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Looking back at the blockbuster success of "Heart of Gold," the mellow country-rock tune that became his first number one single and only Billboard Top 40 hit in 1971,
Neil Young remarked that the song "put me in the middle of the road. Traveling there soon became a bore so I headed for the ditch."
Young wrote this passage for the liner notes of
Decade, a double-disc compilation that documented the first part of his career, ten years that took him from the pioneering Los Angeles rock & roll band
Buffalo Springfield, through his emergence as a lone folk-rock troubadour and his alliance with
Crosby, Stills & Nash, to his noisy, rambling wanderings with
Crazy Horse. Over the years, he would tap back into these different sounds and personas, but his avoidance of the middle of the road pushed him into eccentric territory his singer/songwriter peers would generally avoid.
Young's willfulness could be as much a hindrance as an attribute -- famously, Geffen Records sued him for delivering albums that were "uncharacteristic" -- but his muse also led to a series of distinctive, indelible records whose legacy sometimes only revealed itself over time; eventually, the electro experiments of 1982's
Trans were acknowledged as an artistic achievement, not a commercial disaster. Many of
Young's most enduring works arrived in the '70s, when he alternated between such bruised, beautiful introspection as 1970's
After the Gold Rush and noisy guitar jams like 1969's
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, taking detours for such after-hours decadence as 1975's
Tonight's the Night.
Young would follow this rough blueprint for years, swaying between noisy rock and intimate folk. Occasionally, his muse led him directly into the cultural zeitgeist, as it did during the 1990s, when he was hailed the Godfather of Grunge and collaborated with
Pearl Jam, and he always felt compelled to address social ills, whether it was through his 2006 Iraq War protest album
Living with War or The Monsanto Years, an album about the environment made with Promise of the Real in 2015.
Young often returned to his home base of
Crazy Horse -- they backed him on
Colorado and Barn, albums released in 2019 and 2021, respectively -- yet despite these constants in his career, he remained a vital, unpredictable presence for decades, challenging himself and his audience.
Born in Toronto, Canada,
Neil Young moved to Winnipeg with his mother following her divorce from his sports journalist father. He began playing music in high school. Not only did he play in garage rock outfits like the Squires, but he also played in local folk clubs and coffeehouses, where he eventually met
Joni Mitchell and
Stephen Stills. During the mid-'60s, he returned to Toronto, where he played as a solo folk act. By 1966, he'd joined
the Mynah Birds, which also featured bassist
Bruce Palmer and
Rick James. The group recorded an album's worth of material for Motown, none of which was released at the time. Frustrated by his lack of success,
Young moved to Los Angeles in his Pontiac hearse, taking
Palmer along as support. Shortly after they arrived in L.A., they happened to meet
Stills, and they formed
Buffalo Springfield, who quickly became one of the leaders of the California folk-rock scene.
Despite the success of
Buffalo Springfield, the group was plagued with tension, and
Young quit the band several times before finally leaving to become a solo artist in May of 1968. Hiring
Elliot Roberts as his manager,
Young signed with
Reprise Records and released his eponymous debut album in early 1969. By the time the album was released, he had begun playing with a local band called the Rockets, which featured guitarist
Danny Whitten, bassist
Billy Talbot, and drummer
Ralph Molina.
Young renamed the group
Crazy Horse and had them support him on his second album,
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, which was recorded in just two weeks. Featuring such
Young staples as "Cinnamon Girl" and "Down by the River," the album went gold. Following the completion of the record, he began jamming with
Crosby, Stills & Nash, eventually joining the group for their spring 1970 album
Déjà Vu. Although he was now part of
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, he continued to record as a solo artist, releasing
After the Gold Rush in August 1970. The album, along with its accompanying single "Only Love Can Break Your Heart," established
Young as a solo star, and fame only increased through his association with
CSN&Y.
Although
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young were a very successful act, they were also volatile, and they had split by the spring 1971 release of the live
Four Way Street. The following year,
Young had his first number one album with the mellow country-rock of
Harvest, which also featured his first (and only) number one single, "Heart of Gold." Instead of embracing his success, he spurned it, following it with the noisy, bleak live film Journey Through the Past. Both the movie and its soundtrack received terrible reviews, as did the live
Time Fades Away, an album recorded with the Stray Gators that was released in 1973.
Both Journey Through the Past and
Time Fades Away signaled that
Young was entering a dark period in his life, but they only scratched the surface of his anguish. Inspired by the overdose deaths of
Danny Whitten in 1972 and his roadie Bruce Berry the following year,
Young wrote and recorded the bleak, druggy
Tonight's the Night late in 1973, but declined to release it at the time. Instead, he released
On the Beach, which was nearly as harrowing, in 1974;
Tonight's the Night finally appeared in the spring of 1975. By the time of its release,
Young had recovered, as indicated by the record's hard-rocking follow-up,
Zuma, an album recorded with
Crazy Horse and released later that year.
Young's focus began to wander in 1976, as he recorded the duet album
Long May You Run with
Stephen Stills and then abandoned his partner midway through the supporting tour. The following year, he recorded the country-rock-oriented
American Stars 'n Bars, which featured vocals by
Nicolette Larson, who was also prominent on 1978's
Comes a Time. Prior to the release of
Comes a Time,
Young scrapped the country-rock album Homegrown and assembled the triple-album retrospective
Decade. At the end of 1978, he embarked on an arena tour called Rust Never Sleeps, which was designed as a showcase for new songs. Half of the concert featured
Young solo, the other half featured him with
Crazy Horse. That was the pattern that
Rust Never Sleeps, released in the summer of 1979, followed. The record was hailed as a comeback, proving that
Young was one of the few rock veterans who attacked punk rock head-on. That fall he released the double-album
Live Rust and the live movie
Rust Never Sleeps.
Rust Never Sleeps restored
Young to his past glory, but he perversely decided to trash his goodwill in 1980 with
Hawks & Doves, a collection of acoustic songs that bore the influence of conservative right-wing politics. In 1981,
Young released the heavy rock album
Re*ac*tor, which received poor reviews. Following its release, he left
Reprise for the fledgling Geffen Records, where he was promised lots of money and artistic freedom.
Young decided to push his Geffen contract to the limit, releasing the electronic
Trans in December 1982, where his voice was recorded through a computerized vocoder. The album and its accompanying technology-dependent tour were received with bewildered, negative reviews. The rockabilly of
Everybody's Rockin' (1983) was equally scorned, and
Young soon settled into a cult audience for the mid-'80s.
Over the course of the decade,
Young released three albums that were all stylistic exercises. In 1985, he released the straight country
Old Ways, which was followed by the new wave-tinged
Landing on Water the following year. He returned to
Crazy Horse for 1987's
Life, but by that time, he and Geffen had grown sick of each other, and he returned to
Reprise in 1988. His first album for
Reprise was the bluesy, horn-driven
This Note's for You, which was supported by an acclaimed video that satirized rock stars endorsing commercial products. At the end of the year, he recorded a reunion album with
Crosby, Stills & Nash called
American Dream, which was greeted with savagely negative reviews.
American Dream didn't prepare any observer for the critical and commercial success of 1989's
Freedom, which found
Young following the half-acoustic/half-electric blueprint of
Rust Never Sleeps with fine results. Around the time of its release,
Young became a hip name to drop in indie rock circles, and he was the subject of a tribute record titled The Bridge in 1989. The following year,
Young reunited with
Crazy Horse for
Ragged Glory, a loud, feedback-drenched album that received his strongest reviews since the '70s. For the supporting tour,
Young hired the avant-rock band
Sonic Youth as his opening group, providing them with needed exposure while earning him hip credibility within alternative rock scenes. On the advice of
Sonic Youth,
Young added the noise collage EP Arc as a bonus to his 1991 live album,
Weld.
Weld and the
Sonic Youth tour helped position
Neil Young as an alternative and grunge rock forefather, but he decided to abandon loud music for its 1992 follow-up,
Harvest Moon. An explicit sequel to his 1972 breakthrough,
Harvest Moon became
Young's biggest hit in years, and he supported the record with an appearance on
MTV Unplugged, which was released the following year as an album. Also in 1993, Geffen released the rarities collection Lucky Thirteen. The following year, he released
Sleeps with Angels, which was hailed as a masterpiece in some quarters. Following its release,
Young began jamming with
Pearl Jam, eventually recording an album with the Seattle band in early 1995. The resulting record,
Mirror Ball, was released to positive reviews in the summer of 1995, but it wasn't the commercial blockbuster it was expected to be; due to legal reasons,
Pearl Jam's name was not allowed to be featured on the cover.
In the summer of 1996, he reunited with
Crazy Horse for
Broken Arrow and supported it with a brief tour. That tour was documented in
Jim Jarmusch's 1997 film
Year of the Horse, which was accompanied by a double-disc live album. In 1999,
Young reunited with
Crosby, Stills & Nash for the first time in a decade, supporting their
Looking Forward LP with the supergroup's first tour in a quarter century. A new solo effort,
Silver & Gold, followed in the spring of 2000. In recognition of his 2000 summer tour,
Young released the live album Road Rock, Vol. 1 the following fall, showcasing a two-night account of
Young's performance at the Red Rocks Amphitheater in Morrison, Colorado, in September 2000. A DVD version titled Red Rocks Live was issued that December, and included 12 tracks initially unavailable on Road Rock, Vol. 1. His next studio project was his most ambitious yet, a concept album about small-town life titled Greendale that he also mounted as a live dramatic tour and indie film.
In early 2005,
Young was diagnosed with a potentially deadly brain aneurysm. Undergoing treatment didn't slow him down, however, as he continued to write and record his next project. The acoustically based
Prairie Wind appeared in the fall, with the concert film Heart of Gold, based around the album and directed by
Jonathan Demme, released in 2006. That year also saw the release of the controversial
Living with War, a collection of protest songs against the war in Iraq that featured titles such as "Let's Impeach the President," "Shock and Awe," and "Lookin' for a Leader." Restless, prolific, and increasingly self-referential,
Young issued
Chrome Dreams II late in 2007 and the car-themed
Fork in the Road in 2009. Later in 2009, he finally issued the first installment in his long-rumored
Archives series, Archives, Vol. 1, a massive first volume that combined over ten CD and DVD discs in a single box. As he was prepping
Archives, Vol. 2,
Young entered the studio with producer
Daniel Lanois and recorded
Le Noise, which appeared in the fall of 2010.
Archives, Vol. 2 was not forthcoming, however, as
Young stayed very active during the early 2010s, he finally reunited with
Richie Furay and
Stephen Stills as
Buffalo Springfield for a pair of shows at his annual Bridge School Benefit in the fall of 2010. It wasn't a complete reunion, since bassist
Bruce Palmer had died in 2004 and drummer
Dewey Martin passed in 2009, but the three singers used drummer
Joe Vitale and bassist
Rick Rosas to fill in. The same configuration played six concerts in the spring of 2011 but reportedly did no studio work.
Young continued going through his archives with the release of A Treasure in 2011, a single-disc set of live tracks recorded during his 1984-1985 tour with the International Harvesters that featured five previously unreleased
Young songs mixed in with older songs like "Flying on the Ground Is Wrong" and "Are You Ready for the Country?," all done in the classic
Harvest style. In 2012,
Young reunited with
Crazy Horse for
Americana, a set of classic folk tunes like "This Land Is Your Land" and "Wayfarin' Stranger," followed several months later by the double-disc album of originals
Psychedelic Pill, which again saw
Young turning to the guitar garage stomp of
Crazy Horse.
In September 2012,
Young published his memoir, Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream. In the book, he wrote at length about his family and career and expressed his frustration with the low sound quality of digital music. Timed with the release of the book,
Young announced the founding of Pono Music, originally a new audio format but later simplified to a music player and downloading service designed for audiophiles and listeners who had similar issues with sound quality. A Kickstarter campaign in 2014 raised six-million dollars, one of the largest digitally crowd-funded efforts in history, and the company started shipping the devices in the fall of 2014. On the recording front,
Young entered
Jack White's Third Man studios in Nashville to cut
A Letter Home, a covers album featuring songs from
Young's favorite songwriters. Within a few months, he announced another full-length for 2014,
Storytone. The album was heralded by the release of an environmentally conscious song, "Who's Going to Stand Up?," that
Young had been performing in concert.
Young's passion for environmental causes also informed his next album, 2015's The Monsanto Years, in which he took on the issues of genetically modified crops and agribusiness; the album found him backed by Promise of the Real, a band led by
Lukas Nelson, son of outlaw country icon and
Young's close friend
Willie Nelson.
Young and Promise of the Real supported The Monsanto Years with a tour, which became the basis for the 2016 live double-album Earth. Just after the June release of Earth,
Young wrote and recorded the protest album
Peace Trail, which appeared in December 2016.
Young continued his burst of activity in 2017 with the release of "Children of Destiny." It was the first single from
The Visitor, an album recorded with Promise of the Real that appeared in December 2017. The Promise of the Real also supported
Young on Paradox, the soundtrack to the Daryl Hannah film starring
Young and the band. Also in 2018,
Young released two volumes in his Archives series: April saw the release of
Roxy: Tonight's the Night Live, which was recorded in 1973, and November brought the release of
Songs for Judy, a collection of highlights from his acoustic 1976 tour.
Young unveiled another archival release in June 2019,
Tuscaloosa, a live set recorded at an Alabama date on the same 1973 tour that produced
Time Fades Away.
In May 2018,
Young announced he was playing a handful of shows in California with
Crazy Horse.
Frank "Pancho" Sampedro opted not to perform, and
Young recruited
Nils Lofgren to join himself,
Billy Talbot, and
Ralph Molina for the tour. The concerts proved to be a warm-up for the recording of 2019's
Colorado, cut in the titular state during a full moon, with the
Lofgren/
Talbot/
Molina edition of
Crazy Horse backing him.
Neil Young continued mining his archives in 2020, unearthing the scrapped 1975 album
Homegrown for an official release that summer, with the long-awaited box set
Archives, Vol. 2: 1972-1976 appearing at the end of the year; a live 2003 performance called
Return to Greendale preceded the box by a few weeks. Just two months prior to the 2020 presidential election,
Young released The Times, an EP offering solo acoustic versions of his well-known protest songs along with a cover of
Bob Dylan's "The Times They Are A-Changin'." In February 2021, Way Down in the Rust Bucket -- a double-disc live album recorded in November 1990 on the
Ragged Glory tour -- appeared, followed in March by Young Shakespeare, a live album from 1971. Before 2021 was over,
Young issued the first installment of his Official Bootleg Series with
Carnegie Hall 1970. Though the second of his two sets at Carnegie Hall had been widely bootlegged over the years, this release offered previously unreleased recordings of the first set, which found
Young playing many songs off his just-released
After the Gold Rush LP, as well as performing tunes that at that point weren't commercially available yet.
Young closed out a busy 2021 with Barn, an album recorded with
Crazy Horse; it was the second LP in a row to feature
Nils Lofgren, who took over the guitarist role vacated by a retired
Frank "Poncho" Sampedro. In 2022, the Official Bootleg Series continued with the release of three more live sets that had circulated as bootlegs for decades, all presented in upgraded recording quality and packaging. Released in May 2022, the three sets included
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion,
Royce Hall, and
Citizen Kane Jr. Blues (Live the Bottom Line).
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and
Royce Hall were recorded within weeks of each other at separate Los Angeles gigs in 1971, and they included material from
After the Gold Rush as well as songs yet to be recorded for
Harvest.
Citizen Kane Jr. Blues captured an unannounced solo set on a bill shared with
Leon Redbone and
Ry Cooder in 1974. The show included performances of songs that would appear publicly for the first time a few months later as part of
On the Beach. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine