In more than thirty-years as a recording artist, Neil Young has experienced as many
extreme low points of critical and commercial success as he has high but, without a doubt,
he is one of the most important rock composers and performers North America can claim. His
signature raw nasal tone, shrill guitar playing, highly personal lyric-writing, and
hippie-cowboy loner stance have helped shape rock and roll as it has advanced from
adolescence into maturity. Through his experimentation with every genre, from folk to
heavy metal to rockabilly to techno, Young has created a sound and feel uniquely his own.
Born the son of Edna
"Rassy" Young, a former quiz show panelist on Canadian Television, and Scott
Young, a sportswriter for the Toronto Sun, Young's first musical inklings were
encouraged when his father gave him a ukulele for Christmas in 1958. His parents split up
not too long after that, and in 1960, Young moved to Winnipeg,
Manitoba, with his mother. A rather apathetic student, he was far more interested in
playing the banjo and guitar than turning his mind to his studies, and he eventually
dropped out of high school to concentrate his attention on the band he had formed, Neil
Young & the Squires.
Mrs. Young supported
her son's musical endeavors, and through her aggressive booking, helped the Squires gain a
fair amount of regional notoriety. Drawing influence from Elvis
Presley, Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the
Ventures, and the Shadows, the band evolved from an instrumental
group to a folk-rock band, and began performing in clubs around the area between 1963 and
1965.
After the Squires
disbanded in the summer of 1965, Young recorded some demos for Elektra Records, but failed
to secure a contract. He spent the rest of the year playing the Toronto coffeehouse
circuit, both as a solo artist and as a member of the Mynah Birds, a group fronted by
future soul-music star and "Super Freak," Rick James. On the circuit, Young met
a number of folk artists, including Joni Mitchell, guitarist Richie Furay, and Stephen
Stills, who was then playing with his own folk band, the Company. When the Mynah Birds
disbanded after recording one album, Young and Mynah Birds bassist Bruce Palmer moved to
the promised land of L.A., where they hooked up with Stills, Furay, and drummer Dewey
Martin to form the seminal folk-rock band the Buffalo
Springfield. Stills' counterculture anthem "For What It's Worth" earned
the band nationwide fame, but it was Young who drew the most attention for his
idiosyncratic style and high-energy guitar playing. In their two-year existence, the band
recorded three successful albums and a retrospective (Buffalo Springfield, Buffalo
Springfield Again, Last Time Around, and The Best of the Buffalo Springfield)
for Atco before splintering in 1968.
Following the demise
of the band, Young signed a solo deal with Reprise Records, and released a poorly received
eponymous debut, Neil Young in January of 1969. His second solo
effort, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, recorded in his
own studio setup at his Topanga, California, home with his new backing band Crazy Horse
(the band's original lineup included lead guitarist Danny Whitten, bassist Billy Talbot,
drummer Ralph Molina, and pianist-producer-arranger Jack Nitzsche), became a major hit and
went platinum on the strength of songs like "Cinnamon Girl," "Cowgirl in
the Sand," and "Down by the River." With the understanding that he could
come and go as he pleased, Young elected to join David Crosby, Steven Stills, and Graham
Nash's supergroup in the summer of 1969, just in time to appear at the historic Woodstock
Festival. Young eventually recorded three albums as part of Crosby, Stills, Nash, and
Young: 1970's Deja Vu, 1971's live 4-Way Street, and 1988's American
Dream. Hailed as "quite possibly the most important new poet since Bob
Dylan," Young's notable songwriting contributions to the collective included
"Helpless," "Country Girl," and "Ohio." In Young's
estimation, the latter song, written in response to the tragic shooting deaths of four
students at an anti-Vietnam rally at Kent State University in May of 1970, was his best
C.S.N. & Y. cut.
Young's solo career
was simultaneously soaring, as 1970's After
the Gold Rush and 1972's Harvest
both became bestsellers and were immediately recognized as classics. Harvest,
recorded in Nashville with the Stray Gators and crossover pop-rock stars Linda
Ronstadt and James Taylor, was the biggest-selling album of
1972, and the cut "Heart of Gold" remains the most successful single of Young's
career. Between 1972 and 1977, Young released a sequence of six introspective albums of
impressive scope (Journey Through the Past, Time
Fades Away, On the Beach, Tonight's
the Night, Zuma, and American
Stars 'n Bars); haunting loss permeated many of his songs during this prolific
period, most obviously because of the devastating drug-related deaths of Crazy Horse
guitarist Danny Whitten and roadie Bruce Berry. In 1977, the release of a double-album
retrospective, Decade, attested to Young's importance in rock
history. He closed the seventies on a peak with the lighthearted, philosophical Comes
a Time, and a half-acoustic, half-electric album,Rust
Never Sleeps, so titled at the suggestion of the members of the new-wave group
Devo, who thought the Rustoleum slogan, "Rust never sleeps," made a catchy-sounding
title. A rollicking live album, Live
Rust, and the generally poorly received concert film Rust Never Sleeps resulted
from the 1978 tour for the album.
Depending on one's
perspective, Young either lost focus in the early- to mid-eighties or deserves credit as
an ambitious explorer. Jumping wildly between genres, he opened the decade with the
country-tinged Hawks & Doves, moved into Kraftwerk-like
electronic sounds with Trans and retro-rockabilly on Everybody's
Rockin', but still tore it up with Crazy Horse on Re-act-or
and on 1987's Life. The next year, Young headed in a horn-driven,
soulful direction with a new band, the Bluenotes, on This
Note's for You. The title track won MTV's Video of the Year award, despite the
fact that the clip was banned by the network lampooning the commercial state of
rock, the video shows a Michael Jackson look-alike's hair catching fire and
being extinguished with Pepsi by a Whitney
Houston look-alike.
After all the
experimentation, 1989 witnessed Young going back to his roots. Freedom,
powered by the anthemic single "Rockin' in the Free World," became his most
critically lauded album since Rust Never Sleeps, and its follow-up, 1990's Ragged
Glory (recorded with Crazy Horse), was similarly celebrated. Since then, Young has
been on a streak of critical and commercial success unparalleled by his peers, making
music in his third decade even more distinguished than that in his first. His rediscovery
of electric guitar feedback juxtaposed the emergence of the American alternative scene,
earning him the nickname "The Godfather of Grunge." Young cemented that
description with his satisfying 1995 collaboration with Pearl Jam, Mirror
Ball, for which he scored a Grammy nomination for Best Male Rock Vocal
Performance. An occasional dabbler in movie soundtracks since 1970, Young composed the
music to Jim Jarmusch's film Dead Man, and followed the early 1996 release of that
soundtrack with Broken Arrow, a new studio effort with Crazy Horse
that garnered a Grammy nod for Best Rock Album. A subsequent summer tour, which spawned a
double live album titled Year of the Horse,
was filmed by Jarmusch for a 1997 documentary of the same name. The year 1999 saw Neil
collaborating onca again with Crosby, Stills & Nash on Looking Back. Into the
new millenium & Neil has produced a great effort in Silver & Gold. This release sees Neil
gathering together old friends such as stellar sidemen including Spooner Oldham,
"Duck" Dunn and Jim Keltner, along with longtime associate Ben Keith, (who
co-produced the record). The result is a relaxed, casual journey through some heartfelt
and pensive songs that find Young in both a thankful and inquisitive mood. Comparisons
will most certainly be made with Harvest and Harvest Moon because of the acoustic tone.
This Neil Young is older, wiser, more reflective and less judgmental. Neil's 2000 summer
jaunt across the U.S.A on the "Music In Head" tour with the "Friends &
Relatives " culminated in a live album named Road
Rock. In addition to Neil's regular line-up of
musicians, he also had wife Pegi & half sister Astrid on vocals. Chrissie Hynde also
provided guitar & vocals on "All Along The Watchtower" as The Pretenders
were opening act on the Tour.
With wife Pegi, Young
co-founded the Bridge School for Handicapped Children near San
Francisco, and each year holds a star-studded benefit. Their son Ben has cerebral palsy
and attended the school. Young has also founded a company that makes devices for the
disabled, as well as high-tech toys one of the company's projects is manufacturing
an improved wheelchair that Young helped design. The irascible elder statesman of rock
eschews the trappings of fame and lives a rather reclusive life on his Northern California
ranch. He declines most interviews, and has said that he will no longer grant them to Rolling
Stone, in particular, because of its perfumed ad inserts: "I don't like the way
the magazine smells."