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Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Interview: "You can't conceive of the pleasure in my smile" - Neil Young's early years explored by Canadian author Sharry Wilson

(Click photo to enlarge)

Last week, we ran a review by Broken Arrow Editor Scott Sandie of the upcoming book "Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years" by Sharry Wilson.

Now here's an interview with Canadian author Sharry Wilson by Bernie B. Shakey.

You can't conceive of the pleasure in my smile...
Neil Young's early years explored by Canadian author Sharry Wilson


By Bernie B. Shakey

If one were to line up the reams of Neil Young literature I've purchased over the years, it'd stretch from my New York City home, up to Toronto, over to dreamy Omemee, then to Winnipeg, and all the way back again. Twice.

Over the last 40+ years dozens of Neil books have been written and I'm proud to claim ownership over many of them. Most utilize a similar formula - that is, touching very briefly on his childhood years, then expanding greatly on his swift rise to superstar performer with notable bands like Buffalo Springfield, Crazy Horse & Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. That Hall of Fame story is very well documented and can be recited chapter and verse by many Neil fanatics.

But the Neil story that's still somewhat shrouded in mystery is his Canadian upbringing, his early years as the youngest child of Edna & Scott Young, bouncing from one town to the next, simply trying to find his way in the big world - music superstardom (and tantalizing Cinnamon Girls) a long ways off.

Very few authors have seriously tackled those early, turbulent days, but in October 2014 that all changes with the release of Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years by Sharry Wilson, a Toronto-based author and certified Neil Young Junkie. The long-researched book, five years in the making, will provide a sweeping overview of Neil's childhood, from his birth, to his nascent career as an egg farmer, up to his awkward schoolboy days at Kelvin High School, and all the many life stops in between.

As Young Neil gets ready to hit shelves, I had the pleasure to interview Sharry over a two-week period in March 2014. Most nights, over email, Sharry and I would hash out a few questions until we came to the finish. Her book, now near-complete, promises to become a worthy, 456-page addition to any Neil Young reading library.


Backstage at the Flamingo Club in Fort William, April 1965.
From left: Neil, Bob Clark, Ken Koblun.
Courtesy of Ken Koblun. Copyright Don Baxter.

BBS: Hi Sharry. It's a pleasure to conduct an interview with you. It probably makes sense to start at the very beginning: Do you have an earliest Neil Young recollection you can share? Or a moment when you realized Neil was "The One" to follow?

Sharry: I knew Neil was the one to follow after I saw him in concert for the first time at Massey Hall on January 19, 1971. I attended the late show. (An earlier show was added after the first show quickly sold out.) I was already familiar with Neil's material from After the Gold Rush, but it was seeing him live for the first time that convinced me I would be a long-time fan. I purchased Neil Young and Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere shortly after seeing him at Massey Hall. I wanted to know more about him.

BBS: Massey Hall, such a legendary Neil Young show. What was it like for you when Neil, 36 years later, decided to release this concert as part of his Archives Performance Series? Did you have to pinch yourself? Did the show sound like you remembered it?

SW: I have a soundboard recording of the late show in my collection somewhere. I was thrilled to receive it. But I was even more pleased when Live at Massey Hall 1971 was released. It's an edit of both the early and late shows, but the sound is excellent and it captures the mood well. It really takes me back.

I remember being disappointed that Neil didn't play "Only Love Can Break Your Heart," but I was overjoyed to hear "Don't Let It Bring You Down." I also remember being impressed with "Journey Through the Past." I liked Neil's singing and piano playing and thought the melody was catchy. The audience also loved his nod to Canada in the lyrics. So many great songs that night, many of them brand new.

BBS: Before we dip into the deep end on Neil, I have to ask about something completely different: The Beatles. I know you've seen them, not just once, but twice! Please take us back in time. Did you realize just what you were seeing at the time, how historic it was? And what do those concerts mean to you now, nearly 50 years after they occurred?

SW: The Beatles were my first musical love. I learned about them through my older sister. She purchased a few of their early 45s and then their first lp release in Canada – Beatlemania! With the Beatles, followed by Twist and Shout. We watched with the rest of the world when the Beatles made their first appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show” on February 9, 1964. A Hard Day's Night was released during the summer of 1964. I remember seeing the original run of the film at our neighbourhood cinema. The girls in the audience would scream en masse whenever there was a close-up of any of the Beatles. My sister, of course, purchased the soundtrack recording.

Then the biggest excitement of all. The Beatles were going to perform at Maple Leaf Gardens on September 7, 1964. (I was nine years old at the time.) It was decided we could attend but only if our mother escorted us. She was concerned about the crowds and there were reports of young girls fainting when they saw the Beatles. Our three friends also attended with their mother. We had seats on the floor but they were way in the back on the extreme right. I remember it was so cool to see the Beatles perform songs that I knew from their albums, such as "She Loves You" and "I Want to Hold Your Hand." The constant screaming of audience members also made a big impression on me. My ears were ringing when it was over. I was lucky enough to also attend their second show at Maple Leaf Gardens on August 17, 1965. My friend’s father had given her a pair of tickets that he had received from a business client. I was thrilled when my friend asked me to go with her. They were excellent seats – around row 20 on the floor near the centre. It was around this time that I purchased my first Beatles single – "Eight Days A Week." The Beatles also made a third appearance at Maple Leaf Gardens on August 17, 1966. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to get a ticket for that show.

I knew the Beatles were huge at the time, but had no idea they would endure for so long. Their music still sounds fresh today.

BBS: Great recollections, Sharry! Two Beatles concerts by the age of 10! Unreal! I hope you kept your ticket stubs. So, this was 1965, six long years before your first Neil Young concert at Massey Hall in 1971. What is it that led you to Neil? Do you remember the first time you heard his voice, and what you thought?

SW: My older sister, the same one who introduced me to the Beatles, had a great collection of 45s. Two of those singles were "For What It's Worth" and "Sit Down I Think I Love You" by the Buffalo Springfield. I liked both of those songs a lot and remember reading about the band in various teen magazines. I saw them perform on TV and remember that Neil caught my eye. I liked his fringed buckskin jacket, his dark hair and muttonchops and general demeanor.

A few more years passed where I was peripherally aware of Neil. I heard a few songs that I really liked while attending a friend's party (circa 1969-70). I asked who was singing and was told it was Neil Young. I discovered the songs were "Down by the River" and "Cowgirl in the Sand." That caught my attention, but it still wasn't enough.

An AM radio station in Toronto – 1050 CHUM (the same station Neil listened to when he was young) – was playing "Only Love Can Break Your Heart" in heavy rotation, starting in early November 1970, continuing into December and then into the new year. I remember being immediately attracted to the song and loved hearing it over and over. I was taken by Neil's unique voice, simple yet true lyrics and lovely melody. I would sing along with Neil, and taught my then four-year-old sister the lyrics so she could sing along too.

That was the song that did it for me. The first Neil album I purchased was After the Gold Rush. Then came Neil's concerts at Massey Hall in January 1971.

BBS: Your time with Neil stretches back 45 years, when you were a young teenager. Now, you're much older. So my question is this (hopefully you can follow it): Do you find yourself still loving The Artist (i.e., Neil) the same as you did when you first fell in love with his music? Do the songs still affect you in the same way? Your life has changed, but the songs you loved very early on have not, they remain just as they were when you first heard them at 16. Yet your life, 45 years later, is presumably much different. Does the music still have the same meaning to you?

SW: I was fifteen years old when I purchased After the Gold Rush. I loved Neil's music but I also had a bit of a teenage crush on him. I thought he looked totally cool with his patched jeans, plaid flannel shirts and long, straight, dark hair parted in the middle.

There have been periods in my life when I haven't followed his career as intently. This was especially the case when my kids were young (circa 1985-95). It was more difficult to get out to shows and my attention was focused on domestic issues. I tried to keep as up to date as possible by continuing my subscription to Broken Arrow magazine. It was my lifeline to Neil at the time.

The 80s were not my favourite Neil period but I don't think I'm alone in that regard. I jumped back on board with renewed interest in 1996 when Neil and Crazy Horse performed at Copps Coliseum in Hamilton, Ontario on October 31st. Neil came came on stage and said "Boo!" before launching into "Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)" with Crazy Horse. That was an amazing concert.

I still love his music as passionately as I did when I was a teenager but it means more to me now because of the history involved. I continue to be astonished and delighted with his output.

BBS: So, now let's get to the heart of the matter - your book, Young Neil, an exploration of the early years of Neil Young. When did you first think - "Hmmm, maybe I should write a book about Neil." And what made you go from thinking it to actually doing it? An incredible accomplishment, Sharry.

SW: The idea for the book formed gradually over time. I had contributed a number of shorter pieces about Neil's early years to Broken Arrow magazine, the most recent being "A Shakey Education" in 2010. It was at that point that I made the decision to expand the article into a book length work. I thought I had the resources available to do an effective job, but it also meant a lot more work. I remember feeling overwhelmed at times, but I was given some excellent advice by seasoned writers. "Focus," "Keep digging," and "One chapter at a time." That seemed to do the trick.

BBS: So it's been four years since you've been engrossed in the writing of Young Neil, I can only imagine the time commitment necessary for such an endeavor. You're likely thinking of Neil 24x7. When you wake up in the morning how much time lapses before you start thinking of Neil Young?

SW: I've actually been working on Young Neil for five years if you include the time I spent researching and writing prior to the publication of "A Shakey Education." That was the largest piece I had written on Neil's early years up to that time. I used some of the material from "A Shakey Education" for my book.

It's been a very intense journey and learning experience. During the past year I've been more involved with the formal editing process (i.e., getting permissions and copyright clearances for photos, organizing the images and entering them on a spreadsheet, going through the different stages of the copy-editing process).

I've had to be super-focused on Neil and do think about him every day. I usually listen to Neil in the car on the way to work every day so that gets me off to a good start.

BBS: Surely this has been a very intense journey for you, as Neil must be a hero of sorts; you want/need to get the story right. Can you quantify in some way what the research process has been like, especially trying to get long-ago, cloudy facts accurate?

SW: I've been extremely fortunate in regard to my research for the book. I was born and raised in Toronto and still live in the Greater Toronto Area. I'm a decade younger than Neil, but I remember what it was like to be a child in the Province of Ontario in the late 1950s and '60s. It made it easier to navigate Neil's childhood world.

First-rate archival material was readily available and I took advantage of the situation. (I knew where to look.) I went on a number of research-related field trips in Toronto and also further afield to Omemee, Peterborough, Brock Road and Winnipeg. I obtained a lot of crucial information from conducting personal interviews. I spoke to Neil's former class mates, friends, band mates and acquaintances. I tried to be scrupulous with my research, checking and then double-checking facts, figures and other assorted information. I also made the decision to document my sources heavily.

BBS: How many people would you say you interviewed during your research? Can you tell us about some of the colorful characters you met along the way? Anyone stand out?


SW: I interviewed approximately 150 people in total. Not all of them were fruitful, but there were many individuals who went above and beyond the call of duty.

I think I interviewed Ken Koblun the most. (Bass player in the Classics and the Squires.) I lost count of the number of times I spoke with him over a period of two years. I found that phone interviews were the best way to interact with him. He was a font of knowledge about the Squires. He was also very generous in supplying images to use in my book. I feel that I forged a real connection with him and that he enjoyed talking with me. He's extremely detail-minded and talks very quickly. I had to write fast when interviewing him.

I was thrilled when I tracked down Neil's first bass player. I had always thought that Ken Koblun held this honour, but this proved not to be the case. Ken had a part in helping me track down this individual. I don't want to reveal his identity just yet, but there's an amusing story about how I figured out who it was. This person was instrumental in providing information about Neil's little known pre-Squires history. He also supplied me with a number of very cool photos for my book.

Don Marshall, drummer in the Esquires, also went above and beyond the call of duty in helping me transcribe an accurate history of Neil's time with that band. We exchanged hundreds of e-mails over a three-year period. I also interviewed two other members from this band and the discussions were very fruitful. I obtained some excellent images from them to use in my book.

I interviewed Ross F. "Clancy" Smith by phone on half a dozen occasions and we also exchanged e-mail. I guess he would definitely rank as a colourful character. He's quite eccentric and holds strong opinions on many subjects.

Jim Kale, bass player in the Guess Who, also provided a memorable interview and proved to be a colourful personality. I spoke with him for over an hour and he shared some great memories.

BBS: Ahh, now there's a name from the past, "Clancy Smith," the tortured student in Buffalo Springfield's great song, "Nowadays Clancy Can't Even Sing." What was Neil like during his school years? Was he an outcast? A misfit? Did he get picked on by fellow classmates? What did you find out?

SW: He was an average student during his elementary school years. English was always his best subject, even during his high school years. He was never very good at sports, so that set him apart from other boys. He could skate a bit but didn't play hockey (Canada's national pastime). He was an avid fisherman from a young age and a more than competent golfer. His keen sense of humour was consistently noted by class mates.

He began to experience some conflict with other students as he got a bit older. His parents' separation, and then divorce, set him apart. (Divorce still wasn't common then.) His disinclination for sports also set him apart from the jocks in the class.

His grades began to slide exponentially as his interest in music increased. School wasn't important anymore. Music was all that mattered. He empathized with others who were outcasts and different in some way. He was a total music geek. Girls wanted to be around him but he was too involved with music. He flunked twice during his high school years and was on the verge of repeating his year when he decided to quit school and make music his career.

BBS: "Music was all that mattered." Hmmm, I guess some things never changed for Neil. You mention his parents, Rassy and Scott Young, two very interesting people whose marital conflict is well documented (as an aside, Scott's book Neil & Me is superb). As you did your research did you feel you got closer to Neil's parents? How pivotal were they to Neil's growth as an up-and-coming artist?

SW: I did gain some additional insight about his parents. I achieved a better understanding of Scott's point of view. He was trying to be supportive with Neil, but it was hard with such a great geographical distance between them. He was alarmed by Neil's poor marks at school and feared that he would never graduate. (He was right about that.) Neil and Scott were constantly butting heads over his poor performance at school. There was friction between Scott and Rassy, with Neil bearing the brunt of Rassy's complaints. He naturally gravitated to his mother because she supported his music career unequivocally, while it was more complicated with his father. Scott came to be more supportive of Neil's career over time whereas his mother was his number one fan from day one.

It's interesting to ponder what might have happened if Rassy and Scott hadn't divorced. Would Neil have finished high school? How would living in Toronto with both parents have differed from living with Rassy in Winnipeg? I still think he would have pursued a music career, but the Toronto music scene in the 1960s was a much different animal than its counterpart in Winnipeg. The environment wasn’t as welcoming and nurturing to young musicians just starting out.

BBS: There have been dozens of book written about Neil over the last 40+ years, but very few have focused on his Canadian years. One that did - Neil Young: Don't Be Denied - was written by John Einarson. How will your book differ from Einarson's?

SW: John Einarson’s Don't Be Denied is a groundbreaking work about Neil’s Winnipeg years, and it was a valuable resource, as were some of his other books. But Young Neil has a broader focus, looking at Neil’s youth biographically and in the context of the times. I address Neil’s earliest years in Ontario, and I think I’ve also unearthed some valuable new information about his pre-Squires time in Winnipeg.

BBS: Even though he's called America home for nearly 50 years, Neil is unabashedly Canadian; he loves his birth country. What does Neil mean to Canadians? How influential and important has he been to the culture?

SW: Neil is a Canadian icon, arguably more well known worldwide than Gordon Lightfoot and Joni Mitchell, two fellow Canadian icons. He's a source of pride to many Canadians. (Although, not all, as his foray into the oil sands debate and Native rights has not endeared him to everyone.) Neil's massive success once he moved to the U.S. proved to Canadians that we could be equal competitors on the world stage.

I personally feel that Neil has two hometowns – Toronto and Winnipeg. He's loyal to both in different ways and retains distinct memories from that time. Whenever he plays Toronto the audience always responds with enthusiasm when he makes a reference to Canada, Toronto and elsewhere in the country.

He's covered widely in the Canadian media and stories about him are quite common in the press. He's highly visible to the majority of Canadians, even those who would not consider themselves fans. He's been bestowed with many honours in Canada for his music and philanthropic efforts.

Although Neil takes pride in being a Canadian I think he truly considers himself a citizen of the world.

BBS: A "citizen of the world;" I like that Sharry. In a March 2014 Rolling Stone interview, Neil was asked: "What's the most Canadian thing about you?" Neil's reply: "That I care about Canada, and Canada's environment. I care about the stewardship of the land, and I care about the First Nations people. And I care about hockey."

What do you think, Sharry?

SW: I think Neil was speaking from the heart and the quote expresses his strong feelings for Canada and the environment. He's displayed his commitment on many levels and his sincerity shines through. His love for hockey is readily apparent and a great Canadian trait to have.

BBS: As many know, Neil Young had a chicken egg farm as a child, a vocation he seemingly passed down to his youngest child, Ben Young. Do you see any symbolism here? What's up with Neil and eggs?

SW: I don't think it's that unusual that Neil has passed down his love of chicken farming to his son. He's also shared his interest in trains with Ben and his enthusiasm for cars. Neil still has the same hobbies and interests he held as a child -- trains, cars and chickens. Chicken farming has become Ben's vocation and he's made a great success of his operation. Neil must be very proud of Ben's accomplishments.

BBS: Have you ever met Neil Young? Do you plan to send him a copy of Young Neil?

SW: I have never personally met Neil, although he did autograph an item for me once. I was in a crowd by the stage door at Massey Hall in 2007 after one of his shows. I raised my arm over the back of a taller person in front of me. I felt the weight of Neil's sharpie signing the CD sleeve, but I didn't speak with him at all and our eyes never met.

I've made some additional attempts to meet him since then but none have worked out for one reason or another. During my most recent unsuccessful attempt I resigned myself to the fact that I most likely will never meet him and that I should just be content with the situation.

An advance reader's copy of Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years is being mailed to one of Neil's close associates. I forwarded the full mailing address to my publisher. I was told by this close associate that he would share the advance copy with Neil and include it in their library. I was thrilled to hear this.

I believe Neil is aware of my book, at least to some degree. He expressed interest in using "A Shakey Education" as a Blu-ray Live Update, part of The Neil Young Archives (Vol. 1). Everything was ready to go but then Neil never gave his final approval. I think he put the kibosh on continuing the Blu-ray Live Updates project because no new material has been sent for a few years.

It's my understanding that Neil has also read an earlier version of part 1 of Young Neil. I sent this to the same close associate and I believe he was going to pass it on to Neil. This was about a week prior to Neil's appearance at the Toronto International Film Festival for the screening of Neil Young Journeys in September 2011. My husband and I were in the audience at the Princess of Wales Theatre for that screening. Neil and Jonathan Demme participated in a post-show interview and Q&A session. Neil spoke about his childhood a lot. I was in Neil childhood heaven.

BBS: That's all very interesting Sharry. I do hope you get to meet him once. For me, luckily, this happened in 2012. Fate and luck intersected and there I was, standing right next to Neil. I had to shake his hand, so I did, and somehow managed to murmur a quick "thank you." A moment I will truly never forget, something seemingly so small that means so much.

So, what will it personally feel like for you when you finally see your book available for purchase in a local Toronto bookstore later this Fall?

SW: Each step of the book publishing process has been fascinating for me. I'm sure I'll be thrilled to see my book on display at local booksellers. The ultimate reward for my efforts. It's immensely gratifying to think that my work will be read, and hopefully enjoyed, by others.

BBS: Can you describe what goes into writing a book like this? The time commitment? The discipline? Obtaining and selecting the photos? Coming up with a marketable title? Sounds like a lazy walk in the park - LOL.

SW: They say everyone has a book inside them. Mine is obviously to tell the story of Neil Young's childhood. The experience can best be described as an overwhelming urge that quickly turned into an obsession.

The original title was Neil Young: A Canadian Childhood. It was my publisher who suggested Young Neil. I liked it right away and we debated whether Young Neil or Young Neil Young was better. Then we discussed a subtitle. The Sugar Mountain Years was one of my suggestions. It was a true collaborative effort.

I've basically devoted the last five years of my life to completing this book. The time commitment involved is obscene. In addition to trying to work on it a bit each day, I devoted two entire Christmas holiday periods to the task. I discovered that I wrote most productively late at night and into the wee hours of the morning. The interviewing required seemed overwhelming at times. I had to be extremely organized and plan my next moves in advance. My research included day trips to various archives in Toronto and also out of town. Field trips were also part of the research process. I took a lot of photos to document my efforts. Some of them appear in the book.

Obtaining other photos for use in the book was a real education for me. I was really naive about this particular process and I was on a steep learning curve. I remember feeling overwhelmed when it came time to organize the photos for submission. I had to obtain signed permissions as well as copyright clearances. My publisher requested that I enter specific information about the photos on a spreadsheet with about half a dozen different columns. I had to label all of the photos in a similar manner and sort them into chapter folders. Then I had to enter them on the spreadsheet in the order they appear in the chapter. I spent about 8 months getting my photos in order. I submitted well over 200 images. Approximately 130 made the final cut.

In many ways I was well equipped to work on a book. I've been employed as a proofreader for 34 years – 25 years in publishing and 9 years in advertising. A formal editing process is used in both fields so I was used to the rigours involved. I was thrilled that only a light copyedit was required for my book.

BBS: Sharry, is there anyone you want to thank, give credit to, for helping you during this Young Neil journey?

SW: There are many people I’d like to thank, but above all others I'd like thank Scott Sandie for believing in my work early on and providing invaluable support, advice and encouragement. He provided a forum in which to publish my earlier work and I truly believe I would not have written the book without his initial input.

BBS: I would like to close by stating a name, and for you to say a few words about that person and how he/she related to Neil during his Canadian Years. Let's start with Comrie Smith.

SW: Comrie Smith was Neil's first musical friend. They spent a lot of time at the Smith family home, listening and talking about records. They would meet every weekday morning to walk to school together. Neil would always have his transistor with him and they'd talk about music. They'd also haunt a local record shop together. Comrie was the one who joined Neil when they used to “sit on the steps at school and dream of being stars.” When Neil returned to Toronto in mid-1965 he renewed his friendship with Comrie Smith. Most notably, they recorded some songs on a reel-to-reel tape recorder in the attic of the Smith family home during the fall of 1965. Some of these songs appear on The Neil Young Archives (Vol. 1).

Vicki Taylor?

Neil met Vicki Taylor during his time in Yorkville in the mid ’60s. She was a folksinger who had a local hit with one of her songs, the multi-versed "The Pill." She rented an apartment above the Night Owl on Avenue Road and was well known for being a den mother to young, starving musicians. Vicki felt that Neil could benefit from her care and she let him crash on the floor at her place on a few occasions. Neil met John Kay (then with the Sparrow and later, more notably, Steppenwolf) at Vicki Taylor's apartment and it was also where Neil first heard Bert Jansch's debut album. Pot and pills were also plentiful at her place and Neil experimented with both. Neil sometimes played Monday-night hootenanies at the Riverboat as part of the Public Futilities, a folk group also comprised of Vicki, Donna Warner and Elyse Weinberg.

Joni Mitchell?

Joni and Neil share much in common. They were both stricken with polio when they were young and both came from families that moved around a lot. Neil and Joni both spent their teenage years in the Canadian prairie provinces and both had played the ukulele when first discovering their aptitude for music in the late 1950s. Joni famously wrote the "Circle Game" in response to Neil's "Sugar Mountain" and he experienced a real feeling of recognition from that. Neil wrote "Sweet Joni" for her, although it remains unreleased. They reconnected for various projects over the years and they remain true friends.

Omemee?

Omemee holds a special place in Neil's heart. His first childhood memories are from this time when his family life was stable, loving and secure. It was wonderful community to grow up in. Everyone knew everyone else, time unravelled slowly and Neil could indulge in favourite activities such as fishing and train watching. "Helpless" is Neil's loving ode to Omemee, although he has noted that "the town in north Ontario" celebrated in the song is actually an amalgamation of several places he recalls fondly from his childhood. I personally feel that Brock Road was also a special place for Neil during his childhood.

Bruce Palmer?

Neil and Bruce Palmer clicked immediately. He's the one who recommended Neil for the empty slot in the Mynah Birds. He was also Neil's co-conspirator in illegally selling some of the Mynah Birds' equipment to finance their road trip to L.A. Bruce was the one who hatched the plan with Neil. They'd talk about it while sitting in The Cellar coffeehouse in Yorkville.

Ken Koblun?

Neil had a true and loyal friend in Ken Koblun. Ken was in it for the long haul. He and Neil were the only members of the Squires to be in the band the entire length of time. Ken's ambition was to continue playing bass in the Squires and follow Neil wherever he wanted to go. Then things started to go awry in June 1965 in Fort William and they couldn't get anything together in Toronto. Ken played in the Buffalo Springfield for a short time in early 1967, replacing the absent Bruce Palmer. Ken enjoyed success for a number of years playing bass with Three's A Crowd, a Canadian band.

Mort?

Neil loved Mort. The 1948 Buick Roadmaster hearse was his first car and an important part of his identity. It was also the principal means of transportation for the Squires. It was perfect for carrying the band’s equipment. Neil truly mourned Mort's demise. He famously wrote "Long May You Run" in memory of Mort. His second hearse, a 1953 Pontiac, was anointed Mort II.

Sharry Wilson?

Neil's music has been a huge part of my life for over 40 years. I've followed him through all the different stages of his career. It's the music of my life. I developed a keen interest in his early years in Canada and I’m thrilled that I had the opportunity to write about it in a book.

BBS: Sharry, I appreciate you taking the time to discuss Young Neil with me. I get the sense if we ever met we'd likely talk Neil for 48 hours straight before taking a breath. Best of luck to you as you launch your book.

SW: My pleasure. It was a positive experience. Thanks for the good wishes about my launch. It's exciting to think about. It's more than a bit surreal that I'll be going head-to-head with Neil in October when Special Deluxe is also being released.

(Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years, published by ECW Press, is due out on October 1, 2014 and will be available online and at select local bookstores. The planned Young Neil website - www.youngneil.com - will also offer autographed copies of the book. The book is now available for pre-order at amazon.ca, amazon.com and amazon.co.uk.)

Thanks to Sharry and Bernie B. Shakey for this interview!



Author Sharry Wilson in a Town in North Ontario



Also, see Author Sharry Wilson's site: Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years.

Young Neil Book Launch

We'll be having a launch party for Young Neil on Thursday, September 18, 2014 at the Dora Keogh Pub at 141 Danforth Avenue in Toronto, 7 to 9 pm. Please feel free to join us!

Young Neil Book Signing in Omemee

There will be a book signing for Young Neil at the Youngtown Museum at 45 King Street East in Omemee, Ontario, on Saturday, September 27, 2014 from 1 to 3 pm. The Youngtown Museum is a unique collection of Canadian musical memorabilia focused on Neil Young, worth visiting anytime. See you there!

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Monday, September 15, 2014

FULL VIDEO: Neil Young @ Farm Aid 2014 Press Conference



Here is a complete video of Neil Young at the Farm Aid 2014 Press Conference at the Walnut Creek Amphitheatre in Raleigh, North Carolina on September 13, 2014.

Neil Young speaks plainly about the corrupting influence of money in politics and the devastation it has wrought to the family farmer community. Once again, Neil names names and calls out for action. North Carolina's U.S. Senator Richard Burr is criticized harshly for his recent opposition to stemming the tide of the hostile corporate takeover of Washington, DC.


Senator Richard Burr opposes Move To Amend which seeks to reject the U.S. Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling, and move to amend our Constitution to firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights.

"Clean Up Washington and You Clean the Earth", says Neil Young.


"All of the things we're talking about here are all about power. It's all about corporations telling us what to do."
Neil Young

Farm Aid 2014 Press Conference
Walnut Creek Amphitheatre - Raleigh, North Carolina - September 13, 2014

Neil Young echoed that view.

(Thanks to Howell Posner at Howell Media for video and editing production!)

be the rain

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Sunday, September 14, 2014

HIGHLIGHTS: Farm Aid 2014: Raleigh, North Carolina - September 13, 2014


Neil Young
Farm Aid 2014 Press Conference
Walnut Creek Amphitheatre - Raleigh, North Carolina - September 13, 2014
Photos by TW
(Click photo to enlarge)


"Heart of Gold"


"Mother Earth"


"Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?"


"Rockin' In The Free World"

More photo highlights at ThrashersWheatNeverSleeps | Facebook

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Saturday, September 13, 2014

TODAY: Farm Aid 2014: Raleigh, North Carolina - September 13

"Rockin' In The Free World"
Lukas Nelson, Neil Young & Micah Nelson

Photo by TW
(Click photo to enlarge)

Neil Young Setlist

1. Heart Of Gold
2. Comes A Time
3. Pocahontas
4. Standing In The Light Of Love
5. Mother Earth
6. Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?
7. Rockin' In The Free World



Farm Aid will have its annual concert at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre in Raleigh, North Carolina, today, Saturday, September 13.

Farm Aid 2014 will feature live performances by Farm Aid President and Founder Willie Nelson and board members John Mellencamp, Neil Young and Dave Matthews with Tim Reynolds, as well as performances recorded earlier in the day from additional Farm Aid artists including Jack White, Gary Clark Jr., Jamey Johnson, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Delta Rae and more.

Farm Aid announced that AXS TV will be the exclusive television broadcaster of Farm Aid 2014, to be presented live in high definition (HD) on Sept. 13 at 7 p.m. EDT/4 p.m. PDT. This partnership brings the concert experience to fans who are unable to attend the sold-out family farm festival at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre in Raleigh, N.C.

In addition, the webcast, "Farm Aid 2014 Presented by Amy's Kitchen," will stream at www.farmaid.org.

Furthermore, Willie Nelson's SiriusXM channel (56), Willie's Roadhouse, will air live from Farm Aid 2014, beginning at 12 p.m. EDT. SiriusXM's
Dallas Wayne will host backstage interviews and behind-the-scenes coverage of the event.

Festival fans can put the entire Farm Aid experience in the palm of their hands with the official Farm Aid 2014 mobile app, which is now available for iPhone and Android devices. Fans can view the entire Farm Aid 2014 schedule and add artists, workshops and artist briefings to make their own personalized schedule for the day. To download the app, visit www.farmaid.org/app. 

For more information about joining the #Road2FarmAid, visit www.farmaid.org/Road2FarmAid.

For concert updates and other Farm Aid 2014 announcements, follow Farm Aid on Twitter (@FarmAid) and on Facebook (www.facebook.com/farmaid), and visit www.farmaid.org/concert.

About Farm Aid: Farm Aid's mission is to build a vibrant, family farm-centered system of agriculture in America.

Farm Aid artists and board members Willie Nelson, Neil Young, John Mellencamp and Dave Matthews host an annual concert to raise funds to support Farm Aid's work with family farmers and to inspire people to choose family farm food. Since 1985, Farm Aid, with the support of the artists who contribute their performances each year, has raised more than $45 million to support programs that help farmers thrive, expand the reach of the Good Food Movement, take action to change the dominant system of industrial agriculture and promote food from family farms.

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Friday, September 12, 2014

Lineup Announcement: 2014 28th Annual Bridge School Benefit Concert


2014 28th Annual Bridge School Benefit Concert Lineup Announcement.

October 25-26, 2014
Shoreline Ampitheatre
Mountain View, CA

Neil Young
Pearl Jam
Florence and the Machine
Tom Jones
Soundgarden
Norah Jones and Puss 'n Boots
Band of Horses
Pegi Young and the Survivors

Tickets will go on sale Friday, September 19, 2014 at 10:00 AM PDT at Live Nation.



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Farm Aid This Weekend! Highlights from Farm Aid 2013

Pete Seeger's Last Ride
"This Land Is Your Land"
John Mellencamp, Willie Nelson, Pete Seeger, Dave Matthews, Neil Young

Farm Aid 2013 - Saratoga Springs, New York
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Photo by Paul Natkin/Photo Reserve, Inc. via http://www.farmaid.org
(Click photo to enlarge)

Farm Aid will have its annual concert at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Saturday, September 13.

Without a doubt, the highlight of Farm Aid 2013 in Saratoga Springs, New York was Pete Seeger singing "This Land Is Your Land" with John Mellencamp, Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews, and Neil Young.

Sadly, this was Pete Seeger's last public performance and he would pass away several months later.

A truly priceless moment if there ever was one.




More on Highlights of Farm Aid 2013.

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Wednesday, September 10, 2014

STREAMING: "Who's Gonna Stand Up" by Neil Young & Crazy Horse

Neil Young
2014-07-12, Hyde Park, London, England
Photo Paolo Brillo |Facebook
(Click photo to enlarge)

Now streaming on Neil Young's official website is his new song "Who's Gonna Stand Up".

While the details are labeled as "January 21, 2014 - New York City", this is incorrect and intrepid Rusties have identified the track as sourced from Liverpool, 13 July 2014.

Enjoy!

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Photo of the Moment: Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Barolo, Italy - July 21, 2014

Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Collisioni Festival, Barolo, Italy - July 21, 2014
w/ Rick Rosas, Dorene Carter, and YaDonna West
Photo by Francesco Lucarelli
(Click photo to enlarge)

The Photo of the Moment is Neil Young & Crazy Horse at Collisioni Festival, Barolo, Italy - July 21, 2014 by Francesco Lucarelli.

Grazi Francesco!
ciao

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The Road RasCals Bridge Ride Update


The Road RasCals have hit the road and made it across "The Continental Divide".

Earlier this year, we learned of a delightful planned adventure of some Bridge supporters this Fall. (see The Road RasCals To Ride Across The West for The Bridge Kids).

Kloe and Lilly are biking from Denver, CO to Los Angeles, CA this Fall in order to raise money for The Bridge School.

Here's an update:
Greetings from Ridgway (Colorado)! After the first five days or so, we are safe and doing well. The trip has had a lot of unexpected turns and change-of-plans, but it's going well. We have met a lot of new people, some of which know about The Bridge School and some who we get to tell about it. I was wearing a Lincvolt tee shirt in a store and someone recognized that for Neil Young, which started a great conversation about the school.
Just wanted to give you an update. Finding a computer has proven to be really difficult so it's hard to update the blog but I'm hoping to find someway to do it soon.

Will send another update in a week or so,

Lilly
Best of luck Kloe and Lilly! Keep on pedaling in the free world!





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Tuesday, September 09, 2014

EXCLUSIVE: Q&A on Human Highway Director's Cut

Human Highway poster image

This week, the World Premiere of Human Highway (Director's Cut) will be held at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Thrasher's Wheat is pleased to bring our readers an exclusive Q&A session with a member of Neil Young's Shakey Pictures crew who worked on the research, editing and meticulous restoration under the supervision of Director Bernard Shakey.

Neil Young's 1982 post-apocalyptic musical comedy, has long been out of circulation and is regarded as a cult classic with its mythical history of production mayhem, post-production chaos and forgotten legacy.

Now, 32 years after Human Highways' first screening, Bernard Shakey's crew is ready to answer a few questions.

Image from Human Highway

Thrasher's Wheat - The film Human Highway is considered to be a cult classic somewhat similar to the legendary Journey Through the Past and has been described as "if David Lynch directed "The Wizard of Oz on acid." What surprised you going back to the footage shot back in late 70's?

Shakey Pictures - Maybe not so much surprising, but very noticeable was how well shot the film was under the direction of David Myers.

[ed - David Myers (1914–2004) was the cinematographer for the film Woodstock and Martin Scorsese's The Last Waltz among many other concert documentaries.]

TW - So what prompted the desire to produce a director's cut version of Human Highway?

SP - The version that was first screened at the Mill Valley Film Festival in 1982 really could be considered the Director’s Cut. Time went on and various edits of the film had their moment in the sun, but Mr Shakey still held onto his original vision. Along with Producer L.A Johnson, he dispatched the Shakey Pictures crew to locate, catalog and collect for assembly all the original footage that had been cut out of Human Highway post- Mill Valley. It was a lengthy undertaking.

Image from Human Highway

TW - The original release of Human Highway was 88 minutes. The director's cut version is 80 minutes. Usually these director's cut versions go to longer side not shorter. Is this tweaking/ shortening up longer scenes or scenes removed?

SP - That is correct. Once the 1982 Director’s Cut was reassembled, Bernard oversaw further refinements to the story. An astute viewer will note that while the running time of the movie is shorter than that on VHS, there are actually some new elements in the final presentation that will be screened at TIFF.

TW - Was this filmed in 35mm?

SP - Human Highway was shot in both 35mm and in 16mm film.

TW - What are we looking at now? Film edited on high resolution digital video?

SP - The Shakey Pictures team found and transferred the original negatives of the film footage, which then underwent extensive restoration and cleaning, frame by frame. Editing was in high resolution digital.

Image from Human Highway

TW - What is the sound format resolution compared to original?

SP - The sound quality is much improved over the original. The same attention to detail that was given to picture was also given to audio on this project.

The film’s original master 16 track analog tapes were transferred at 24 bit/ 192kHz, as well as the original dialog and music reels.

The new mix of Human Highway is now presented in 5.1 surround as well as in stereo.

TW - What are the release format plans? Blu-ray?

SP - After Human Highway’s theatrical run, it would be fair to say that you can expect to to see Blu-ray and DVD releases.

Image from Human Highway

TW - We know folks would love to hear the story of Woody, the wooden Indian and his mates. Were they really burned in the desert? Is Woody, the wooden Indian, we've seen recently onstage with Neil the same? A survivor?

SP - Yes, that is indeed Woody in the film. He has some scenes in the garage at Otto’s Corner. I don’t know his back story or what stock he came from, but do know that Woody embodies the strong silent type. That is well depicted in Human Highway.

Image from Human Highway

TW - Will there be a director's cut video release with "special features"? Like a vinyl album soundtrack, a booklet, deleted scenes, 'making of' documentaries, etc?

SP - It’s a bit too early to reveal what comes next out of the Shakey Pictures archives in relation to Human Highway, but there is definitely some stuff in the vaults.

Archives Montage image

Thanks Shakey Pictures!

Human Highway (Director's Cut) Trailer from Shakey Pictures on Vimeo.

Human Highway (Director's Cut) Clip 1 from Shakey Pictures on Vimeo.


Human Highway (Director's Cut) Clip 2 from Shakey Pictures on Vimeo.


More at Shakey Pictures - Human Highway.

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Sunday, September 07, 2014

"Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years" by Sharry Wilson

(Click photo to enlarge)

Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years
Review by Broken Arrow Editor Scott Sandie

I was delighted to receive an Advance Readers Copy of Sharry’s book from the publishers. I read it through quickly the first time, then went back and read most of it again. I knew a lot of this material already of course, both from the 80 pages of ‘A Shakey Education’ that I edited in 2010 for the magazine, and also the other Neil books already in existence. But there’s a large amount of detail in here and a big chunk of it is from new research. At 450+ pages, 600+ footnotes, and over 130 photos, it's a very impressive achievement; an exhaustive look at Neil’s school years, tied in neatly to his musical development. It’s described on the jacket as a ‘detailed chronological narrative of Neil Young’s early life’, and that’s exactly what it is. It leaves almost no stone unturned and is surely the definitive study of Neil Young’s early life. In some cases I have to say the detail is mind-boggling. It’s also comprehensively and vividly illustrated, with many never-before-seen photos.


Backstage at the Flamingo Club in Fort William, April 1965.
From left: Neil, Bob Clark, Ken Koblun.
Courtesy of Ken Koblun. Copyright Don Baxter.

The book is organised into three logical parts; Part One: Born In Ontario, Part Two: Winnipeg…Field Of Opportunity, Part Three: Leaving Sugar Mountain.

The opening part covers the years 1945 to 1960, and takes us in four chapters from Neil’s birth in Ontario, through Omemee to Pickering, and back to Toronto, before the move out to Winnipeg in 1960. Part Two is set wholly in Winnipeg, covering Neil’s time at Earl Grey Junior High and Kelvin High School up until he quit high school age 18 in 1964. Part Three sees Neil setting out for a life on the road as a full-time musician.

Sharry’s research consisted of two major strands; interviewing many of the people who were there at the time and were willing to go on the record about it, and exhaustive research of the Scott Young Fonds, which are held at Trent University.

In a long list of people interviewed by Sharry were many of Neil’s old classmates, friends, and of course former band members. Sharry was dogged in tracking them down and many had interesting anecdotes to tell from these early years with Neil. One or two went beyond the call of duty in offering assistance, with Ken Koblun at the top of the list.


Trent University Archives, where the Scott Young Fonds are held.

What’s a ‘fonds’? It means ‘an aggregation of documents that originate from the same source’. A fonds is different to a collection because of its organic nature. It’s a series of archival documents that have been naturally accumulated by an individual, often through day-to-day activities. The Scott Young Fonds is a very substantial collection of material (documents, paperwork, correspondence, photographs, books, memorabilia etc) gathered from his long life and were a rich source of research material. Sharry and I were fortunate to first visit the Archives at Trent University for two days back in 2009 – there will be more on this in an article in a future issue – and we were both staggered by the quantity of boxes and the quality of what they held. Scott Young was an organised and methodical man with his paperwork; he had a good filing system and to his eternal credit he seemed to have kept almost everything. You name it, it’s here and it’s availability seems like a miracle...


In the years after 2009 Sharry was granted full access to all the archival material, returned many times, and has made very good use of her findings. A surprising amount of it pertains to Neil, especially from his earliest days. The private correspondence (much of it between Scott and Rassy Young, Neil’s schools etc) is very detailed and a lot mentions or relates to Neil’s music. The photos are wide ranging, often typical family ‘snaps’ that take on new importance with the Neil Young connection. The memorabilia was a real surprise, totally unexpected. Some of it was handmade by Neil and is priceless, in all ways. In order not to spoil the book I don’t want to give too much away, you’ll enjoy discovering it yourselves. But here’s one example. Some of you might recall the famous old story of Neil and his chickens, which is told here in expanded detail. Part of the tale is that on one occasion a fox got in and killed Neil’s chickens, so to remind him to close things up each night his dad made a sign saying, ‘LOCK UP CHICKENS’. With Neil’s famous sense of humour, at some point he wrote under it, “Neil is a good boy”, presumably one night when he remembered to lock them up! And there, in box 26 of the Scott Young Fonds (amongst a whole raft of stunning material), carefully kept by Neil’s dad since 1957, is this sign, yellow with age but perfectly legible. There were moments during our first visit to Trent when words weren’t necessary, we simply looked at each other with stunned expressions as the depth and richness of the boxes’ content became clear; this was one such moment.


Taken behind the 4-D in Fort William, June 1965.
Clockwise from left: Terry Erickson, Bob Clark, Ken Koblun, Neil.

Courtesy of Ken Koblun. Copyright Don Baxter.

The narrative tells the story of Neil’s upbringing and schooling in tandem with his musical development. Central to part one is the gradual breakdown of his parent’s marriage, which led directly to his move to Winnipeg with his mother. The itinerant nature of Neil’s early years is clear, with the family making several moves before he was 12, some caused by Scott Young’s work, some by problems in the Young’s marriage, and a couple of winter stays in Florida to help with Neil’s recovery from polio. We learn of Neil’s growing interest in music – especially the fledgling sound of rock’n’roll – buying 45s, listening to his transistor radio, and trying to play his Arthur Godfrey plastic ukulele, which had been a gift from his parents. At one of several schools Neil attended he met Comrie Smith, forming his first strong musical friendship, and the pair dreamt of starting a band. Sharry takes us through all these occurrences in colourful detail, with many quotes from the principals. Stories and ‘facts’ that have been wrong for years are corrected, and a torrent of new facts emerge. As an example Sharry has confirmed (with Neil’s ‘camp’) that it’s Comrie Smith who’s playing guitar and sitting on those steps with Neil in “Don’t Be Denied”. Further, it’s at Lawrence Park Collegiate in Toronto – not the oft-quoted Earl Grey Junior High in Winnipeg. What we get throughout the book is many new stories, and a lot more flesh on the bones of older stories. Neil’s relationship with Comrie Smith is a good example of this. We learn a huge amount more about their musical relationship and how the two grew together, Comrie emerging as an important cog in Neil’s early musical development. Much of this information comes from notes that Comrie made back in 1970 (‘Notes on Neil Young’) that had been kept by his sister and that Sharry tracked down.


Lawrence Park Collegiate, Toronto

As Part One draws to a close the Young’s marriage is over, Scott has moved out and Rassy and Neil are ready to move to Winnipeg.

And it’s in Winnipeg, during his years at Earl Grey Junior High School and Kelvin High School, that the music really took off and the writing concentrates on that. Sharry has dug deep to find out a lot more about Neil’s musical development here, and we are taken on a trip of discovery as Neil’s dream gradually takes shape through his various bands. The Jades; one half-hour gig at a Friday night school canteen dance, Sharry has details of their set-list. The Esquires; Neil’s first serious band, he had answered an ad for a guitar player in the Winnipeg Free Post. In three or four months he played several gigs with them before too many late nights forced Rassy to tell him to quit. And it’s here that we see another stunning example of Sharry’s research. It’s a fantastic, previously unseen, earliest ever photograph of Neil onstage with The Esquires. It was taken at Patterson’s Ranch House in February 1961 and shows the five band members neatly dressed in matching dark trousers, white shirts and dark ties. Neil is in the rear beside his amp, back mostly turned to the audience, staring intently at the neck of his guitar as he plays. It deservedly gets a full page in the book. We also learn the tantalising information that The Esquires were captured on 8mm silent film at a dance before a full house of 300 at the same venue, but that the film has been lost down the years. The Classics; only five shows, but by now Neil had teamed up with bass player Ken Koblun, who of course was to become a central figure in Neil’s early career. They soon changed their name to the Squires, performed in excess of 200 gigs. Neil soon quit school, heading out to find fortune and fame, and the rest is history.

As well as the musical sections, Sharry skilfully weaves in what was going on with Neil’s schooling, his home life with Rassy, and his somewhat strained relationship with his father. The level of detail continues throughout and it makes for a great read.

I should make special mention of the photographs. There are over 130 spread throughout the book and appear every few pages. They start when Neil was a naked toddler in 1946 and go through to him playing solo acoustic (thankfully now fully clothed) onstage at The Riverboat in late 1965. There are many that you will not have seen before and I found almost all completely fascinating. Some I would not have believed existed...but they do. For example, we get to see a Classic’s playlist from 1962. Sharry has persistently tracked them all down and they’re here.

broken-arrow-cover-117-feb-2010.jpg
Neil Young, May 1955
Mayfair - Rosedale Park, Toronto, Canada
Photo by Mary Ellen Blanch

Special mention too for Ken Koblun, who graciously answered endless queries from the author and then kindly put at Sharry’s disposal his famous ‘List Of Shows’. Neil calls this ‘The Gospel According To Ken’, and it covers all the shows that Ken performed with The Classics, The Squires, The Springfield and Three’s-A-Crowd from November 1962 up to December 1967. Accompanying this list in the appendices are five Squires songlists from 1963 and 1964 – these look very interesting and need some analysis. The appendices are followed by comprehensive foot notes (more than 600) and a detailed bibliography.

In terms of criticism, there are some places where I might question if the detail, fascinating ‘though it is, is just a bit too much and perhaps doesn’t particularly add to the story, especially for the casual fan. But those occasional side trips are part of the author’s makeup. Sharry wants to give us ALL the details and her writing reflects that. Some readers might say, 'Did I need to know that?' And as with any biographical work of great detail there will be some who absorb every word, and some who might skip over parts. But warts and all, it’s here! I hope you enjoy the read.

Thanks to Sharry for supplying some of her unused photos for this review.


Author Sharry Wilson in a Town in North Ontario


Also, see Author Sharry Wilson's site: Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years.

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Saturday, September 06, 2014

Neil Young Guitarist Poncho Sampedro Wants a Crazy Horse Farewell Tour | Rolling Stone


Crazy Horse's Poncho & Neil Young - Europe 2014
Photo by Matt Kent/WireImage

A must read interview with Poncho from Rolling Stone by Andy Greene.

Frank "Poncho" Sampedro discusses a multitude of topics including hoping for a "proper" Crazy Horse farewell tour, his 2013 hand injury and Billy Talbot's health.
The group's future plans are unclear, and Poncho says that Crazy Horse almost certainly won't appear at Farm Aid on September 13th in Raleigh, North Carolina. "It's just a huge expense to bring Crazy Horse there," says Poncho. "Neil did tell me that he loves this band, he loves playing with us and he wants to do it as much as he can. He didn't talk about any sort of timeframe, and I'm sure he loves playing with CSNY, too."

On the plane back to America, Poncho did approach Young with his take on what the future should hold. "I said to him, we should get together in the spring, record another Crazy Horse album and do a farewell tour next year,'" says Poncho. "Elliot was saying, 'Great idea!' But Neil's a poker player. He didn't really say anything. He's always thinking about what he's doing today and tomorrow, and right now he has acoustic shows, Pono and he's working on a fiction novel."
More on Neil Young Guitarist Poncho Sampedro Wants a Crazy Horse Farewell Tour | Rolling Stone.

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Friday, September 05, 2014

Open Letter: CSNY 1974 Limited Edition Deluxe Box Set Orders


CSNY 1974 | Limited Edition Deluxe Box Set

The following comment was submitted on the CSNY 1974 | Limited Edition Deluxe Box Set by George Koumantzelis:
Dear Thrashers Wheat Readers,

On May 29, I purchased a copy of the Limited Edition $500.00 CSNY 1974 Box Set from CSNY Deluxe. On June 12th, my bank and VISA confirmed that my credit card was charged over $558.00 !!! ...

The online - and subsequent emails from CSNY - states that we would all receive our items "5 Weeks" after Release Date - which was July 12. ... It is now September 4th, and I have still not received my Box Set. ...

Not only that, but on my credit card statement, it says that my money was paid to a BIG DOT PRINT company in Los Angeles, CA - Phone Number 866-962-9482. http://www.manta.com/c/mx20ykp/big-dot-print ... Does anyone know what is going on? ...

Thanks! - a Loyal Neil Young fan since 1967 !!

- George Koumantzelis / Sept 4, 2014
Total bummer George and sorry this has happened.

We've heard from several others who are just as frustrated and disappointed.

Here's what we know. From Classic Rock Debacle: Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young Sue Westside Printer - Business | Venice-Mar Vista, California Patch By Penny Arévalo (Patch Staff):
The company behind the folk rock group Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young is suing a print shop for allegedly failing to fill online orders for box sets of the band’s 1974 reunion tour and refusing to return nearly $240,000 in revenue collected from the first buyers.

CSNY Recordings LLC filed the lawsuit Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court against D’Andrea Graphics Corp. and its owner, David D’Andrea. The lawsuit alleges breach of contract, intentional interference with contract and conversion. The complaint seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

A representative for D’Andrea did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment. Both CSNY Recordings and D’Andrea Graphics are based in West Los Angeles.

According to the complaint, the two sides reached a verbal agreement in May for the manufacture and distribution by D’Andrea of 1,250 of the box sets. D’Andrea was to collect all revenue from sales on behalf of CSNY and to split the proceeds after recovering its out-of-pocket expenses, according to the suit.

The box sets were to be sold through a website with editorial content and photos provided by CSNY, the suit states. CSNY announced the release of the box set on May 29, the suit states.

But when CSNY attempted to get updates on sales from D’Andrea, it did not hear from the company until June 17, when D’Andrea said he did not understand why sales were lower than expected, according to the lawsuit. CSNY told D’Andrea to expand the shipping options, the suit states.

However, on July 18 D’Andrea repudiated the contract, the suit states. CSNY then found out that D’Andrea Graphics did not pay most of its vendors, including the website designer, according to the lawsuit.

D’Andrea received $237,620 from box set buyers, but refused CSNY’s demands to turn the money over to them after the band took over the manufacture and distribution of the music and set up a new website, the suit states.

CSNY was forced to tell many of the first customers to buy the box sets that their orders will likely not be shipped until October and several have cancelled their purchases and demanded refunds as a result, the suit states.

“Plaintiff has been forced to refund their purchases out of its own funds because plaintiff is not in possession of the pre-order revenues,” the suit states.

CSNY was first formed in 1968 by David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and Neil Young.

--City News Service
So George and others, it looks like steps are being taken to straighten out the situation. Whether and when you receive your box set and/or a refund seems unknown.

We'll try and report more as we learn more.

Definitely "pre-order downs".

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Thursday, September 04, 2014

Neil Young on "SEPARATION OF CORPORATION AND STATE"


So what's on Neil's mind lately?

From the official neilyoung.com web page:
SEPARATION OF CORPORATION AND STATE

September 1, 2014, from undertheinfluencefilm.com

"Under the guise of democracy, huge global corporations have purchased our politicians and are writing laws that poison our planet and dismantle our democratic process. Corporations have usurped democracy by using their vast wealth to influence politics and silence the citizen voice in government.

All natural living systems are in rapid decline, pushing the human race ever closer to extinction. Despite enacted environmental protections, global corporations have recklessly abused the four natural resources that we rely on for life (air, soil, fresh water and oceans) as an open sewer for their toxic wastes with blatant disregard for humankind.

Neither the environmental crisis nor the many other social and economic crises we face can be addressed until democracy is restored and this cycle of corruption is broken by corporate money being removed from politics.

UNDER THE INFLUEN$E focuses on what can and is being done by conscious and committed citizens, movements and businesses to reverse the ecological destruction and take back democracy."

Read more and see the trailer [below]

People, please go to this link and share.

This is how I feel about what is going on in OUR world. You can learn here. --NY

SNEAK PREVIEW... from UNDERtheINFLUENCE on Vimeo.


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"I've Got The Revolution Blues": Neil Young on Social Revolution



It seems that just about everyone has "The Revolution Blues" these days.

As the "Big Shift" inexorably approaches, a look back at some very significant comments by Neil Young on social revolution.

Also, some of the most eloquent and articulate speaking that we've ever seen by Neil in an interview.

Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff interviews Neil Young at the Cloudforce Conference 2011 in Japan. Young compares the youth movements of the 60s and 70s with the social movements (Arab Spring, Occupy Wall Street) of today, noting how social media technology is enabling people around the world to effect change in ways never imagined.

Recorded live in Tokyo, Japan, December 14, 2011.

We must say that we were quite pleased to hear Neil discuss Kent State and Occupy, especially after the attacks we saw on our post #OccupyWallStreet 2011 and Kent State Ohio 1970: Is This Really Deja Vu? back in November 2011.

When we posted this back in 2012 , there were a number of comments on the subject and here's one by Mother Nature on the Run who said...
I think television helped shape a lot of what happened on the campuses in the 60s, too. We saw injustices like images of little girls down South getting hosed during demonstrations and protests. We were watching their brave and courageous mothers and fathers being beaten and treated like animals. We saw people grieving for their murdered relatives and friends afterwards.

Getting high helped many of us escape once in awhile from the inhumanity of our own people. Unfortunately, some of our friends and family started developing an addiction for the high and couldn't find their way back to reality.

So here we are, 40, 50 years later and wondering if the social revolution ever ended. Nope, it still raves on in so many ways through musicians and artists work.

I would disagree with Neil by saying some of the music, most notably RAP, is very much social protest music against social injustices of the people who listen to it.

I very much agree with Neil that if we are open to it, we can learn a lot from the Japanese and their survival, their reverence and respect for social order and reconciliation, and overall mutual collectivism. Unlike here in America, the head of the nail sticking out gets hammered in.

Is Neil is referring to mainstream-pop culture music today that appears to void of social consciousness raising? He forgot the sidebar note about there ALWAYS being an undercurrent in art & music & literature directed at those guilty of social injustice. Only until it becomes part of our collective social conscience can we make a difference or bring about change that will improve upon the condition for all life on our planet.

Neil continues to give an honest-to-God account of the human condition which is why his work is still so relevant today. He writes how most of us are feeling on any given day or any day of major significance.

Remember? That one song he pulls out of our collective consciousness? "Imagine?" It's the one song that said it all after the tragedy of September 11.

Remember when he did Hank's "Alone and Forsaken" that one time, too? The songs he doesn't write, he pulls out of obscurity. He pulls it right out from our hearts:

"We met in the springtime when blossoms unfold. The pastures were green and the meadows were gold. Our love was in flower as summer grew on; her love like the leaves now has withered and gone.

The roses have faded, there's frost at my door. The birds in the morning don't sing anymore.

The grass in the valley is starting to die & out in the darkness the whippoorwills cry.

Alone and forsaken by fate and by man. Oh, Lord, if you hear me please hold to my hand. Oh please understand.

Oh, where has she gone to, oh, where can she be? She may have forsaken some other like me.
She promised to honor, to love and obey; each vow was a plaything that she threw away.

The darkness is falling, the sky has turned gray; a hound in the distance is starting to bey
I wonder, I wonder - what she's thinking of?

Forsaken, forgotten - without any love."
And speaking of deja vu all over again, fast forward to today and unbelievably, Tin Soldiers and Nixon's Coming, yet again.

So just occupy the music, how about it, OK?

Thanks Denis & MNOTR!


"Try To Remember Peace"

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Wednesday, September 03, 2014

▶ "Oh! Sweet Nuthin'": Tribute to Lou Reed at 2013 Bridge School Benefit Concert - Neil Young & Friends



Here's a tribute to the late, great Lou Reed at the 2013 Bridge School Benefit Concert by Neil Young & Friends.

The loss of the hugely influential Lou Reed came just a day before the annual Bridge concerts, so there was great anticipation about not if -- but who - would step forward to pay homage to Mr. Street Hassle himself. The tribute task fell to My Morning Jacket's Jim James, who covered the Velvet Underground’s “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” along with Neil Young, Elvis Costello, Jenny Lewis, and more.

Also, check the great save by the strings when the strap comes off of Neil's guitar towards the end.
***
On February 18, 2010, Lou Reed paid tribute to Neil Young at a concert for the Vancouver Olympics Tribute. Coming on stage in leather, Reed played a heavy electric rap version of “Helpless”.

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Lou Reed
Vancouver Olympics Tribute to Neil Young Reviews - February 18, 2010
Photo by THE BACKSTAGE RIDER


So Lou, how's that dirty boulevard these days? A little cleaner hopefully.

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Sunday, August 31, 2014

The Adventure Set To Begin: The Road RasCals To Ride Across The West for The Bridge Kids

Kloe and Lilly - The Road RasCals

Earlier this year, we learned of a delightful planned adventure of some Bridge supporters this Fall. (see The Road RasCals To Ride Across The West for The Bridge Kids).

Kloe and Lilly are biking from Denver, CO to Los Angeles, CA this Fall in order to raise money for The Bridge School.

In 1986 Pegi Young founded The Bridge School for students with speech and physical limitations. The school is awesome, and students learn how to utilize alternative communication and assistive technology.

You might wonder what biking has to do with The Bridge School? Basically, Kloe and Lilly want to go on a bike ride and raise money for the Bridge Kids and more. Much more. Here's what Lilly writes on her blog Road RasCals | "Quick, what's the number for 911?":
I just want to say thank you to everyone who donated to The Bridge School in honor of our Road Rascals adventure. Kloe and Kyle are officially in Denver, and we leave Tuesday bright and early. The final bits of planning are coming into place- we finally have a place to stay every night, which is a huge relief. We'll be spreading the word of The Bridge School and the different programs that the school offers throughout the trip which will be great.
My sister, Leah, and friend, Alex, are going to be putting stuff on the Road Rascals blog as we send them updates throughout the trip, so you can follow how it's going. Also, the fundraiser will be up throughout the trip so please feel free to post it on social media and tell your friends about it.

Anyway, I just want to send a final thank you before we head out. It is pretty cool that this started out as an idea and is now actually happening. And it's even cooler that so many people have supported us in the ways you have. I know this sounds generic, but I typed each of your email address' out and really can't thank you enough. Thank you so much for supporting Kloe, Kyle and myself, and we look forward to telling you stories long after you have any interest in hearing them.
Seriously, thanks,
Lilly
Best of luck to Kloe and Lilly and their journey to help out The Bridge School! We'll be posting updates as their journey start date approaches.






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Wednesday, August 27, 2014

▶ "Only Love Can Break Your Heart" - Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Cork, Ireland 10/07/14



"Only Love Can Break Your Heart" by Neil Young & Crazy Horse at The Marquee Cork Ireland on July 10, 2014

"I was always thinking of games that I was playing
Trying to make the best of my time

But only love can break your heart
Try to be sure right from the start
Yes only love can break your heart
What if your world should fall a-part?"

"Only Love Can Break Your Heart" by Neil Young


Johnny D's - Boston, MA - 9/11/13
Photo by Steve Babineau - Sports Action Photography

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Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Love To Burn, Separate Ways, Barstool Blues & The Days That Used to Be: Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Summer 2014



"Love To Burn" by Neil Young & Crazy Horse at Mönchengladbach, Germany on July 25, 2014.

"Late one night
I was walking in the valley of hearts
The spirit came to me
And said 'you've got a move to start
You've gotta take the first step
You've gotta crawl to be tall'

And then she told me somethin',
That I'll never forget

You got love to burn
You better take a chance on love
You better let your guard down

You better take a chance,
.... a chance on love."

"Love To Burn" by Neil Young



"Separate Ways" by Neil Young & Crazy Horse at Liverpool, England on July 13, 2014


"I won't apologize
The light shone from in your eyes
It isn't gone,
It will soon come back again.
Though we go our separate ways
Lookin' for better days

And I'm feeling better now,
a lot more alive somehow,
my heart is open
and my love comes pouring through.""

"Separate Ways" by Neil Young



"Barstool Blues" by Neil Young & Crazy Horse at Mönchengladbach, Germany on July 25, 2014.

"I have seen you in the movies and in those magazines at night
I saw you on the barstool when you held that glass so tight
And I saw you in my nightmares, but I'll see you in my dreams
And I might live a thousand years before I know what that means"

"Barstool Blues" by Neil Young



"Days That Used to Be" by Neil Young & Crazy Horse at The Marquee Cork Ireland on July 10, 2014

"People say don't rock the boat,
Let things go their own way
Ideas that once seemed so right
Now have gotten hard to say
I wish that I could talk to you,
And that you could talk to me
'Cos there's very few of us left my friend
From the days that used to be"

"Days That Used to Be" by Neil Young



Pegi Young "I Don't Want To Talk About It" (Danny Whitten) at her show in Anaheim, California on 22 November 2011

"I can tell by your eyes
That you've probably been cryin' forever
And the stars in the sky don't mean nothin' to you
They're a mirror

I don't wanna talk about it, how you broke my heart
If I stay here just a little bit longer
If I stay here won't you listen to my heart
Oh my heart?"

"I Don't Want To Talk About It" by Danny Whitten


Neil & Pegi - 2001

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Willie for a Nobel!
#Willie4Nobel

Willie Nelson for Nobel Peace Prize
for Farm Aid and his work on
alternative fuels, and world peace initiatives.

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"In the >field< of opportunity
It's plowin' time again."

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"There's more to the picture
Than meets the eye"

#BigShift

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Neil Young FAQ:
Everything Left to Know About the Iconic and Mercurial Rocker
"an indispensable reference"

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Paul McCartney and Neil Young

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"You can make a difference
If you really a try"

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John Lennon and Neil Young


"hailed by fans as a wonderful read"

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The Supergroup of the 20th Century



Director Jonathan Demme's Exquisite film "Heart of Gold"

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Eddie Vedder and Neil Young

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Revisiting The Significance of
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"The revolution will not be televised"
... it will be blogged, streamed,
tweeted, shared and liked
The Embarrassment of Mainstream Media

Turn Off Your TV & Have A Life


"Everything Is Bullshit" +
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Turn Off the News (Build a Garden)


Neil Young 2016 Year in Review:
The Year of The Wheat

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Kurt Cobain and Neil Young

Neil Young's Feedback:
An Acquired Taste?

Young Neil: The Sugar Mountain Years
by Rustie Sharry "Keepin' Jive Alive in T.O." Wilson

"the definitive source of Neil Young's formative childhood years in Canada"

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Joni Mitchell & Neil Young

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Bob and Neil

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So Who Really Was "The Godfather of Grunge"?


Four Dead in Ohio
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So What Really Happened at Kent State?


The Four Dead in Ohio



May The FOUR Be With You #MayThe4thBeWithYou

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dissent is not treason
Dissent is the highest form of patriotism

Rockin' In The Free World



Sing Truth to Power!
When Neil Young Speaks Truth To Power,
The World Listens

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Emmylou Harris and Neil Young

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Wilco and Neil Young

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Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young

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Elton John and Neil Young

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Lynyrd Skynyrd and Neil Young

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The Meaning of "Sweet Home Alabama" Lyrics


Neil Young Nation -
"The definitive Neil Young fan book"

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"Powderfinger"
What does the song mean?

Random Neil Young Link of the Moment
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Bonnie Raitt and Neil Young

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I'm Proud to Be A Union Man

UNITED WE STAND/DIVIDED WE FALL


When Neil Young is Playing,
You Shut the Fuck Up


Class War:
They Started It and We'll Finish It...
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A battle raged on the open page...
No Fear, No Surrender. Courage
WE WON'T BACK DOWN. NEVER STAND DOWN.

"What if Al Qaeda blew up the levees?"
Full Disclousre Now


"I've Got The Revolution Blues"

Willie Nelson & Neil Young
Willie Nelson for Nobel Peace Prize



John Mellencamp:
Why Willie Deserves a Nobel

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BOYCOTT HATE

Love and Only Love

"Thinking about what a friend had said,
I was hoping it was a lie"


We're All On
A Journey Through the Past

Neil Young's Moon Songs
Tell Us The F'n TRUTH
(we can handle it... try us)

Freedom:
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Does Anything Else Really Matter?

"Nobody's free until everybody's free."
~~ Fannie Lou Hamer

Here Comes "The Big Shift"
#BigShift

Maybe everything you think you know is wrong? NOTHING IS AS IT SEEMS
"It's all illusion anyway."

Propaganda = Mind Control
NOTHING IS AS IT SEEMS
Guess what?
"Symbols Rule the World, not Words or Laws."
... and symbolism will be their downfall...

Brighter Planet's 350 Challenge
Be The Rain, Be The Change

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the truth will set you free
This Machine Kills Fascists


"Children of Destiny" - THE Part of THE Solution

(Frame from Official Music Video)

war is not the answer
yet we are
Still Living With War

"greed is NOT good"
Hey Big Brother!
Stop Spying On Us!
Civic Duty Is Not Terrorism

The Achilles Heel
#NullifyNSA
Orwell (and Grandpa) Was Right
“Emancipate yourself from mental slavery.”
~~ Bob Marley

The Essence of "The Doubters"



Yes, There's Definitely A Hole in The Sky


Even Though The Music Died 50+ Years Ago
,
Open Up the "Tired Eyes" & Wake up!
"consciousness is near"
What's So Funny About
Peace, Love, & Understanding & Music?

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Show Me A Sign

"Who is John Galt?"
To ask the question is to know the answer

"Whosoever shall give up his liberty for a temporary security
deserves neither liberty nor safety."

~~ Benjamin Franklin

Words

(Between the lines of age)


And in the end, the love you take
Is equal to the love you make

~~ John & Paul

the zen of neil
the power of rust
the karma of the wheat

~Om-Shanti.

Namaste