"Toast" by Neil Young w/ Crazy Horse
“It's got everything that the best Crazy Horse albums have had.” - Neil
A few Neil Young release schedule updates on NYA timeline: (Thanks Phil!)
- Noise and
Flowers - 12th November 2021,
- Toast - 10th December
- ORS box sets 4-5-6 & Harvest 50th anniversary - Feb
2022
In addition, the recent interview with Frank “Poncho” Sampedro, Neil Young, Crazy Horse Guitarist | The Aquarium Drunkard contained further revelations on the album "Toast":
Frank “Poncho” Sampedro: Toast is whole
‘nother story.
Here we are in the Mission District in San Francisco,
where we open the back door to the studio and smoke a cigarette and we
watch giant rats running all over the place. They’re so evolved. Not
just black and brown. They’re pintos. They’re big. The whole
neighborhoods is just crazy dilapidated. Usually, Neil would call us,
and he’d have songs. [This time] we got to that place and he didn’t have
that many songs. He was writing. We spent a lot of days just walking
around the studio and watching TV.
There was really nothing to do. There
was a donut shop on one corner and a Mexican place about a block away.
So, we’re in that environment and we’re watching Neil sit there with his
legs crossed on the floor, holding a yellow pad of paper and a pen. And
that’s not just for a couple of days. That’s for a couple of months.
Then out of nowhere, we start playing the songs and we’re not really getting them great.
Then all of a sudden, Elliot says he’s got this tour for us. So, we
take off and we go to South America and holy shit, man. That was a
blast. We’re playing giant places. One hundred and eighty thousand
people or two hundred thousand. In Buenos Aires, the whole crowd got so
into it [they were] doing these soccer chants of the melodies and… I’d
love to hear some of those tapes. Louder than us. It was really
fun. Plus, Billy’s Italian, Ralph’s Puerto Rican, both my parents are
from Spain. So, we have this Latin influence in the band. We were big
into salsa music. When we got back from that, we went right back into Toast.
It’s funny that all the songs kind of have a little Latin feel to them.
Things were different. It was like a different session from the time we
got back.
And then those sessions ["Toast] ended.
More on recent interview with Frank “Poncho” Sampedro, Neil Young, Crazy Horse Guitarist | The Aquarium Drunkard.
Are You Passionate? - 2002
by Neil Young w/ Booker T & M.G.’s
If Neil says that Toast reflected a relationship going
sour, then it almost as if the touring of that time was part of that
realisation.
The 2001 Euro Horse tour debuted many of the Toast tracks
with Pegi in the backing singer line-up along with the Horse.
And
then links and moods between Toast, Are You Passionate? and Sleep with Angels all
collided oh so briefly with the 5 Poncho & the MGs shows. I had the
great fortune of being at Brixton Academy in May 2002 and have come to
realise that it was my "Bottom Line" show - rare live outings and Neil
in a real transition mode but utterly in control.
I'm not one for
assuming that an artist lives their personal life on the stage, least of
all Neil, but you can almost read this as a year long conversation -
let's get away from home, see the sights, be with friends and colleagues
but also lose ourselves in work.
What to make of a sequence of
Differently, Sleeps with Angels, Are You Passionate? and then Goin'
Home?
It was thrilling to hear at Brixton and there must have been a
compelling reason to include SWA 8 years after release and an even more
compelling reason to go out to do these few shows in the first place -
maybe one last try at healing with a different group of friends?
I
can't say any of this was obvious in any way on stage, it's just what we
now read on the Archives allows us to re-assess all these lesser known
songs.
At the time I thought the real centrepiece was the Cortez,
Let's Roll and Powderfinger sequence - the "violence" trilogy of sorts.
The lame political criticism of Let's Roll especially was blown away by
the realisation that it was simply a powerful modern retelling of
Powderfinger, about people being placed a a desperate and hopeless
situation, coming to terms with this and taking action, however doomed.
Whilst Powderfinger gives the protagonist's lone act an epic musical
cinemascopic treatment, Let's Roll has to deal with real people and
treads an almost brooding documentary path. It was clear that No one has
the answer, But one thing is true, You've got to turn on evil, When
it's coming after you was hardly a ringing endorsement of Bush's
foreign policy but a call for ordinary people to face down unimaginable
hatred.
This show is now my absolute candidate for a Timeline Concert
submission on the Archives for all the surprises and being a genuinely
unique musical occasion.
And then the following year we got solo acoustic troubadour Greendale which sent us on a completely different musical journey.
Tony "Hambone" Hammond in the UK
Thanks so much for comment Tony! We had been saving this for the right moment and now seems as good as any. Wow on Brixton concert. "Differently"?! Now there's an obscurity for sure. According to
Sugar Mountain Setlists,only played in concert 4 times.
Labels: album, archives, neil young, neil young archives, nya, releases