Category Archives: Neil Young

Classic footage: The Old Laughing Lady – Neil Young busking in Glasgow 1976

Neil Young busking

Classic footage: The Old Laughing Lady – Neil Young Busking in Glasgow 1976

The Story Behind the Footage (from the YouTube channel, Nemo Wieener):
“The day was April 2, 1976. Neil Young was flying into Glasgow, and a local camera crew was waiting at the airport to meet him. Director Murray Grigor and cinematographer David Peat had been hired by Young through his record company. As they waited there, at the airport, they had no idea what to expect.

“The irony,” Peat told Open Culture, “is that neither Murray or myself were particularly knowledgeable about the rock world, and we knew little of this guy Neil Young. So we turned up at the airport in sports jackets and ties to meet him!”

Young’s scheduled flight from London arrived, but he wasn’t on it. When a second flight came in, Peat and Grigor watched anxiously as all the passengers cleared the terminal. Still no Young. Finally, said Peat, “this tall bloke in a long coat came ambling down the corridor.” The filmmakers introduced themselves to Young and asked what he wanted.

“Just give me some funky shit footage,” said Young.

“Nae bother, as we say in Scotland,” Peat said. So the filmmakers tagged along as the musician and his band, Crazy Horse, headed into the city. At this point Murray Grigor picks up the story: “Our filming got off to a tricky start. When Neil and the band finally made it to their lunch in the Albany Hotel’s penthouse, one of them set fire to the paper table decorations, which we filmed. ‘Just like Nam,’ another one said as he warmed his hands over the small inferno lapping up towards the inflammable ceiling.”

Continue reading Classic footage: The Old Laughing Lady – Neil Young busking in Glasgow 1976

March 20: Neil Young recorded Cinnamon Girl in 1969

OLD post … You’re being redirected to a newer version……

Neil Young opened up his second long-player Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969) with this concise, yet hard driving love song. It also effectively began his relationship with the backing combo Crazy Horse. Musically the track is an uncomplicated three-chord rocker and shows off Young’s infamous one-note solo motif during the instrumental ‘middle eight’ bars between the chorus and verse. ..
~Lindsay Planer (allmusic.com)
Continue reading March 20: Neil Young recorded Cinnamon Girl in 1969

March 15: Neil Young – Only Love Can Break Your Heart (1970)

neil young only love can break

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 apart?

… the sublimely lovely songs like “Only Love Can Break Your Heart,” which went into the Top 40 in 1970. And its success probably did not discourage the songwriter from recording the largely acoustic Harvest and its number one single, “Heart of Gold,” a year later. “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” is the sort of song that is at once inimitable in style and yet almost universal in appeal and sentiment — perhaps to the point of seeming trite; the words are sort an update of sort on Tin Pan Alley songs like “You Always Hurt the One You Love,” and the wistful melody feels like it has also been around forever, though one would be hard-pressed to find it somewhere else.
~Bill Janovitz (allmusic.com)

Continue reading March 15: Neil Young – Only Love Can Break Your Heart (1970)

March 11: Déjà Vu (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album) released in 1970

crosby stills nash young deja vu

March 11: Déjà Vu (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album) released in 1970

 

One of the most hotly awaited second albums in history — right up there with those by the Beatles and the Band — Déjà Vu lived up to its expectations and rose to number one on the charts.
~Bruce Eder (allmusic.com)

Almost Cut My Hair – Live Wembley 1974:

Continue reading March 11: Déjà Vu (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album) released in 1970

February 06: Neil Young records “Old Man” in 1971

neil young old man

Old man look at my life,
I’m a lot like you were.
Old man look at my life,
I’m a lot like you were.

“Old Man” was one of the highlights of Neil Young’s Harvest album, with a haunting melody strong enough to have made it a good choice as a single. It was indeed released as a single in 1972, but it made only #31, possibly because it came just a few months after the chart-topping “Heart of Gold,” which might have blunted its commercial impact a bit. Nevertheless, it got mucho airplay on FM radio and is one of Young’s more familiar songs, especially to those who prefer the more gentle singer-songwriting face of his work. ..
~Richie Unterberg (allmusic.com)

Neil Young – Old Man, original 1971 version:

Continue reading February 06: Neil Young records “Old Man” in 1971