Los Angeles Times - 02.11.2019

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War protests in 1970, or
“Rockin’ in the Free World,” a
1980s commentary on the in-
equities of Reaganomics.
More recently, that com-
partment of his songbook
has expanded with “Shut It
Down” from “Colorado,” the
project for which the two-
time Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame inductee reunited his
long-running band Crazy
Horse for the first time in sev-
en years. In that song, Young
takes a jab at the many ways
he thinks the country has
veered off course, his remedy
being “shut the whole thing
down” and start again.
Why become a citizen now
after living in the States for
more than half a century?
“We’ve got a climate emer-
gency, and governments are
not acting,” he said between
bites of the omelet and
sautéed spinach that consti-
tuted his lunch, part of a
healthier diet and lifestyle
he’s embraced.
Climate change surfaces
as a theme in another song
from “Colorado,” “She
Showed Me Love,” in which
he owns up to his station in
life, singing, “You might say
I’m an old white guy. ... You
might say that,” adding, “I’ve
seen old white guys trying to
kill Mother Nature.”
The song spontaneously
stretched out into a signa-
ture Crazy Horse jam (it ex-
tends for more than 13 min-
utes on the album) during
the recording session high in
the mountains of Colorado
this year, for which he reunit-
ed with longtime Crazy
Horse bassist Billy Talbot
and drummer Ralph Molina.
This time out, Crazy Horse
also includes guitarist Nils
Lofgren, who first played in
Crazy Horse in 1970 and has
periodically collaborated
with Young over the years
when he hasn’t been occu-
pied with his duties as a
member of Bruce Spring-
steen’s E Street Band.


Lofgren has stepped in for
guitarist Frank “Poncho”
Sampedro, who has retired
to his home in Hawaii, ac-
cording to Young.
When Young talks about
Crazy Horse, he sounds less
like he’s simply discussing a
group of musicians and more
like he’s alluding to another
form of life, one that some-
how exists beyond the limita-
tions of human musicians.
“The Horse is not on a
schedule,” he said when
asked what moves him to re-
activate the group time and
time again. “It’s really the
feeling: certain songs, loca-
tions, places, times. It’s the
way our instrumentals are:
How do we know where we’re
going? How did we end up
jamming and having it be
really melodic when I’ve ne-
ver played this before? So
that’s where we want to be.
It’s almost like jazz — but it’s
not that.”

In quieter moments
Crazy Horse has earned
its reputation as one of rock’s
noisiest, brashest, most
magnificently ragged en-
sembles. So one potentially
surprising aspect of “Col-
orado” is its quieter mo-
ments, songs built on some of
the most poetic and graceful
lyrics Young has written in at
least a decade: the opening
track “Think of Me,” in which
he envisions life from the per-
spective of a bird; a melan-
choly benediction for com-
promised ideals titled
“Green Is Blue”; a reverie for
loved ones who are gone,
“Olden Days”; and “I Do,” a
paean to nature’s wonders
with a hint of foreboding:
“Show me that garden / In
the sun that you saw / Let me
see the flowers / And the bees
before they fall.”
In his 2012 autobiography,
“Waging Heavy Peace,”
Young revealed that he had
given up smoking pot, some-
thing he had enjoyed for dec-
ades, after doctors recom-

mended he quit following a
life-threatening brain aneu-
rysm for which he underwent
surgery in 2005. As he wrote
the book, he said he was un-
sure how that change would
affect his songwriting, which
subsequently leaned more
heavily on more overt mes-
sage songs than the meta-
phor- and allegory-rich songs
that represented some of his
most prized earlier work.
Subsequently, however,
he resumed inhaling, and to-
day counts himself among
customers of his friend and
Farm Aid annual benefit
partner Willie Nelson, who
has created a line of marijua-
na products, Willie’s Reserve.
“I’m back to smoking,”
Young said. “I stopped for a
while and then I started
again, but I’m much healthi-
er. I lost like 35 pounds from
what I weighed at that time.
My life is full of exercise and
happiness and creativity. So
I’m very happy.”
Young acknowledged the
major life changes he has
weathered in recent years:
the 2014 divorce from his wife
of 36 years, Pegi Young, and
her death this year; his move
out of the ranch in Northern
California he bought in 1970; a
2010 fire that ravaged his
LincVolt electric car project
and the warehouse it was

stored in, and another last
year that partly destroyed
the home he owned in Malibu
Canyon; his marriage last
year to Hannah; their pur-
chase of a second home in
Colorado; and the death in
June of his longtime manager
and friend, Elliot Roberts.
“It’s a new world,” he said.
“Thank goodness I got mar-
ried to Daryl.”
As artists and social activ-
ists who are often occupied
with multiple projects, do
Young and Hannah ever find
time to curl up and binge-
watch “Game of Thrones”
like garden-variety married
couples?
He laughed at the ques-
tion. “We do things together
all the time,” he said. “We ap-
preciate life. We’re happy.”
He indicated they do en-
joy watching films together
— on the list of music-related
films still on their to-see list
are “Amazing Grace,” the
concert film of Aretha Frank-
lin’s gospel performances in
Los Angeles filmed in 1972,
and “Linda Ronstadt: The
Sound of My Voice,” profiling
the singer who, among her
many collaborations, sang on
several of Young’s recordings
in the mid-’70s.
One he’s not in a hurry to
see is “David Crosby: Re-
member My Name,” film-

maker Cameron Crowe’s look
at the life of Young’s on-
again, off-again bandmate
from Crosby, Stills, Nash &
Young, who drove a stake
through their friendship by
disparaging Hannah at the
outset of their relationship.
(Crosby later apologized.)
Young simply smiled when
asked about the film and
sided with another of Cros-
by’s many former bandmates
who recently said, “I have no
sympathy for David but I
have compassion for him.”

Followed instincts
Mostly, they’ve been too
busy to watch other people’s
films because they’ve been
immersed in completing
“Mountaintop,” which pre-
miered Oct. 22 with a string of
one-night-only screenings
across the country. (The rest
of the world will have a shot at
seeing it in a theater Nov. 18,
when it is set to screen glob-
ally. After that, Young said,
the film probably will live on
his online audio and film
website, the Neil Young
Archives.)
“A lot of people are going
to see it tonight,” he said a few
hours before the formal pre-
miere at the ArcLight in Hol-
lywood, which he ultimately
bypassed. “I’ve got to find out
if I have to do an apology.”

He’s referring to the
warts-and-all 92-minute
document of the final days of
the 11-day recording session
out of which “Colorado”
emerged. It captures Young
occasionally swearing at co-
producer John Hanlon and
other studio personnel out of
frustration or miscommuni-
cation. Hanlon comes close
to throwing in the towel on
the project over technical
mishaps.
“I don’t know what to say
about working on it,” Young
said. “It was a real eye-
opener. It reveals more about
what happens, more than
people are used to seeing.
“Daryl wanted to do it, but
I didn’t want to, at first,” he
said. “I said no, because it will
get in the way of the music. So
we just let it go, and then at
the end, I said, ‘OK, it’s all
right.’ ”
As with most things in
Young’s world, and always
when it comes to Crazy
Horse, instinct leads the way.
“We just knew it was there,
and you don’t have to do any-
thing more than just be ready
once you recognize that you
have it,” he said. “That’s what
we did. That’s how we did
‘Colorado.’ And we still
haven’t played any more live.
We’re just waiting for the
right time to do that.”

NEIL YOUNGis captured in a multiple exposure photograph as he promotes a new album with Crazy Horse.

Genaro MolinaLos Angeles Times

Neil Young is


out for a ride


with Horse


[Young, from E1]

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