades Away" Pe...
  • Petition Gathers Over 10,000 Signatures
  • TFA Now in Top 20 All-Time on Petition Spot
  • Petition Passes 5,000 Signatures
  • UPDATE: TFA Petition and Signature Highlights
  • Petition Comments Highlights
  • UPDATE: - Album Song Poll & "Don't Be Denied"
  •  

    More on the history and background of Release "Time Fades Away" Fan Petition.

     
    time-fades-away-banner2a 
    Release "Time Fades Away" Petition


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    Sunday, January 08, 2023

    The Flying Scotzman Soars with Neil Young Writings

    "A close look at two of Neil Young’s most thrilling guitar effects"
    by  The Flying Scotzman on Patreon

    For all of the Thrasher's Wheat  regulars  out there, you are very familiar with the writings and musings of The Flying Scotzman or Scotsman or simply Scots.

    The Flying Scotzman's posts here on Thrasher's Wheat have consistently been made Comments of the Moment and have served as fundamental cornerstone to what we do here in terms of separating the wheat from the chaff.

    So we bring you the news that  The Flying Scotzman has launched on Patreon and we encourage all TW readers to give him a visit and support him if you can.

    The Flying Scotzman's  first article is titled "A close look at two of Neil Young’s most thrilling guitar effects."

    Another article examines the recent NEIL YOUNG ARCHIVES TIMELINE CONCERT OF THE HOLIDAYS: w/ Crazy Horse @ Cal Expo, Sacramento, CA - 9/16/1996.

     
    "All about the latest Neil Young & Crazy Horse timeline concert release, Cal Expo ‘96"  
     
    Neil Young and Crazy Horse
     
     
     
    In the meantime, here are a few featured CotM's by the "intrepid, inconsolable, & inflammable" Scotsman:
     
     
    Best of luck Scotsman and we look forward to your writing about the remarkable music of Neil Young!
     

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    Monday, December 12, 2022

    Comment of the Moment: Neil Young - Alone Together With The Loner

    Neil Young
    Illustration by Mike Faille, from Kiim Kong photo
    (Click photo to enlarge)
     
     

    The Loner.

    Neil Young has many, many nicknames like "Shakey", "Mr. Soul", "Godfather of Grunge", etc.  And then there is "The Loner".  

    In the film "Harvest Time"  (see ANALYSIS: What "Harvest Time" Reveals About Neil Young), a side of  Neil Young is seen -- yet unseen -- that many fans identify with in a comfortingly relatable manner.  As in, literally, see the lonely boy out on the weekend trying to make it pay.

    Neil Young's Harvest Time Film

     

    In listening to Neil Young's extensive lyrics, the theme of "loneliness" quite often hovers about many of his songs.  A theme which is very prevalent, pervasive and persistent over the decades.  Thus, the TW Comment of the Moment on ANALYSIS: What "Harvest Time" Reveals About Neil Young by Dionys:

    The Loner Alone, a Lonesome List 

    • Bad Fog Of Loneliness
    • Campaigner (“I am a lonely visitor”)
    • Everybody’s Alone
    • Four Strong Winds (“Four strong winds that blow lonely…”)
    • Give Me Strength (“The lonely man I make myself to be”)
    • Hard Luck Stories (“Now she’s gone and you’re alone…”)
    • Harvest (…and was some black face in a lonely place…)
    • Hello, Lonely Woman
    • Hold Back the Tears (Single life really has its fine points…”)
    • Like An Inca (There’s a bridge I have to cross alone…”)
    • Lotta Love (“Cause my heart needs relating not solitude”)
    • Mellow My Mind (”lonesome whistle on a railroad track”)
    • Misfits (“On the Needles Highway there is a lone red rider…”)
    • Oh, Lonesome Me
    • Out on the Weekend (“See the lonely boy out on the weekend”)
    • Roll Another Number (“though I long to see that lonesome hippie smile”)
    • Sample and Hold (“But not the lonely one…”)
    • Sunny Inside (From now on I ain’t scared of lonely nights...”)
    • Tell Me Why (”I am lonely but you can free me)
    • The Loner
    • The Losing End (When You’re On) (“Before I wandered off alone”)
    • There Goes My Babe
    • The Wayward Wind (“In a lonely shack by the railroad track…”)
    • Too Lonely
    • When You Dance I Can Really Love (While the lonely mingle with circumstance”)
    • When Your Lonely Heart Breaks
    • Will to Love (“But I won’t turn back with this lonely tide)
    • Wonderin’ (I am wondering if I’ll be alone”)

    Sure I missed out on a few songlines

    UPDATE:

    + Down By The River ("It's so hard for me staying here all alone..") (Thanks Abner!)

    + Old Man  (live alone in a paradise) and (but I'm all alone at last) (Thanks Nobody knows!)

    + Last Trip to Tulsa (Sure it's not a case of being lonely we have here...)

    +Music Arcade - ("Have you ever felt all alone") (Thanks Sancho!)

    Thanks Dionys, Abner, Nobody Knows, Sancho & Still Young and everyone on the thread.

    Step aside, open wide.

    And the ultimate irony here is that watching Neil in "Harvest Time" write the song “Out on the Weekend” -- apparently spontaneously -- while happily laughing away and surrounded by friends and lovers is most incongruously surreal.

    You folks out there make us feel never alone as long we have friends digging the music.

    More on ANALYSIS: What "Harvest Time" Reveals About Neil Young.

     
    Neil Young Gets Back “Out on the Weekend”
     


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    Saturday, December 10, 2022

    ANALYSIS: What Harvest Time Reveals About Neil Young | Rock and Roll Globe

     
    Neil Young's Harvest Time Film
     

    Here is a highly recommended analysis of the just released documentary presenting a fuller look at the landmark album  "What Harvest Time Reveals About Neil Young | Rock and Roll Globe" by Pat Daly:

    Neil Young acolytes, notably loyal and reliably obsessive, took the Decade blurb and constructed a parable that is now part of the gospel according to Neil freaks. The three records that followed Harvest – Time Fades Away, Tonight’s The Night, and On the Beach – are now enshrined as “The Ditch Trilogy.”  

    The one slight problem here is that Harvest is every bit as ditchy as the records that followed, maybe ditchier. 

    It starts with what could be the bleakest, most depressive utterance of Neil Young’s career, which is saying something. “Out On the Weekend” surveys the inner life of its lonely protagonist, who is getting ready to abandon his present circumstances, and just “pack it in.” He “can’t relate to joy.” It is foreign to him. He’d explain it, but his depression has rendered him incapable of speech. “He can’t begin to say.”

    Surely the middle of the road beckons as the record goes on, and the ride is uphill from here, right? Well, kind of. The two songs that give Harvest its mainstream reputation – “Heart of Gold” and “Old Man” – are testaments to want, yearning, and more loneliness. 

    The former is about the search for love, by all accounts futile to date, and time is running out on our 24-year-old artiste. Inability to articulate persists. “It’s these expressions I never give, that keep me searching for a heart of gold – but I’m getting old.” 

    The picture painted in “Old Man” is not much rosier. Love has not been kind to our lonely boy, and he sorely needs someone to love him the whole day through. His lyric does not exude optimism. “Love lost, such a cost. Give me things that won’t get lost.”

    These three numbers – can I propose we refer to them henceforth as The Loneliness Trilogy? – constitute less than a third of the album. The rest of the album surely must contain the soothing “Sweet Baby James”-ish folk pop that explain its mellow reputation and enduring popularity. 

    A few quick notes on this highly recommended analysis. First, we rustie grains don't really like the label "obsessive" and prefer "passionate" instead. Second, here at TW, we have been a major proponent of the “The Ditch Trilogy” theory.  In fact, this  “The Ditch Trilogy” theory has been expanded to a  quadrilogy, or possibly even a quintology.

    Neil Young's "Ditch Quadrilogy":
    "Time Fades Away", "Tonight’s the Night", "On the Beach" & "ZUMA"

     

    Last point, on this analysis is the stream of consciousness composition of “Out on the Weekend” which rivals anything from the much ballyhooed Peter Jackson documentary "The Beatles: Get Back" scenes. The ever so elusive "The Muse" is seen in full force display on her majestic, creative, channeling journey. So, get back to that John & Paul, literally and figuratively.

     

     
    Neil Young Gets Back “Out on the Weekend”
     
     



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