Thursday, April 30, 2009

Concert Reviews of Neil Young in Kansas City, Missouri: 4/30/09

From Back to Rockville: Review: Neil Young:
"Overall, I agree with Tim's review of the show. The last two songs before the encore were particularly lackluster and somewhat anticlimatic but it was nice to see last night's show deviate from other shows on the tour both in song selection and format (the acoustic set was way longer than other shows).

What's interesting is that he is penalized for emphasizing new material.
One of my first NY shows was the 'Rust Never Sleeps' tour in 1978. Half the show consisted of material from that album that would not even be released until the following summer. At the time, many people griped about that as well. Now in hindsight, that tour stands out as one of the highlights of his long and distinguished career."



Neil Young will be performing tonight at Sprint Center, Kansas City, Missouri.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Look out for Neil Young's (gear) love tonight

From Kansas City - Wayward Blog - Look out for Neil Young's (gear) love tonight by Scott Wilson in Bands You Should Know:
Doing a little homework for tonight's Neil Young show at the Sprint Center, I came across a site devoted to the details of the hall-of-famer's guitar rig. If you're curious, prepare to venture down the rabbit hole (the site, a clearinghouse of previously published tidbits about Young's stuff, has links upon links upon links) and probably end up in an uncharted Canadian province populated by car-obsessed eccentrics.

A choice nugget:
From Neil Young interview in Zuerich Weltwoche (July 1996):

Young: You know, the sound is of increasing importance to me. We use very old amplifiers and tune them for each show. After the show we meet with the crew and talk about corrections for this kind of show, which is new to us too. Usually we play smaller venues, like for instance this bar near my house. We rehearsed in this bar for 3 months. Two, three days a week, sometimes four, we play two or three sets in the night. We've played together for 30 years, in fact there is a kind of telepathic relation between us. It takes time to develop such a situation into mature communication, which happens without words and without arrangements.

W: That sounds rather esoteric.

Young: Bullshit. It's similar to how the musicians in the old jazz era functioned. We don't have to prove anything to nobody -- besides ourselves. Only that brought us to where we stand today. Only that moves me. I can't go out with big light shows and that shit. No interest in that.

Photo Gallery of Neil Young in Denver by Tony Stack

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An awesome photo gallery by Tony Stack on Rock Steady Studios of Neil Young in Denver, CO on 4/27/09.

Thanks Tony!!! Great shots.

Also, see concert reviews of Neil Young in Denver, CO on 4/27/09.

Update on RustedSister

As some of you may know, one Neil Young's dearest, devoted fans -- Joann RustedSister -- recently suffered a personal tragedy.

Last month, Joann experienced a horrific tragedy in which her husband of 23 years, Tito, perished in a fire.

People have known "Rusted Sister" Joann through friendship for many years and know of her generosity, warmth, and selflessness. She's the kind of person with whom you can pick up no matter where you are in your life and she always takes you in. Some people even watched her boys grow up online and remember her as a very devoted and caring mother.

Even though she is strong and smart and taking care of things as best as she can, some of us are aware how the past few years have taken a toll on her and family financially. Losing her husband to this terrible tragedy also means losing the majority of their income. It appears that the family business that Tito managed had suffered irreversible financial consequences leaving Joann and boys in dire straights. She needs our help!

To show her our support, a family fund has been setup by several of her closest friends -- Neil Young fans from around the world. Even if you don't have much, the smallest donation will add up. If this is not possible, then please keep her and the boys in your thought and prayers as they face their grief and try to rebuild their lives.

Sympathies and donations can be mailed to:

Pichardo Family Fund
1820 Perth Amboy
Whiting, NJ 08759

We also hope that whatever we can send will raise her spirit and give her the strength, courage, and support she has shown so many others all these years.

Feel free to drop her line at rustedsister@comcast And thanks for showing your care and sharing your prayers for her and her family.

We recently received an update letting us know that Joann and her family are bravely moving through their grief over their tragic loss and appreciated the sympathies and condolences that people shared with them.

Lastly, we've run into Joann a number of times over the years at Neil concerts. Once, we were seated a few rows apart during a show with everybody sitting while Neil rocked out. Then we stood up and Joann started dancing around and before we knew it everyone in the place was up on their feet. That's Joann for you.

But, one of our fondest memories was at the 2004 Greendale tour's 3 night stand at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. We were up front in the pit with Joann and after the show she was handing out these "Free Jed Green" cards to everyone around us! A lot of folks just looked at the cards with a puzzled look on their face. ;) It was her little campaign to help get Jed released from jail, which was kinda funny given his circumstances. A very Joann type type of memory that we'll always cherish.

We're sure folks have many more stories of meeting up with Joann on the road with Neil.

In Sympathy for the Pichardo Family,
Thrasher & Thrashette

'Cortez the Killer" on YouTube: Neil Young - Lethbridge, April 25, 2009



'Cortez the Killer" by Neil Young on YouTube from Lethbridge, Canada on 4/25/09.

Awesome jam @ 4:00! What a killer.

Thanks DylanS.!

Also, see concert reviews of Neil Young in Lethbridge, Canada on 4/25/09.

Omaha, Nebraska Concert Reviews of Neil Young - 4/29/09

From JournalStar.com - Lincoln, Nebraska - Blog - Ground Zero Online by L. Kent Wolgamott:
Neil Young did not disappoint Wednesday night at Qwest Center Omaha, putting on a fine 2 1/2 hour show that ran the gamut of his career. I wrote a review on my iPhone with about 30 minutes left in the concert that, I hope, conveyed something of what I thought about the show. But here are some thoughts that expand on and, with any luck, add to that piece.

Young is one helluva guitarist. That's evident on his records, but easy enough to overlook until you hear him live. A song like 'Tonight's The Night' became a rambling, 10-minute guitar workout with Young making his black Gibson growl, moan and cry and he literally tore the strings off of it during the encore of the Beatles 'A Day in the Life,' which ended with jet-engine feedback.



Neil Young will be performing tonight at Qwest Center, Omaha, Nebraska.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Photo Gallery: Neil Young in Kingston 2009

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"Old Man" - Neil Young and Larry Cragg
Photo by Jim McQuaid


Super photo gallery by Jim McQuaid on Picasa Web Albums of Neil Young in Kingston, Ontario, Canada on 4/13/09.

Also, see Concert Reviews of Neil Young in Kingston, Ontario, Canada on 4/13/09.

Paul Williams Needs Our Help

In 1996, the legendary former editor of Crawdaddy! magazine called "The Complex Sessions: Neil Young & Crazy Horse", directed by Jonathan Demme, Neil Young's - and Rock n' Roll's - finest moment.

Williams went on to wrote a definitive biography (until McDonough's Shakey) Neil Young: Love to Burn : Thirty Years of Speaking Out, 1966-1996.

Now comes word that Williams is seriously ill.

In 1966 Paul Williams published his first issues of Crawdaddy! magazine, the first serious publication devoted to rock & amp; roll news and criticism. In 1995, Williams suffered a brain injury in a bicycle accident near his California home. Today, the man who used to devour records and churn out copy requires managed care. Williams’ accident brought on early onset Alzheimer’s disease, and the pioneering writer has no insurance to cover the costs of his treatment.

To raise funds, Williams and his friends and family have launched a new Website, PaulWilliams.com, which is collecting donations and provides a striking retrospective of his life and career (he sang with John and Yoko on “Give Peace a Chance”). “He was like a friend leaning on your shoulder, saying ‘You should check this out,’ ” R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck tells Rolling Stone. “And he always had smart reasons.”

Thanks P(or F)! We just made our donation.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Denver Concert Reviews of Neil Young - 4/27/09

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Ben Keith, Neil Young, Rick Rosas
Photo by Tim Rasmussen


From Recap: Neil Young at Magness Arena | Features | Music | Denver/Boulder | Decider by Jason Heller:
Monday night at Magness Arena, Neil Young sounded like shit. Sloppy playing. Off-key singing. False starts. Muddy feedback. Classics that whizzed by too fast. Jams that dragged on too long. Stagehands wandering around aimlessly. Bandmembers wandering around aimlessly. Neil Young wandering around aimlessly. And, overall, the sense that the veteran rocker dared take the stage in front of several thousand people with a ragtag, under-rehearsed group that was barely able to connect the dots—let alone paint a full portrait of Young's songwriting genius.

In other words: It was damn near perfect.

From Live Review: Neil Young, Neville Brothers, Everest @ Magness Arena : Reverb Colorado by Michael Behrenhausen:
And so, at Young’s sold-out show at Magness Arena on Monday, I was interested to hear if those same new songs would be able to keep up with his classic cuts — and even spark a bit of renewable energy into both Young and the audience.

More of review and great photos here.



Neil Young will be performing tonight at Magness Arena, Denver, Colorado, USA.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Concert Review of the Moment: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada - 4/20/09

The Neil Young Concert Review of the Moment is from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada - 4/20/09 by Shakey:
Neil Young, and really the whole band blew the roof off Credit Union Place for over 2 hours. The band was amazing, Rick (the bass player) was smiling, getting into the music, jumping on top of the drum riser with Neil. Pegi and Neil performed a duet singing 4 Strong Winds (written by Canadian Ian Tyson). That was rather cool to see. The songs performed on the set list that night was a who's who of historical Neil songs.

I never thought I'd hear Roll Another Number live. And when he did Down By The River, one of his songs I loved to play, anyways, when Neil would sing; "Be on my side". The crowd responded with "We'll be on your side". and it was an exchange that put Neil and the whole audience together unlike I've ever witnessed during one of his concerts. (Sober and straight at least)

I talked a friend into coming with me, he had never seen Neil live before. He's played drums on Neil tunes I would play and sing, but he never saw the Master, live before. He left a changed man.

For most of the concert I was at most 12ft away from the stage most of the night.

Due to my health I don't know if I'll ever be able to see another Neil concert again, and out of the 3 I've now seen, (Yeah, I know, by now it should be about the 30th one considering I've been a fan since I was 10, and that was 36 years ago), the concert put on for Saskatoon that night was the best one I've been to yet.

So, if you still can, get out there and online to find tickets to this great tour he's putting on. Even if you are just an average Neil fan, who only likes a certain type of Neil's music, get your ticket, even if it has to be in the nose bleed section.

You will never forget this concert.

More on Neil Young concert reviews of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada - 4/20/09.

"When You Dance I Can Really Love" Video in Sault Ste Marie, 4/17/09



"When You Dance I Can Really Love" by Neil Young at Essar Centre, Sault Ste Marie, Canada on April 17, 2009.

Thanks Joe!

Also, see concert reviews of Neil Young in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada on 4/17/09.

Johnny Magic Video: "Under The Hood - The Middle of The Beginning"

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Here's another Johnny Magic video "Under The Hood - The Middle of The Beginning".

Good to see that "Re-Powering the American Dream" can come from America, too! ;)

Here are a few other crazy videos by Neil Young fans:

- Johnny Magic Contest Video by Albert, Jens and Roland
- Johnny Magic Contest Video by Brian, 13 Years Old
- "Johnny Magic" Contest Video by Liza
- My, my, hey, hey, I touched Neil Young's Car today!
- Neil Young You're My Hero
- Neil Young Stole My Dog
- There is a Town in North Ontario: "Road To Omemee" Video
- Neil Young Sang and We Heard The Truth

So, if you're feeling creative, check out Neil Young's Johnny Magic Video Contest.

Also, see all entries posted on N Y Times.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Photo: Neil Young on Music Scene in 1969

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Neil Young on The Music Scene, September 1969
Photo by Jeff Allen, Cache Agency


Last year, we received an extraordinary email from Jeff Allen about some rare Neil Young photos from the 1969 1970 ABC-TV show "The Music Scene" where Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young performed "Down by the River".

Jeff wrote at the time:
I have over 90 shots in b&w from the taping.

I was 19 years old when I was invited to the taping. I can't remember who invited me, but I went with my trusty Nikon F with a 105mm portrait lens. I was so close, I couldn't even get all four band members in the same shot, but got a few with three.

I shot the black and whites and also a bunch of Ektachrome slides (which I subsequently lost in the many moves from rental properties over the years) while sitting in the front row of the audience. I was the guy in the long sleeve yellow shirt, second from the left in the opening scene.


Check out all the great shots on Cache Agency: Jeff Allen.

Thanks Jeff!

Revisions to "Ghosts On The Road"

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There are now revisions available for download of the definitive and indispensable book Ghosts On The Road - Neil Young In Concert by Pete Long.

Pete writes:
We had hoped this page would not be needed but inevitably further details are going to surface. Thus some revised pages are available for download here if you wish to do so. We have identified the exact changes so that you may incorporate them into the book in any way you feel appropriate.

Thanks to those eagle-eyed readers who have sent in revisions.

- revised pages 36 & 38 for Canterbury House 1968 to include Sugar Mountain song sources and intros
- revised pages 439 - 450 for CSNY 2006 to include Deja vu Live song sources
- new pages for shows to February 1st, 2009
- page 90 - not available for download - first six songs Roxy 21st September 1973 confirmed
- new Buffalo Springfield show advertised for March 22, 1968 at Capital High School, Boise, ID
- page 37 - March 11, 1969 add songs Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere & The Losing End

Thanks Pete! Off to download right now. Kind of like a lo-tech Blue-Ray Live download?!

More on "Ghosts On The Road".

Concert Reviews Lethbridge, Canada of Neil Young - 4/25/09

From Lethbridge Herald - Neil Young's popularity knows no boundaries by Pamela Roth:
It’s not very often a legendary rocker like Neil Young comes to town with his pork-chop sideburns and acoustic guitar, ready to rock ‘n’ roll. So when Barb Janusz and her son Olek heard the news the 64-year-old would be performing at the Enmax Centre, it was an opportunity the pair knew would only come once in a lifetime.

(Thanks neilyoung.org!)

From Everest (EverestBand) on Twitter: "Rumor has it we're singing Change Your Mind with Neil tonight. Cross your fingers for us."


Neil Young will be performing tonight at Enmax Centre, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Johnny Magic Contest Video by Albert, Jens and Roland


Johnny Magic - Neil Young video-contest from Roland Schaller on Vimeo.

Here's another entry into the Johnny Magic Video Contest by Albert, Jens and Roland featuring Robert and Jana.

Very interestingly, folks 3 favorite contest videos are from Germany?!

So Re-Powering the American Dream comes from overseas? And we wonder what has happened when Americans can't even seem to be able to produce a competitive video...

Details at Johnny Magic Contest.

Here are a few other crazy videos by Neil Young fans:

- Johnny Magic Contest Video by Brian, 13 Years Old
- "Johnny Magic" Contest Video by Liza
- My, my, hey, hey, I touched Neil Young's Car today!
- Neil Young You're My Hero
- Neil Young Stole My Dog
- There is a Town in North Ontario: "Road To Omemee" Video
- Neil Young Sang and We Heard The Truth

So, if you're feeling creative, check out Neil Young's Johnny Magic Video Contest.

Also, see all entries posted on N Y Times.

In Search of Neil Young in Kelowna

Here's an amusing Neil Young story from Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada by Kevin Parnell at kelownacapnews.com. Neil recently played at Kelowna on 4/22/09. (Reprinted with permission by kelownacapnews.com)
When I heard Neil Young was coming to Kelowna I jumped into action. This was going to be it. I was going to interview the great Canadian musician.

You see I’ve seen Neil before but never this close to home.

This was my chance and I wasn’t going to let it slip by.

At first I was turned back.

E-mails to his web site were not returned nor were notes sent to his management company.

Live Nation replied. But the concert promoter said no interviews available. Sorry.

Well so was I. There went my best opportunity to meet Neil Young.

But I wasn’t going to miss the show. Heck I was online as soon as the tickets were on sale. When it comes to Neil I’m fan (atic) first, journalist second.

But when the day of the concert came it all came flooding back. This was an opportunity.

I’ve watched The Fifth Estate, I know what good reporters are supposed to do. You want the story you go get the story, son.

So off to Prospera I went, reporter’s notebook in hand, camera over my shoulder, Neil Young shirt on my back.

There were the busses and trucks lined up in the parking lot.

But no sign of Neil.

There were open doors and an open invitation for a member of journalistic nation.

There was the stage and there were the dressing rooms, complete with lists of band names, people cooking, music playing.

But no Neil.

I was there. I was nervous. What would I say?

Then I was asked to leave.

Walking around the outside of the building that would soon host a legend, I took another tact.

What would I do if I were Neil with my family, near the lake in Kelowna?

So I walked to the beach and around the boardwalk. There was someone passed out on the grass. There was someone rolling some grass. There were some moms with babies.

But there was no Neil.

Turned back at every corner, stonewalled in my attempts to interview Neil Young, I decided to camp out for awhile. I saw his bus, I saw some roadies.

But Neil, I did not see.

So I went back to the comfort of the office, cranking some Neil, happy just to be a fan and happy to have tickets in hand.

And here's Kevin' review of Neil's concert in Kelowna.
From the opening chords of his Buffalo Springfield classic Mr. Soul, through a long acoustic set and to an encore of Bob Dylan’s All Along the Watchtower, Canadian music legend Neil Young showed a Kelowna audience on Wednesday night that he is far from fading away.

Young, 63, alternately tore through an electric set and strummed acoustic songs for two hours and 10 minutes Wednesday with songs ranging from classics to diamonds in the rough.

His voice nearly perfect, his guitar playing frenetic, Young said little, instead opting to dominate the stage with a unique setlist, giving the sellout crowd everything it could handle. And the love (and smoke) flowed back freely for the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer.

For Young fans it was the best of every world. At times he was the grunge rocker, strangling spine-tingling notes from his famous 1953 Les Paul electric guitar nicknamed Old Black.

Storming around the stage in the jeans and flannel shirt that helped earn him the nickname Godfather of Grunge, Young rocked hard on numbers like Cinnamon Girl, When You Dance, Words and Fuel Line, the first of a handful from his new album Fork in the Road.

He then turned folkie and ran through a beautiful acoustic set, ranging from Mother Earth from 1990’s Ragged Glory, and featuring lyrics that remain current today, to classics like Old Man and Heart of Gold, the song from 1972s Harvest that, at the time, sent him barreling towards a less-mainstream muse.

Heart of Gold remains Young’s only number one hit. He later said, “This song put me in the middle of the road. Traveling there soon became a bore so I headed for the ditch. A rougher ride but I met more interesting people there.”

After the beauty of the acoustic set, which spotlighted Young’s painfully sweet falsetto voice, Wednesday's concert was headed in a different direction as well.

Striding to the piano Young played two songs from 1975’s Tonight’s the Night, a dark and dreary ode to former Crazy Horse guitarist Danny Whitten and roadie Bruce Berry, both of whom died of drug overdoses while working for Neil.

Following the bluesy Speaking Out, Young played a spooky version of Tonight’s the Night.

“It sent a chill up and down my spine,” he wailed, “when I picked up the telephone and learned that he died out on the mainline.”

Songs from Young’s new album Fork In the Road, an eco-themed rocker, provided the most upbeat, straight ahead rock and roll of the night.

Just Singin a Song won’t change the world, he sang on one tune, while telling folks you can sing about change while making some yourself.

The closer, perhaps the definitive cover of Dylan’s All Along the Watchtower, brought the night to an end in a flurry of feedback.

Many acts have come to Prospera and many will be there again. But if you missed Neil Young you missed the boat. One of the most unique, current, expressive and exciting acts of all time, was on his game and then some.

And like the twists and turns that have marked his career along the way, who knows when he will ever decide to come back.

Thanks Kevin! Great story. Glad you enjoyed the show.

Also, see concert reviews of Neil Young at Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada on 4/22/09.

'Net Radio: This Note's For You - Part 1

Veteran and new fans of Neil Young are invited to listen to a special virtuallyaudio.com radio feature entitled "This Note's For You, Part 1," which is a discussion about Neil's first solo albums up to Rust Never Sleeps. Its essentially an interview between the show's host, J. Hoskins, and Neil fan/ collector/ historian Christopher Rutty, and focuses on some personal perspectives about the albums and their context, along with a selection of favourite/ significant, but lesser known album tracks.

To listen/ download, go to:
http://www.virtuallyaudio.com/radio-irrelevant-rock-roll-music-show.asp

and then click on the March 29, 2009 show link in the player, or in the listing of shows you'll see down the page.

The show can also be downloaded from:

http://rapidshare.com/files/223818644/Virtually_Audio_-_Neil_Young_Part_1_-_rrms-2009-Mar-29.mp3

Part 2 of the Neil feature will follow soon, but there are also lots of other interesting shows on the site, including the latest one (April 12), which features The Strawbs and progressive music.

Thanks Christopher !

Friday, April 24, 2009

Edmonton, Canada Neil Young Concert Reviews: 4/23/09

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Photo Gallery by vWayner.com


Extensive photo gallery of Neil Young in concert in Edmonton, Canada on 4/23/09 by vWayner.com. (Thanks neilyoung.org!)

From edmontonsun.com - Neil Young wows sold-out Rexall Place:
Rest assured, however, that when Neil does his own thing, the source is unmistakable.

He sure was in powerful form last night. So he's not the greatest singer in the world. So he's not Steven Tyler.

Young howled, he moaned, he screamed, he shouted, he gave it everything he had. In short, what he might lack in vocal technique, he more than makes up for in passion.

Sweet backup vocals - including his wife Pegi - provided the perfect counterpoint.

Attired in blue jeans and plaid shirt, Neil got a standing ovation just for showing up.



Neil Young will be performing tonight at Rexall Place, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Photos: Neil Young Concert at Kingston, Ontario, Canada - 4/13/09

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Neil Young and Chad Cromwell
Kingston, Ontario, Canada - 4/13/09
Photo by Merideth-Smith on Flickr


Nice photos by Merideth-Smith on Flickr.

Also, see Concert Reviews of Neil Young in Kingston, Ontario, Canada on 4/13/09.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Comment of the Moment: And Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road

The assessment of Neil Young's Fork in the Road continues to veer back and forth across the road even though the album has been out for little more than a week.

It seems hard to believe that an album with such a short release time frame can go from the divided opinions prior to release to nearly utter critical disdain upon release and then back to recognition of the bluesy, riffing simplicity of messages of hope freedom, and a better way of traveling.

Need less to say, the critical reaction to Fork in the Road has been both fascinating and confounding. Our review of FITR, generated a spectrum of opinions which yielded a rather lengthy comment by Pinto (or Flounder) that was met by a fusillade of criticism over Neil's recording and touring motives.

Here's some of the pushback on Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road by Greg, who said:
Every now and then something prompts me to go back and reread the great Cameron Crowe Rolling Stone interviews. They always seem to provide a perfect perspective for the newest flavor of the moment controversy, as in the case of this blog. People very rarely change, or change their stripes. Maybe they have their lapses, and Neil is human for sure, but I’d be shocked to find out it was ever about the money. It’s about what’s happening right now- in his head, in his life, in the world around him. Is that really so hard to understand? People don’t understand something, they don’t like something, they don’t know- they freak out and start flailing about trying to make sense of something they’re not privy to. I’m not privy to anything either, but I rest my mind in the experience of what 40 years of Neil Young have given me, and it’s all about the music and the integrity. Money motive just doesn’t wash with me.

I don’t have anything more to say about the recent music- too much has been said already- other than to say that Thrasher is probably on to something by likening GD/LWW/CDII/FITR to the “ditch trilogy”, and in that event hold onto your hat for what might be coming next. Revisionism notwithstanding, I was there when it was happening, and clearly remember the gnashing of teeth in the music world over the impending demise of Neil Young, and the dismissiveness of the people who didn’t understand, who felt the need to save Neil from himself. Beyond this, Bill Shapiro of “Cypress Avenue” said it all when he likened Neil to a troubadour, someone who is compelled to perform for people. You might find someone like this playing to a local bar like as not playing to an “ocean of shaking hands”. It’s not about the money. As one blogger pointed out somewhere, heart rending and angst ridden youth produced heart rending and angst ridden music, but now having moved beyond these things, different things are producing different music- things like the deterioration of society, the degradation of the environment, war in the middle east, and the need for energy alternatives. Laced through all of it is the need for the artist, the individual, to make sense of it all and have something to say. There’s need, and it ain’t pretty.

I’ll let the following Crowe excerpts say the rest:
“Every one of my records, to me, is like an ongoing autobiography. I can't write the same book very time. There are artists that can. They put out three or four albums every year and everything fucking sounds the same. That's great. Somebody's trying to communicate to a lot of people and give them the kind of music that they know they want to hear. That isn't my trip. My trip is to express what's on my mind.“

“I don't want to feel like people expect me to be a certain way. Nobody expected Time Fades Away and I'm not sorry I put it out. I didn't need the money, I didn't need the fame. You gotta keep changing. Shirts, old ladies, whatever. I'd rather keep changing and lose a lot of people along the way. If that's the price, I'll pay it. I don't give a shit if my audience is a hundred or a hundred million. It doesn't make any difference to me. I'm convinced that what sells and what I do are two completely different things. If they meet, it's coincidence. I just appreciate the freedom to put out an album like Tonight's the Night if I want to.”

“One afternoon during a tour several years ago, Young sat in his manager's hotel room. The phone kept ringing, tour crew members bustled in an out... and through it all, Young sat on the bed with his son Zeke, peacefully watching the news.

The broadcast was interrupted by an emergency bulletin. Pat Nixon had suffered a stroke, an announcer said over a filmed report of the sad and beaten Richard Nixon tearily moving through the hospital's revolving doors. After a time, Young got up and disappeared into his bus in the parking lot. Onstage several hours later, Young played the song he had written…“ (Campaigner)

"People don't understand sometimes," he says, looking down at a pencil he's toying with, "how I can come in and go out so fast, how I can be there and want to do something and then when it's over, for me it's over. To other people it's just a beginning. Sometimes that's hard for people to take. I can see how that would be. I just don't like to stay in one place very long. I move around, I keep doing different things . . ." He looks up. "Just different things."

It must be difficult, I wonder, to decide which impulses to follow.

"I only follow the ones I get," says Young. "And if it makes me laugh... I know it's a good one. Basically I've had a really good time, even though my songs have mostly expressed the down side. I like that there's a lot of humor in rock & roll now. A lot of people take me so seriously. They don't know what to do with me not taking myself so seriously anymore.“

"I've got a job to do, I've got to just tear down whatever has happened to me and build something new. You can only have it for so long before you don't have it anymore. You become an old-timer... which... I could be... I don't know.

"After all, it's just me and Frank Sinatra left on Reprise Records."

Does anybody doubt that Neil is laughing and having fun right now, or that something’s getting torn down in the process? Is it just too much to handle that the same man employing the same method that in the past produced something “musically pleasing”, is now producing music that is not “melodic” enough or “lyrically complex” enough? I think it’s time for everyone to take a chill pill, and give the guy a break. After all, it has to be pretty lonely sometimes now that Frank is gone.

Greg M

More reaction to Neil Young's new CD Fork in the Road.

Concert Reviews of Neil Young at Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada - 4/22/09

Neil Young will be performing tonight at Prospera Place, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

YouTube - "Cowgirl in the Sand" by Neil Young, Saint John NB April 11, 2009



"Cowgirl in the Sand" by Neil Young, Saint John NB April 11, 2009.

Inparticular, check out the intensity beginning at around the 5:00 mark.

Thanks rsthomas18!

Also, see Concert Reviews of Neil Young in Saint John, Canada on 4/11/09.

SLEEPS WITH ANGELS LISTENING PARTY!

After the successful listening party for Tonight's The Night last week, it's time to do another one!

SLEEPS WITH ANGELS LISTENING PARTY!

Thursday 4/23, at 3 PM, EST and again at 10 PM, EST (That’s 7 PM GMT and 2 AM GMT)

Karen will be hosting at:
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/live-from-streamland.

Come watch the record go ‘round. See you there!

ps - maybe we can do Greendale next?!

Happy Earth Day Sun Green!

greendale-poster-no-print-sm.jpg


Happy Earth Day!

Here at Thrasher's Wheat, we're observing Earth Day by playing Neil Young's Greendale. Kinda like playing ARC on April 1!

But in all seriousness, we try and make everyday Earth Day on this blog. Some may note the badge on the lower right sidebar that states that "This Blog Fights Climate Change". And we like to talk about Sun Green and Earth Brown's mission to save Alaska from time to time.

Brighter Planet's 350 Challenge


As we've argued repeatedly over the years about the vastly underrated and under appreciated Greendale, the inconvenient truth of Greendale was that Sun Green -- and Neil Young -- were right.

save-alaska-billboard

And -- inconveniently -- the job is bigger than saving just Alaska.

From Venice Magazine interview (February 2004) on making a difference:
YOUNG: "Well, I think it is incumbent upon me, with Greendale out there, to do everything that I can to try to live up to Sun Green's vision of what the world should be like, and the kind of changes people should make. Which is more like, "Put your money where your mouth is.

And it's slow, a painfully slow process, but one of the things that we are doing is starting to power our vehicles for this next tour with bio-fuel that has no emissions that damage the ozone, 75 to 80% less pollution than normal diesel, and we'll just try to make a statement that, "Hey, this is something you can do right now, I could be driving around in my SUV or Hummer burning vegetable oil." The thing everybody hates about those is how wasteful they are. The fact that it's big, it's in the way, it's macho, and it's polluting the fucking planet and wasting fuel while it's doing it, it's pouring gallons and gallons of gasoline through one of these things, that's what bothers people."

And that's only one reason why we applaud the LincVolt project.

neilyoung_lincvolt_full.jpg


The inconvenient truth of Greendale is that regardless of whether you loved it or hated it, it was "the most important album of 2003, the musical equivalent of Silent Spring".

Now that is clear that the classic capitalist economic model is seriously flawed we need to understand how best to re-engineer our societies. Because we have now reached the fork in the road and must make a serious choice -- continue in the direction were heading or choose the hidden path which is less traveled.

Mother Earth by Neil Young


Oh, Mother Earth,
With your fields of green
Once more laid down
by the hungry hand
How long can you
give and not receive
And feed this world
ruled by greed
And feed this world
ruled by greed.

Oh, ball of fire
In the summer sky
Your healing light,
your parade of days
Are they betrayed
by the men of power
Who hold this world
in their changing hands
They hold the world
in their changing hands.

Oh, freedom land
Can you let this go
Down to the streets
where the numbers grow
Respect Mother Earth
and her giving ways
Or trade away
our children's days
Or trade away
our children's days.

Respect Mother Earth
and her giving ways
Or trade away
our children's days.


Neil Young has been performing "Mother Earth" at each of his concerts over the past year or so.

Why?

So, if you never really figured out what 2003's Greendale was all about -- or if you missed the stageplay concert -- then take a few moments and watch this video of "Be The Rain".



Be the Rain. Be the Change. Be the Wheat.

“Treat the earth well: it was not given to you by your parents; it was loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors; we borrow it from our children.”

-- Ancient Indian Proverb.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Comment of the Moment: Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road

Lots of comments on Neil Young's latest release Fork in the Road. Some love it. Some hate it.

The quick back story on our Comment of the Moment is that we've had some fairly serious disagreements with the commenter -- Pinto (or Flounder) -- over the past several months. Truth be told, we seemed to somehow mix him up with some snarky anonymous commenters which led to a little dust up.. But we moved on and agreed to disagree.

So here's Pinto (or Flounder)'s take on Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road:
It's funny, in retrospect, how, even though I'd been reading on the site for a long time, I initially took it for a place where critical analysis was a primary purpose and goal. Maybe because that's what Thrasher says it's for on the home page. And maybe because Thrasher's editorial stance, as evidenced by his really painstaking compilations of critical opinion, is pretty journalistically well-balanced. There's a strong pro-Neil tilt, to be sure, but it is, after all, a Neil Young web site, so what would you expect?

The comments section is a different story. It's here that the real split occurs between those who above all else revere the man and those whose primary focus is on the music. Thrasher's comments fall solidly in the first category, leading to opinions like the one that ends this column:

"But, there will always be those who can not get it, and will never get it, because they can't change their minds. Sad."

Restated this reads "It is sad that those who can't change their minds (about FITR) will never get it." What he's really saying is that Neil Young's every utterance is deserving of the utmost reverence because... well, because it's his web site and that's the way he wants it.

Those who come to the site with an honest critical approach that says maybe Neil isn't making the greatest music these days are greeted with torrents of abuse, from, at times, the host himself. (Though, to be fair, a reasonable amount of thoughtful discussion does occur amongst the rubble.)

I have no axes to grind here. Thrasher and I went back and forth a few times and agreed to a respectful (I hope, from his side) truce. I love and revere Neil's music; I am completely neutral on the question of the man himself and his personal qualities. I really don't care if he's a saint or a complete asshole. I have only ever been interested in discussing the arc of his career and possible reasons why he doesn't seem able to record songs that are as good as the ones he used to record. In the middle of a long heated exchange of opinions Thrasher explicitly agreed with this when he told me that I might have a long wait if I was expecting any more "classic" recordings from Neil.

So I continue to wonder what's happened to Neil's muse...career.. whatever you want to call it (and the corresponding issue of Neil's peers, Dylan, Springsteen, etc. whose career arcs seem to parallel Neil's in many ways.) To that end, the following thoughts on being a rock star in the 21st century:


Let's maybe look at Neil and his last few years from a different standpoint. As Deep Throat (the All the President's Men confidential source, not the porno movie) famously advised "Follow the money."
See, I've seen comments many times along the lines of "Well, Neil sure doesn't need the money." in justification of any number of arguments relating to his recordings, tours, charitable and public service participation, etc. My answer to that is, "How the hell do you know?" And, of course, neither do I, but if you start from the opposite perspective and ask "What if Neil does need the money?" you might end up with a different view.

Let's start the discussion with an an overview to illuminate the current state of what it might be like, economically, to be a rock star in the 21st century.

From Billboard:

This week's charts of the Top 200 show that:

The best selling album,(Rascal Flatts) sold 351,000 copies
The 10th best selling album, Lady Ga-Ga, sold 56,000
Neil Young's Fork in the Road debuted at number 19 (unknown total sales but reasonable to assume somewhat less than 30,000)

Furthermore:

After 77 weeks, Carrie Underwood's second album has been certified for 2 million units sold
After 129 weeks Taylor Swift's first album has been certified for 3 million units sold.

Continuing:

In the top ten best selling albums there are zero with multi-platinum certifications.
In the 11-50th best selling albums there are four certified multi-platinum with a total of 8 million sold.
In the 51-100 best selling albums there are four multi-platinum representing 8 million sold.

In the entire top 100 there are only two albums (Taylor Swift and L'il Wayne) that have been certified for 3 million sold.

This is not an unusual week. You don't have to go back too many years to find the Top 100 studded with albums certified for 5 or 10 or 12 million units sold. And it is reasonable to assume that the other albums on those charts sold more units by far than albums in the same chart position sell today. And, while digital sales have made up some of the difference, those sales are primarily of single songs by relatively recent artists, not albums by artists like Neil Young.

So, regardless of whether or not Neil still makes bundles of bucks from sales of his back catalog, royalties, etc., the inescapable conclusion has to be that Neil's income from sales of his individual albums are way, way down from what they used to be. And human nature tells us that it is fairly difficult to make a radical change in one's standard of living once one has gotten used to a certain level of economic affluence and comfort.

If you accept the argument that Neil's income from sales is way down (and he pretty much confirms that himself with the "My sales have tanked" line), and you make a logical deduction that Neil is maybe not too interested in downsizing his lifestyle, you ask yourself what Neil might be thinking/doing to keep the bucks arriving in a satisfactory manner.
The first approach, and most clearly obvious, is to step up the pace of his touring. This has been extensively noted, not just with Neil, but with many artists of his generation. Dylan has been on tour for about a hundred years now. Neil has been touring far more extensively than at any time in his artistic career. Springsteen reforms the E-Street Band and sells Greatest Hits exclusively at Wal-Mart after his solo recordings and tours fail to produce revenue anywhere near historic levels (and, again from Billboard, his 5-Star reviewed, Super Bowl supported Working on a Dream album sits at number 88 after 11 weeks with half a million certified sales.)

For us, the fan, it is, in one sense, wonderful. We have far more opportunities to see the man in person than was ever previously the case. In another sense, though, the constant touring doesn't leave much time for the man to sit around quietly waiting for the muse to produce new inspiration. So, we get the "direct lyrics" approach of Living with War and Fork in the Road, with songs written and recorded in, seemingly, minutes. It's quite a change from the days where albums would be assembled over months and even years and when entire albums would be trashed because they weren't quite matching where Neil's head happened to be at the moment.

But a secondary effect of the current music economy is to make it increasingly unlikely that an artist wants to take the time off from touring to record a major album. If the very top selling albums from the newest, hottest artists are only going to sell a million units or two over a couple years, why invest the time and psychic energy necessary to write and record them?

From an economic standpoint it makes a lot more sense to record a whole bunch of albums and sell them to the dedicated fan base than to spend the same amount of time recording one album that will, primarily, still only sell to the same fan base.

And, this, I think, more than anything, accounts for the current pattern of Neil's career. The topical, tossed off (and inexpensively produced) album will sell a few tens of thousands before it disappears; the gradual release of archives material will do somewhat better (I don't think it's an accident that the first volume of the archives seems imminent only after the third archive recording, Canterbury, only lasted a week on the charts); and non-stop touring will fill in the revenue gaps.

And, finally, I do not in any way mean this to be critical of the artist. A man's gotta eat. Neil has absolutely nothing left to prove to anyone. I just think that looking at the economic picture might provide a different insight into how we got to where we are.

More reaction to Neil Young's Fork in the Road.

Neil Young Concert Reviews: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada - 4/20/09

Neil Young will be performing tonight at Credit Union Centre, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Johnny Magic Contest Video by Brian, 13 Years Old


Johnny Magic Contest video from Brian Arnold on Vimeo.

Here's another entry into the Johnny Magic Video Contest by Brian Arnold, 13 years old, the youngest member of the German Human Highway Mailinglist.

Details at Johnny Magic Contest.

Here are a few other crazy videos by Neil Young fans:

- "Johnny Magic" Contest Video by Liza
- My, my, hey, hey, I touched Neil Young's Car today!
- Neil Young You're My Hero
- Neil Young Stole My Dog
- There is a Town in North Ontario: "Road To Omemee" Video
- Neil Young Sang and We Heard The Truth

So, if you're feeling creative, check out Neil Young's Johnny Magic Video Contest.

Also, see all entries posted on N Y Times.

Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road

It's been about 9 months now since some the songs on what would come to be known as Fork in the Road were first debuted on the 2008 European tour.

As time went by -- oddly -- it seemed that the reaction to the new songs became more and more hostile. We simply could not understand how the new unreleased songs seemed to not even be given a chance before being consigned to Neil Young's slagheap of failures.

The attempts to defend the new songs seemed to only generate the backlash that not only did the new songs suck, but that Neil Young was washed and done. Neil's muse had failed him and he should simply release the Archives and call it a day.

All in all quite disheartening that even Neil's greatest fans for 10, 20, 30, or 40 years were throwing in the towel before an album was even released based on one-off concert performances, crappy YouTubes, and audience tapes. Even folks claiming to have come around on TRANS, Reactor, or Greendale or insert your favorite under appreciated/misunderstood Neil album of your choice here.

It got so bad in March that it was literally a battle raging on this blog that led us to a quite regrettable outburst.

In retrospect, it all seems truly bizarre now that the album is out. Here we are, on a nice spring weekend, with FITR blasting in the CD player, windows down, buzzing down the open road and it all sounds like a perfect roadtrip album to us. But that's just a us and apparently a few others.

In our Fork in the Road review last week where we laid out the case that FITR fits into a final chapter of trilogy formed by Greendale and Living With War, some other brave souls have come forward to say that they were premature in their assessment and were now also recognizing the brilliant simplicity of FITR and it's compelling message.

Like this mea culpa for Fork in the Road by Charlie:

OK, I was wrong about Fork in the Road – I shouldn’t have doubted Neil. FITR has greatly exceeded my expectations. I really like this album, and it keeps getting better with each play. Over the past couple months as the new songs destined for FITR were rolled out, I posted a number of comments on Thrasher's Wheat stating that I was less than thrilled by them; in fact, I thought they were some of the weakest material Neil has done. I stand by my criticisms, particularly that a bit more word craft could have done wonders in some songs. But overall, the album overcomes those weaknesses, and manages to be the best thing he's done in quite a while.

Or Andrews Rock Blog:
I love to be wrong sometimes. Usually it’s when it comes to music. I love to have low expectations on something and then have it exceed those expectations. That’s exactly what Neil Young has done for me with his new album Fork In The Road. When it was announced that Neil was going to postpone his massive Archives boxset because he had a new album about his car he wanted to release, I was super ticked off. I haven’t been impressed with the last few Neil albums, and I was so looking forward to the box set, I figured there was no way I was going to enjoy Fork In The Road. Well, I was wrong.

Or The Other Paper's review by JOHN PETRIC:
Why do critics hate this?

Goodness gracious, I wasn’t aware until after I’d first heard it that Neil Young’s new album, Fork in the Road, was so, uh, controversial with certain media-types around the world who’ve given it some serious thumbing down.

Ah, silly rock critics—never trust your opinion to one of ’em. But then again, what am I telling you for? You love me because you hate me. Fair enough.

The new Neil Young record is, at times, pretty damn good. It’s themed on his electric-car project, namely turning an ancient Lincoln Continental into a non-fossil-fuel-burning moving mobile, which apparently he has. It’s his cause.
Those big, lumbering dinosaur chords, the limpid melody walking through a hauntingly gorgeous minor key of the kind Neil specializes in—I am in love with this song.

I don’t give a flying fire truck what other people think. This album may end up a minor Neil classic along the lines of Tonight’s the Night. Long may he run, on electricity, off-shore oil or his own goddam gumption.

Damn the critics,
full steam ahead!

So with all this said, here is yet another re-appraisal of Fork in the Road by Anonymous (who we really feel should come out and stand up for this comment):
Firstly, I'd like to consider "Just Singing a Song" a bit more closely. Of course, one of the great things about Neil is that most of his songs really can be interpreted a number of ways, but one of the biggest mistakes a fan or listener can make is to be narrow-minded in interpretation and assessment. I hope I don't come off as taking things too seriously, but a Neil Young song is rarely about any one thing; there are multiple inspiring factors.

"Just Singing a Song" really isn't about cars as I see it-- certainly not in the same way that "Fuel Line" or " Get Behind the Wheel" are. It is about exactly what the title suggests: change, and more precisely, making it happen. With his Lincvolt project, it would seem Neil is trying to make a particular, large-scale change: make cars convenient for the environment and economy, as well as on-the-go people who really have no choice in this day and age but to use them. Hence, he brings up his car in one verse, because although it has to do with change, the car itself is not the focal point or overall theme of the song. That would be change, social and personal, and the idea that it's difficult to make it happen: just picking up a guitar and playing a song is not, in and of itself, going to make that change happen. A far more cliche way of saying it would be, "be the change you want to see."

So "Just Singing a Song" can safely be designated as not being about cars. Unless, of course, I am being too intellectual, and not simple-minded enough, in defining a "song about cars." Just because a lyric mentions a motor vehicle, this does not mean the vehicle is the focus or theme of the song. Personally, I'd think that level of lyrical analysis would be second nature to a Neil Young fan.

Lots of Neil's songs--and lots of the ones on this album--use motion as a theme, and often a metaphor for something. When Neil talked about the "Spirit Road" on his previous album, he wasn't literally talking about paved street, or going for a ride, but about an emotional journey. This is because one of the things Neil does best and most frequently is to write songs about feeling and emotion, about life-- about the human condition. Neil has a remarkable way of, through his songs, connected to people, their success, and the challenges they face daily.

In "HIt the Road", a song that some would say is about cars, Neil talks about the people in the cities make their daily commutes. He does this, it would seem, partially to draw attention to the pollution the vehicles involved in the commute cause, but he also speaks of people trying to keep up the energy and morale to keep following this routine day-in and day-out, to "stay in the groove." I am not a psychologist, but I'd say people who go to and from a workplace--or school--every day of the week should be able to relate to this one way or another.

Simply put, cars can be a component of the lyrics of a Neil Young song, but this does not constitute that they are the focus or them of the song in question. Which brings us to this album, "Fork in the Road." I like it quite a bit myself, some tracks more than others. It's said to be inspired by his Lincvolt, and indeed environmentally sound cars are the primary focus of several of the songs. There are many numbers, however, that clearly aren't "about cars" if one pays more attention than the average music critic:

The opening track, "When Worlds Collide" is a perfect example. It's one my favorites, with a melody that really grabs your attention and works well as an album opener. One may automatically infer that in "taking a trip across the USA", a car is involved--and one is likely to be correct--but the fact remains that the journey, not the transportation, is the theme of the song. It's a strong lyric, if not obvious in its meaning. There is neither time or nor space for extensive analysis here, but suffice it to say that lines like "living my days in a old jail, somehow life just goes to hell with one bad hand" provoke the mind into enough exercise.

Other songs not specifically, or largely, about cars:
"Off the Road" (again, about the feeling), "Light a Candle" (obvious), "Cough up the Bucks" (also obvious, and to be brought up again later), "Fork in the Road" (yes, it mentions a road, a rig, and a pickup truck, but are we really that myopic?)

Most of these are very good songs, particularly the absolutely excellent "Light a Candle", currently my favorite song on the album. I also like "Off the Road." It relates to the daily human condition, as I elaborated on earlier. These are the only quiet numbers on the album, and it is interesting to note that they are among the best, and perhaps not entirely coincidental in my case: I am a big fan of Neil's acoustic, so-called "mellow" side.

I mentioned "Cough up the Bucks" earlier, and indicated I'd come back to it. It's grown on me since initial listening, especially the riff before the verses.
Lyrically, it seems a bit shallow at first, until you realize Neil is making a tongue-in-cheek comment about the current state of the economy--read: bailouts--and just how self-serving some of our "civil servants" have been of late. I actually like this song and think there are worse ones on this album alone, never mind the rest of Neil's catalogue.

"Fork in the Road" also brings up the bailout as a central element: "There's a bailout coming, but it's not for you. It's for those creeps, hiding what they do." It's different from what Neil's done before, and I think it's pretty good. Some of it is pretty funny: "download this/sounds like s***/keep on blogging, till the lights go out." This what some have called talking blues, and is not the most eloquent or poetic thing Neil has ever written, but that doesn't matter as that pretty clearly wasn't the intent with this album. This isn't necessarily an example of a Neil Young song I'll come back to again and again, but it's enjoyable in context, like much of this album.

Along with "When Worlds Collide" and "Light a Candle", "Just Singing a Song" is among the best on here. Neil plays some tantalizingly brief electric guitar and I've already talked about the lyrics, which are among the finest on the album.

This about leaves the songs that are about cars. "Hit the Road" is arguable, as I have already summarized. In any event, it is the best of the remaining tracks, really connecting at a basic, almost primal, level to the human condition. I prefer to think of it as more about the environment than about cars, and also about people, which can be said of any number of Shakey's songs. The remaining songs are, for me, lesser material, which could be quite telling depending on how you interpret it.

"Get Behind the Wheel" has a fun Chuck Berry-like feeling to it, which I like. But it is bland lyrically, and probably the least interesting song on the album.

The humor of "Fuel Line" has grown on me, but it still isn't much as far as lyrics. At least it keeps up the pace as the second. I do have to emphasize that I like this track more than I did initially; I think I've gotten the humorous attitude with which Young approached the song. And to be honest, given that subject, to do a song intended to be serious, and which most people could take seriously, would probably be quite difficult.

Lastly is "Johnny Magic", a mechanic that worked on Neil's Lincoln, I hear tell. It's a good melody--among many, the album is strong musically--but lyrically uninteresting to me and seems, though it isn't a word I relish to use--nor do I often have the opportunity--in connection with Neil Young, bland. It's got that rock 'n' roll vibe to it again, and it seems to me that Neil touches on the theme of bringing about change again, from the perspective of one character. Regardless, I don't feel it stands out among the other numbers, even if the vibe is, as mentioned previously, a fun one.

So overall, this is a pretty good album. I like it more than I initially did, some tracks growing on me in ways I didn't expect. Neil has done that to me before. I won't say this album is near as great as the classics from the '70s, or even his strongest work from the '90s and past few years, such as the absolutely sublime "Chrome Dreams II", "Silver and Gold", and "Sleeps with Angels", but the extreme negative reaction to it is, I think unfounded and exaggerated to ridiculous degrees at times.

I have to laugh thinking about it: anyone who is listening with both ears should be able to tell this isn't just an album "about cars".

So, in conclusion, we thought this review summed up FITR quite nicely. From The Music Magazine by Chris Sheerin:
On the surface, Fork In The Road is an automotive-themed concept album highlighting Young’s own obsession with a project to create an alternative power supply for cars (the LincVolt project is using his own 1959 Lincoln Continental as a prototype) but it follows the blatant political objections of Living With War in a much more concise and direct way. Young has created a fairly ordinary garage rock (see what he did there?) album celebrating the world of the automobile and fused in some ironic commentary about the environmentally destructive pastime. This approach will ultimately divide fans and critics, but knowing what Young is now dedicating his life to it all makes sense. And this process has created a decent album.

Within all the greasy overall-wearing car-based metaphor is a real sense of reality; a finger firmly on the social and political pulse, like it has always been. It would be difficult to understand why Neil Young would do anything else than to comment on current times, particularly when the world is under the clouds of global economic crisis and impending threat. And there is no better muse than misery. While Springsteen has his head full of dreams, and Dylan is removing himself from the political lure, Young has his feet on solid ground, still toiling and campaigning for the common ‘middle-American’ man. The title of the album, and indeed the title track itself, represents a divided America with citizens faced with a choice of left or right…but at the same time it is the perfect analogy for convergence, as the old broken America of Bush makes way for the new historic vision of Obama. Whether Fork In The Road is remembered as a classic like After The Goldrush and Harvest is a matter of debate but it certainly is an album marking a point in history.

But, there will always be those who can not get it, and will never get it, because they can't change their minds. Sad.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Photos: Neil Young in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada: 4/17/09

sault-ste-marie-04-17-09-NeilYoung-donna-hopper.jpg
Neil Young in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada: 4/17/09
Photo by Donna Hopper


Super photo gallery and concert review by Donna Hopper on SooToday.com.

Thanks Donna!

After reading reviews of this tour, KM from Colorado was moved to write us:
Neil will be here on the 27th of April in Colorado. I've followed him since 1969, I was 16 yrs old. I've been to all of his concerts here in CO, and treasure all the recordings I've collected thru the years. No one has ever touched my soul like his music. I lost my mom & dad when I was young, and it was his music that comforted me with the pain,the heartbreak,and lonely times of my life. My children, where raised listening to his music, they really enjoyed the work he did with Pearl Jam. Will write review of his upcoming concert...

I love the man and his music.

KM from Colorado

Also, see Concert Reviews of Neil Young in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada: 4/17/09.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Concert Reviews of Neil Young in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada: 4/17/09


"Down By The River" by Neil Young @ Essar Centre Sault Ste Marie Ontario April 17 2009

Thanks Joe!


Neil Young will be performing tonight at Essar Centre, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

"Johnny Magic" Contest Video by Liza


"Johnny Magic" Neil Young contest entry from Liza Piontek on Vimeo.

Here's a great video by Liza in Germany for the "Johnny Magic" video contest.

Thanks Liza! Good luck!!!

Inspired by Neil Young's recent foray into imaginative do-it-yourself digital video's, the Make-Your-Own "Johnny Magic" video contest is a chance to grab your camera, rev up your ingenuity, and let your vision be seen.

Details at Johnny Magic Contest.


Here are a few other crazy videos by Neil Young fans:

- My, my, hey, hey, I touched Neil Young's Car today!
- Neil Young You're My Hero
- Neil Young Stole My Dog
- There is a Town in North Ontario: "Road To Omemee" Video
- Neil Young Sang and We Heard The Truth

So, if you're feeling creative, check out Neil Young's Johnny Magic Video Contest.

Got Neil? Contact Thrasher's Wheat

So you've got Neil?

We always love to hear folks' Neil stories, reviews, links, photos, videos, etc.

Here's how to contact us here at Thrasher's Wheat.

But first, it's come to our attention that some folks who have written us never received our reply. It seems that some of our out going mail is ending up in folks junk mail or spam folders.

So if you've written to us and didn't get a reply within 48-72 hours, check your junk mail or spam folders.

Also, we return a lot of mail with requested info and never hear back as to whether useful. Or folks who say they'll share a story, link, photo, video or whatever and we never hear back from them. So please don't ask a bunch of questions promising us stuff that never comes through.

As an fyi, if you are trying to contact Neil Young, we are in no way, shape or form affiliated with Neil's organization. Try his record label, Warner Bros. + Reprise Records.

And if you would like us to answer a question, check the Neil Young FAQ. Or search Thrasher's Wheat (the search box is always in the right sidebar).

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Keep On Rockin' In The FREE World!!!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Concert Reviews of Neil Young in London, Ontario, Canada: 4/15/09

From 925 JACK FM - Toronto's Best Rock Variety - Andrews Rock Blog:
: "Last night’s Neil Young show in London at the John Labatt Centre was the best I’ve ever seen from the man, and I’ve seen quite a few (I believe it was number 13). The band, who he’s spent the better part of a year touring with, has a second sense with Neil, and knows where he’s going during any one song. The set list was a great mix between classics and obscurities, the highlights for me including “Change Your Mind” from 1994’s Sleeps With Angels, and a great version of Harvest’s “Are You Ready For The Country”, with Neil playing the song’s stellar piano part.

From CANOE -- JAM! Neil Young - Concert Review By JAMES REANEY:
Nine thousand Rusties can't be wrong -- Neil Young never gets old.

Canadian rock icon Neil Young and a jammed John Labatt Centre communed in downtown London last night.

On a night when he plays miles of great guitar, Young saved his big, folk style hits -- Heart of Gold and Old Man -- for late in the main set. By that time, the star had doffed the checked shirt he wore for most of the show and was in a mystifying T, apparently celebrating somebody called Mr. Fiesta.

No matter. Just as his hard-rocking classics such as Cinnamon Girl had roused the crowd mid-set, the quieter songs produced singalongs and huge cheers.



Neil Young will be performing tonight at John Labatt Centre, London, Ontario, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Revolution Blues: Heart of Weirdness

"On The Beach"-- the last album in Neil's so called "Ditch Trilogy" contains the well know Blues Trilogy: Ambulance Blues, Vampire Blues, and Revolution Blues. Here's an interesting essay from Crawdaddy "Revolution Blues: Heart of Weirdness" by Braden Towne:
Something about being splendidly famous didn’t sit right with Neil Young. His star had steadily ascended throughout the later portion of the ’60s, and then went supernova with the release of Harvest in 1972. This unsettling career peak set against the backdrop of an aimless and endless military conflict, a freshly confirmed second term for a conservative warmonger (what year was this again?), and a handful of overdosing cronies sent Young careening into the abyss. The tours and records that immediately followed were a reckless expedition into the jungles of paranoia and despair, navigated with bloodshot eyes. By 1974, the intrepid songwriter probably needed a vacation from all that was heavy, and the aptly titled On the Beach could have been it; but two songs in, like a feverish jetlag nightmare, the demons pulled Neil down into the sinister funk of “Revolution Blues.”

Continue full article here.

More on Neil Young's On The Beach and the "Ditch Trilogy".

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

"The Ways of Love" Video: St. John's, Newfoundland - 4/7/09



Neil Young - "The Ways of Love", Mile One Centre in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada on April 7, 2009.

Thanks RodneyMaxwellFord & Wiggy!

More rave concert reviews of tour kickoff in St. John's, 4/6 & 7/2009.

TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT LISTENING PARTY

tonights-the-night-acetate-cover.jpg

So listening parties are all the rage these days.

Karen dropped us a note on the latest upcoming listening party for Tonight's The Night on THURSDAY APRIL 16, at 3 PM EST and again at 10 PM EST on Streamland Chat.


Yes, I am aware that the album has already been released. :)

This is simply a celebration of this fantastic album and an opportunity for fans around the world to get together and listen simultaneously and chat.

No passport, visa or airline ticket required. If you have love for this album, that’s all you need. Come on in and we’ll love it together. :)

Perhaps you were there in Canada recently when Neil played some of the TTN songs? Come and tell us about it!

Or maybe you were even THERE, for some of the ORIGINAL TTN shows, in which case, pleeeeease come on in and tell all. :)

We’ll be spinning the black circle, folks, so come watch the record go ‘round.

JOIN THE PARTY HERE: http://tinyurl.com/c2xfoc
SIGN UP FOR FUTURE STREAMLAND UPDATES HERE: http://twitter.com/streamland

love,
karen
p.s. Fork In the Road Listening/Get Around Viewing Parties were happenin’. Thanks for coming!

You can do your listening party homework on that deep, dark ditch classic here. Be sure that you have the album insert translated from Dutch for any bonus questions.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Kingston, Ontario, Canada Concert Reviews of Neil Young: 4/13/09

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Photo by Brad


Hey Thrasher,

What a concert last night- I got to see Neil in my home town – what a treat. The concert was fantastic. I have seen him many times since 1986 (including Massey Hall) but there was something extra special about last night. It all started on Sunday night when at a bar in Kingston “The Mansion”, Rocky Roberts performed in “The Living Room” with Rick Rosas, Anthony Crawford and Pegi Young. He also had some local acts including Sara Harmer and The Abrahams Brothers on stage with him. What a great time! And yes I got to meet Pegi and Anthony. A local radio station has me as their “Neil Correspondent”. I’ve attached the link to the interview they did with me before the concert.

http://www.fm96.ca/home/tabid/1236/Default.aspx

But man, Neil was on – I have heard Cortez many, many times in the past, but last night Old Black was singing the notes like I have never heard before. And before he sang Old Man Neil sent out an “I love you” to his family in the audience (you may remember Scott Young past away while living in Kingston a few years ago). Two encores, with a version of Rockin’ in The Free World that had the whole arena rockin’.

Neil really created a connection last night. If you get a chance to see Neil on this tour, do it.

I send a couple of pictures from our digital camera that we took last night and one with Anthony and me and some of the Rocky Roberts concert. Here is a bit of an article from the local paper http://www.thewhig.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1522622

Take Care,

Brad

kingston-pegi.jpg
Photo by Brad

Thanks Brad!! Good to know that Neil rocked his old man's hometown!


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Photo by Corey Lablans


From Crowd roars at Young show - The Whig Standard - Ontario, CA by GREG BURLIUK:
On the title song of his new CD Fork in The Road,Neil Young jokes about having a pot belly and how his record sales have tanked, the implication being that he's a has-been.

Try telling that to the 6,500 fans who jammed the K-Rock centre last night to greet the legendary Canadian rocker with a massive wave of affection.

Thanks Karen!


Neil Young will be performing tonight at K-Rock Centre, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Fork in the Road Reviews: Got A Potbelly

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Recently, we wrote about how the initial consensus around Neil Young's Greendale and Living With War was that they were flawed and misguided. Our opinion was that Fork in the Road seemed to be falling right into the same mindset. But we maintain that the three works together actually constitute a cohesive trilogy that may just validate Neil's early 21st century work.

There's an intriguing arc between the three albums. With Greendale , Neil sounds the alarm that something has gone terribly wrong on a number of fronts. Living With War was a direct confrontation of the need for a call to action. Fork in the Road -- the 3rd installment of the trilogy -- reveals Neil coming to grips with the fact that first you recognize a problem, then you call out the need to address it, and finally you do something about it.

Because just singing a song won't change the world. You need to light a candle. And then you get behind the wheel and hit the road.

Many have written off Fork in the Road as a silly album about cars. But we think that some folks just don't get it. Or they just haven't come around as of yet like some others.

Like New York Daily News' Jim Farber and his woefully misguided review "Young's car concept album is a 'Road' to nowhere":
There's just one thing worse than a concept album, and that's a topical concept album. Unfortunately, Neil Young stumbled across both those tripwires on his latest CD, "Fork in the Road."

It's a 10-track disk of car songs, with every cut dedicated to engines, motion and chrome.

Umm, Jim did you actually listen to the CD? Because songs like "Light a Candle", "Just Singing A Song" or "Cough Up The Bucks" don't have anything to do with cars.
If these observations sound about as fresh as last night's episode of the Keith Olbermann show, wait till you hear the music. It leans on rote blues riffs, harking back to Young's ultra-dreary, CD salute to the genre, "This Note's for You."

"This Note's for You"'s title track -- as we recall -- was an indictment of the music industry's infatuation with music videos as the future and corporate sponsorship of concert tours. And we thought "Married Man" and "Sunny Inside", for example, were pretty optimistic. Did you listen to that album also before writing that comment?

Many riffs sound like they fell off a truck on the way to a ZZ Top album. A few more of the star's trademark stinging leads might have helped but he's surprisingly stingy with them. Worse, his band's beats plod drearily, even by Young's bottom-heavy standards.

They're probably meant to imply a sense of family, as they did on another of his woeful, recent concept CDs, 2003's "Greendale." But the result sounds like something straight out of community theater.

Uh-oh. Don't get us started with putting down our beloved Greendale .
Like Young's ghastly "Living With War" CD in 2006, his latest attempts to be topical just end up seeming either exploitive [sic] or like outbusts [sic] from a coot. But the larger problem is more basic: Young's need to keep putting out so much work.

Proofread much Jim?
"Fork" marks his eighth album in nine years, and the toil shows. Sadly, his track record in this decade has come to recall the star's output from the '80s, when his Geffen albums lapsed from lax to perverse.

Ah, yes. The old tried and true trope of the lost Geffen years.
Young managed to come back strong in the '90s, which may augur well for the next decade. But in the meantime, is it too much to ask Young to lay back long enough for his bankrupt muse to stage its own economic recovery?

And the failure of Neil's muse myth perpetuates itself again due to the shoddy criticism of Farber similar to that of Village Voice's Rob Harvilla and U.K. Guardian's Sean Michaels who we've smacked down previously.

We contacted Farber for this article but he did not respond. But feel free to give him a try. He can be reached at: jfarber@nydailynews.com

But how about some other perspectives on Fork in the Road?

From Yale Daily News - Off the road again by Raphael Shapiro:
Sound mixing, however, is not this project’s major problem. Where “Fork in the Road” ultimately misses is in its dogged determination to make a point. Gone are Young’s poetic lyrics, replaced by expository lines with a smattering of descriptive similes that leave something to be desired. One example will illustrate the point: “Fuel Line” is a song written to an electric car. Seriously. In the second verse come the lyrics, “The awesome power of electricity / Stored for you in a giant battery / She runs so quiet, she’s just like a ghost.” Meanwhile, the backup singers chime in, “Keep running that fuel line, keep running that ol’ fuel line.” The mood feels absurd, a tone Young was probably not aiming for.

In “Cough Up The Bucks,” a commentary on the price of gas [say what??? how about the bank bailout?], Young sings, “Where did all the money go? Where did all the cash flow? Where did all the revenue stream?” And throughout, the backup vocalists return chanting over and over, like a mantra of modern society, “Cough up the bucks, cough up the bucks.” It’s like none of his producers told Young it should have been a comedy.

From JamBase By Dean Smith:
Fork in the Road isn't one of his vintage works, or even a seminal one. His 40th album feels dashed off and less polished than Living with War, but it's good clean fun. The videos will make you laugh out loud and the guitars will keep you coming back for more. Still cranking it out with a fiery glint in his eye, Young is enjoying every minute.

From CANOE -- JAM! Music - Album Review: FORK IN THE ROAD By DARRYL STERDAN:
90% of all great rock songs are about cars, money, sex or some combination thereof. And thankfully, this disc does not consist of odes to alternative propulsion technologies, drivetrain torque ratios or the pros and cons of hydrogen fuel cells. Nor is it a Living With War-style soapbox derby. So you can enjoy these 10 raw-boned, ramshackle blues-rockers without feeling guilty for not biking to work.

Having said all that -- and much as we admire and respect Young's restless commitment to following his muse, striking while the iron is hot and bashing out albums that are the musical equivalent of blog entries -- it would be nice if he made a disc that sounded like it took longer to write and record than it does to play.

From The Daily Athenaeum: Album Spotlight: neil Young attempts relevance with 'fork in the Road,' disappoints by Marc Basham:
But if one would have to pick a quintessential track from “Fork in the Road,” look no further than “Just Singing a Song.”

Bringing up memories of “Rockin’ in the Free World,” “Just Singing Song” contains the most truthful message of any other track on this album: “Just singing a song don’t change the world.”

Regrettably, Young did not listen to his own message from this song.

Overall, I can see people describing “Fork in the Road” as just another oblivious concept album in Young’s long lineage.

However, I still cannot get past the sheer amount of smugness contained in this album.

I guess, in the end, Ronnie Van Zant was right in “Sweet Home Alabama” when he said: “I hope Neil Young will remember a southern man don’t need him ’round.”

In the case of “Fork in the Road,” the same sense of not needing Neil Young also applies.

Grade: D-

From On Deaf Ears:
Throughout, Neil Young sounds like he’s having more fun than he’s had in years. He’s obviously excited to be joining the great American traditions of entrepreneurship and innovation while simultaneously engaging in his passion for classic cars. His enthusiasm, placed on wax for us on Fork in the Road, lights a candle in the darkness of the tough times we are living in. Despite its (often humorous) crankiness, it’s a joy.

From The Daily News MUSIC REVIEW By Scott Bauer:
Give Neil Young credit for following his muse.

Throughout his storied career, Young has never been one to shy away from the idiosyncratic project, whether his fans want to come along or not.

On his latest, the hastily written and recorded 'Fork in the Road,' Young takes on the hot topics of the day. He sings about electric cars, green energy, bailouts and even his own career.

'I'm a big rock star,' Young drolly sings over a thumping blues beat on the title track, the best song on the record. 'My sales have tanked, but I still got you. Thanks!'

It's a very funny song. How could it not be when Young starts it off by talking about his pot belly?

Funny, yes. But just because it's funny doesn't mean it can stand alongside Young's best work, or that it will stand the test of time. That's the problem with topical records like 'Fork in the Road.'"

From SkyHiDailyNews.com By Adam Kandle:
True to its subject, “Fork In The Road” is at times a messy affair that may be in need of repair but when it’s running right will remind you of the joy you felt getting behind the wheel for the first time.

From LiveDaily Album Review by Tjames Madison:
Neil Young has peddled road-as-metaphor-for-life tunes for as long as he's been recording albums, so it's not surprising he would devote his latest studio set to, essentially, one long, shaggy dog tale about an environmentally friendly Lincoln Continental.

Nor, given Young's relatively recent brush with mortality (his brain aneurysm in 2005 and subsequent complications, which everyone seemed to promptly forget about once Neil slipped right back into his typically busy work mode), should anyone be terribly surprised that the rock legend would produce something so footloose and carefree at age 63, because let's face it: he's right where he wants to be and owes nothing to nobody at this point.

No, the mildly unexpected news about 'Fork in the Road' is how perfectly it fits into Young's entire back catalog; sonically, it slots neatly and unapologetically into his mid-'70s oeuvre, comfortably existing in the Neiliverse somewhere between 'Zuma' and 'Rust Never Sleeps.' It's a Big Guitar album, and veers sharply away from Young's most recent retreats to 'Harvest' territory.

The guitars are huge and sweeping on the crunching trio that opens the album, "When World's Collide," "Fuel Line" and the pointed "Just Singing a Song," which gently rebukes entertainers who opt for benefit recordings and live appearances over a commitment to genuine change. "You can sing about change while making your own," Young offers. "Just singing a song won't change the world."

Thematically, Young remains a storyteller almost without peer. The leitmotif weaving through most of the songs on "Fork on the Road" is Neil's recent experience when he and a friend converted a 1959 Lincoln Continental to run on biofuels and then drove the car--dubbed the Lincovolt--across the US on sort of a combination road trip/goodwill tour.

From Blender by Robert Christgau:
Ugh—a concept album about fuel-efficient automobiles.

Showcasing, it figures, an old hippie’s customary disregard for pop niceties, as his rough-hewn band bashes away without even the chorus of 100 that set apart the music on 2006’s Living With War. The trick is that unless you assume “the awesome power of electricity/Stored for you in a giant battery” is too ridiculous for words, the material verges on the extraordinary. The man who wrote “Long May You Run” for his 1946 Buick knows how to milk a car song, and so he sings about freedom and getting under her hood, sure, but also about endless traffic jams, the credit crunch, even bailouts. Pragmatically exploiting his sure tune sense, his saving falsetto and a command of the political facts well exceeding that of Living With War, he’s turned out the first great protest album of the new dispensation.

Unfortunately, we’ll need more.

From The UNCUT Album Review: Neil Young - Fork In The Road by JOHN ROBINSON:
As with its closest precedent, the brief, bracing, garage rock blast of 2006’s Living With War, what’s on offer here is not Neil Young the shy, meditative, folk singer we’ve lately heard emoting from newly released archival recordings. Instead, this is the work of a man who has – again, so soon – been moved by current events to put something down on paper. If Young’s 2009 subject matter makes him a journalist, so does his method. This is no florid essay, but rather angry editorial banged out on a tight deadline, with little regard for the niceties of technique.

Over all, you wonder if it’s a supremely intelligent way to connect with a middle American audience whose No 1 pre-election priority was not solving the war but the restarting of the economy, and a country whose auto industry is in terminal crisis. Remember the guy in the CSNY film who walked out during “Let’s Impeach The President”, saying the band could “suck my dick”? Neil wants him back on board, and perhaps cars is how he thinks he’s going to speak to him.

From Washington Times: Young jams to bailout woes by Adam Mazmanian:
Most of the 10 songs on 'Fork in the Road' take a gritty, sardonic look at the economic landscape and its effects. There's a kind of inchoate populism here — an us-versus-them motif that amalgamates Bruce Springsteen's more fully formed post-industrial critique and Bachman-Turner Overdrive's white-collar blues, 'Taking Care of Business.'

From The Harvard Crimson By SUSIE Y. KIM:
If Neil Young wants to release a concept album about eco-friendly cars, he sure as hell will — and over 40 years of artistic excellence means that people will listen, regardless of its merits. “Fork in the Road,” although appreciable for its grungy, hard-rocking feel and often hilarious, sometimes thought provoking lyrics, leaves the listener feeling unnoticed as Young continues to write songs that seem to serve the sole purpose of amusing himself for the moment.

From 925 JACK FM - Toronto's Best Rock Variety - Andrews Rock Blog:
I love to be wrong sometimes. Usually it’s when it comes to music. I love to have low expectations on something and then have it exceed those expectations. That’s exactly what Neil Young has done for me with his new album Fork In The Road. When it was announced that Neil was going to postpone his massive Archives boxset because he had a new album about his car he wanted to release, I was super ticked off. I haven’t been impressed with the last few Neil albums, and I was so looking forward to the box set, I figured there was no way I was going to enjoy Fork In The Road. Well, I was wrong.

From AWmusic by Carmen:
Fork in the Road is Neil Young’s timely commentary on the current state of America. Undoubtedly rushed to ensure impact and relevance, Young’s work on the ten-song release feels more honest, more accessible, and definitely more fun than anything else he’s recorded in the last few years.

Who can deny America’s love affair with the open road? You know, Route 66, all that jazz? It’s a crucial thread in the fabric of the American dream, representative of an independent and pioneering spirit. Young both romanticizes and criticizes America’s love affair with the automobile, understanding that we “can never take our eyes off the road”, but that something has to change.

And perhaps that’s one reason why Young’s music remains so relevant after all these years, and why he is cited as an influence by so many of today’s rock ‘n’ rolling musicians. He still has something to say. He believes in change, and he’s still critiquing society – something the greatest of artists do.

If you’re one who favours quiet, folksy Neil, try not to be disappointed. This is loud Neil in all his glory. From the dirty guitar riff on “Hit the Road” to the balls of “Get Behind the Wheel”, Young plays and sings with an energy and passion that defy his sixty-three years. “When Worlds Collide” is a formidable jam: groovy rhythms poised against a lyrical backdrop of truth and lies. On “Fuel Line”, Young sings over fuzzy electric about “the awesome power of electricity / stored for you in a giant battery”, referencing the transformation of his 1959 Lincoln Continental from gas-guzzling boat into a more ecologically-friendly Lincvolt. “Fill ‘er up!” he calls out over a very danceable riff.

From NewsOK.com by Gene Triplett:
Neil goes green and mean on his new album, inspirationally driven by his latest socially-conscious crusade to reduce the demand for petro-fuels, clean up the air and eliminate wars over fuel supplies. He’s been walking the walk, partnering with automotive whiz Jonathan Goodwin of Wichita, Kan., to convert Young’s 1959 Lincoln into the 'Linc Volt,” an electric hybrid ride with an onboard hydrogen generator that can rack up 100 mpg on gasoline, compressed natural gas or biofuels. He sings all about it on such plugged-in powerhouses as 'Fuel Line” ('She’s not the car that she used to be / She wants to take you and she wants to take me / Into the future that’s her destiny”) and 'Johnny Magic” ('Wichita-a-a-a, the home of the heavy metal Continental”).

From The Badger Herald by Jason Smathers:
Oh, but don’t worry, because there’s a second-wind with “Hit the Road,” which actually coasts on a muscle car groove and works better than “Get Behind the Wheel” and “Hit the Road” by combining horsepower worship with tangential hint of the fuel concerns mentioned earlier on. Great, Neil. So why didn’t you just record that song and call it a day? Why did you need to record these other three songs and then make a single like the three-chord guitar write-off “Johnny Magic?” Especially when it’s “Mr. Chevrolet Goes to Washington” storyline is so sloppily unfurled that it makes me want to punch anyone from Wichita who even mentions the word “ethanol.”

This album is worth a listen if you can survive a drive in the ditch for about 18 minutes. Songs like the title track save it from obscurity by honing that everyman anger at bailouts and American excess. But when a great, new classic from Young like “Just Singing a Song” admits that “Just singing a song won’t change the world,” why does he spend so much time trying to do just that?"

From ReadJunk.com by Paul Byrne:
Any Neil Young release should be greeted with open arms and “Fork In The Road” is no exception. Yes, it is somewhat of a “concept” album. Any fan of Neil Young’s will know of his real love of automobiles, you just have to visit www.neilyoung.com to get an idea! So its not that much of a surprise that this release has come along. Songs devoted to cars, being on the road, going places - you get the idea.

From Vancouver Sun - "Tough times have been good for Neil Young" by Peter Simpson:
"Neil Young is 63 years old, and still a powerful rock 'n' roll force. Greying, with old black Gibson in hand, he's all business.

He's like an old tractor, from back when things were built to last, still resolutely plowing through the furrows of rock music. Resolute, but not resigned.

Being pissed off has long been Young's muse.


His songs sometimes sputter beneath the weight of his rhetoric - Shock and Awe and Let's Impeach the President are recent examples - and sometimes they soar, as in Southern Man or Rockin' in the Free World.

The songs on Fork in the Road hold up under lyrically ungainly phrases such as 'domestic green fuel,' and come together as Young's strongest rock album since 1995's Mirror Ball."

From Bloomberg.com - "Neil Young Lashes Bankers, Carmakers, Bailouts on Rushed New CD by Douglas Lytle:
Neil Young, who has confounded fans for years by buzzing like a hummingbird from one musical style to another, is at it again in “Fork in the Road,” a series of mostly hard-rock songs inspired by his attempts to retool a 1959 Lincoln Continental to run on alternative energy.

The record, which is released today, features snarling guitars, generous references to said car and travels across the U.S. It is also the latest entry into the “let’s hang the bankers” series that has bumped anti-Iraq records off the shelves. Move over John Rich’s song “Shuttin’ Detroit Down,” Neil’s going to have his say now.

I’m probably not the first to make this expression up, but this can be best described as “rant n’ roll,” something Young has been pursuing in recent records such as “Greendale,” “Let’s Impeach the President” and the accompanying film “CSNY Deja Vu,” which chronicled Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young’s tour of the U.S. during the height of the Iraq war.

“Greendale” and “Impeach” were generally not worth listening to more than twice, and “Fork in the Road” is more of the same, mostly because it feels so unfocused and bitchy, moving from one target to another with breathless haste. One minute Young sounds like Naomi Klein, the next he’s Al Gore.


Young recorded this record quickly during a tour of the U.S. last year. It sounds like it. The videos he’s been posting on his MySpace page look like they were dreamed up in about five minutes and shot with a cheap camera, especially “Cough up the Bucks.” Paul McCartney used to come up with ideas similarly written on the back of a Kleenex in five minutes and the result was the lackluster “Give My Regards to Broad Street.” Not a worthy club, Neil.

From Crispian's Album Reviews:
“Fork in the Road” may not be the masterpiece of its predecessor but it is a short, instantly accessible and very agreeable set of old school rock from a crazy old coot with a big ass car.

From The Buffalo News By Jeff Miers:
"The strain of car-rock that is rooted in Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road” hits the hardest and transcends its immediate milieu with the most ease, and it is from this loam that Neil Young has grown his new “Fork in the Road.”

It’s a loosey-goosey affair that sounds like it was recorded over the weekend at Chateau Young, with breaks for barbecue and Budweisers figured into the equation. Neil being Neil, the car metaphor — which pulled up in front of his ranch already a bit road-weary, banged-up, and badly in need of an oil change — is delivered with a twist. Young’s latest passion is the environmentally friendly automobile, and “Fork” forks over plenty of eco-based metaphor-stretching. It’s cute, even if it’s clunky.

The best Neil Young music boasts an offhand, casual, sloppy feel. The worst Neil Young music also boasts an offhand, casual, sloppy feel. “Fork” splits the difference.

It is far from his best work, but it certainly has its charms, the most obvious being the lovely grime of the man’s electric guitar playing.

From TheStar.com by Ben Rayner:
Daft? A bit. The last time Young reacted so quickly with an album-length political screed it was to call for George W. Bush's impeachment on 2006's Living With War – a record that might have sounded half-finished, but at least didn't suffer from a lack of focus. Fork in the Road, on the other hand, sounds both half-finished and decidedly under-thought; about half the tunes play like unvarnished blues-jam sessions still fumbling towards proper song structure, while the lyrics only occasionally pursue his chosen theme much further than commenting on how nice and quiet the open road can be when you're behind the wheel of an electric car.

It's fun, though, especially if you're into Loud Neil. And who isn't?


From 411mania.com by Jesse Coy:
All you need to do is take a gander at some of those song titles to realize that something is going on here. “Road, road, road… wheel and fuel.” There are some obvious dots just begging to be connected. Not paying any attention to the back story on this one until after I listened to it, I let it play for what it was. The end result is a very relevant look at the current U.S. situation, with a half nostalgic, half progressive and hopeful look to driving, the road, and automobiles. This is coupled with a fair dose of government cynicism.

From A.V. Club by Noel Murray:
It’s a testament to Neil Young’s talent—or maybe just his indelible personal style—that even his most far-fetched ideas are often reasonably entertaining. A rock-opera/lo-fi movie about environmental activism? An R&B homage with Booker T. & The M.G.s? A set of Iraq-specific anti-war anthems? None of these recent Young flights of fancy have exactly been winners, but neither are they completely devoid of the occasional catchy chorus, scorching guitar solo, or flash of oddball affability.

So it goes with Fork In The Road, a 10-song set that Young threw together to promote his interest in alternative automobile technology. The concept drives the record to an absurd degree. There are songs here about how “just singing a song won’t change the world,” but how it’s better to “light a candle” than curse the darkness, so Young is urging the powers that be to “cough up the bucks” to design environmentally friendly cars, because we’re at a “fork in the road.” This album is like a PowerPoint presentation at a local school board, set to cranked-up guitars and a shaky voice.

From musicOMH by Scott Sinclair:
The question as to whether the songs are any good is quite tough to answer. Come on, it's Neil Young. He's a legend. That falsetto tenor is present and correct, sounding as beautifully eerie as ever. Musically speaking, there are some pretty great tunes, even though the tone of this album is angry and strident, led by punchy guitars. He even goes completely Beastie Boys on Cough Up The Bucks, verging on rap during the chorus.

From Jambands.com by Brian Robbins:
Trimmed of all literary fat and boiled down to its essence – it’s the emotion of the man telling the story. My old man used to say stuff to me that sounded deceptively simple – until I got old enough to realize the importance of his few words. That’s what that moment feels like to me. Forget everything else (including Neil’s own video) and just listen.

In some comic book series, the superheroes never grow older and their spandex jumpsuits and capes fit them the same way for decades. This is real life, folks. Neil Young’s never claimed to be any more than what he was at any given moment. You can’t be 20 on Sugar Mountain sang a very young Neil a long, long time ago. It’s still his song to sing – but he doesn’t owe it or another “Sugar Mountain” to us, either.

Now is now – Neil’s still sharing his feelings with us. Let the passion guide the muse. And to those who can’t accept that, I say, “Grow up.”

Neil did."

From The Other Paper BY JOHN PETRIC
Why do critics hate this?

Goodness gracious, I wasn’t aware until after I’d first heard it that Neil Young’s new album, Fork in the Road, was so, uh, controversial with certain media-types around the world who’ve given it some serious thumbing down.

Ah, silly rock critics—never trust your opinion to one of ’em. But then again, what am I telling you for? You love me because you hate me. Fair enough.

The new Neil Young record is, at times, pretty damn good. It’s themed on his electric-car project, namely turning an ancient Lincoln Continental into a non-fossil-fuel-burning moving mobile, which apparently he has. It’s his cause.
Those big, lumbering dinosaur chords, the limpid melody walking through a hauntingly gorgeous minor key of the kind Neil specializes in—I am in love with this song.

I don’t give a flying fire truck what other people think. This album may end up a minor Neil classic along the lines of Tonight’s the Night. Long may he run, on electricity, off-shore oil or his own goddam gumption.

Damn the critics,
full steam ahead!

But does it matter what the critics think? Apparently not, as Fork in the Road has been bouncing around the Amazon Top 10 list for the past week.

Neil Young News: A Mea Culpa for Fork in the Road: "Lastly, we think that it's no mere coincidence that the current tour in Canada contains at least 4 songs from Tonight's The Night, as well as, 'Change Your Mind'. Given the critical reception to Tonight's The Night, maybe Neil is having a sense of deja vu all over again?"

Lastly -- as we mentioned in our previous post on FITR mea culpas -- we think that it's no mere coincidence that the current tour in Canada contains at least 4 songs from Tonight's The Night, as well as, "Change Your Mind". Given the critical reception to Tonight's The Night, maybe Neil is having a sense of deja vu all over again?

An the really last thought is that it's seems rather odd that not one single review mentions the DVD videos. Hello?! I mean, the live "Day in A Life" cover performance alone practically makes the whole thing worthwhile.

More on fan reaction to "Fork In the Road", A Mea Culpa for Fork in the Road, Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road, Comment of the Moment: Yet Another Re-Appraisal of Fork in the Road.

Thanks neilyoung.org for the links!

Sunday, April 12, 2009

A Mea Culpa for Fork in the Road

As most of you know, we get comments. Lots of comments. And we also get lots of letters too. What's nice about those letters is that they're never anonymous snark and often the private revelations of the impact of Neil Young's music on the writer.

So we'd like to share a recent letter that we received regarding the whole hoopla over Fork in the Road. Here's the quick background. It all started earlier this year as the theme of Fork in the Road became apparent and some critics and fans started circulating the myth of the washed up Neil meme. This in turn became the muse has failed Neil on FITR. Which led us to conducting some quantitative research which led us to conclude that only a small but vocal minority of Neil fans fail to grasp the significance of FITR and appreciate it for what it is. Or maybe they are just astroturfing?

All of which led Neil fans to near virtual blows over their respective opinions on FITR.

Which brings us back to our letter from Charlie on coming around to FITR:
OK, I was wrong about Fork in the Road – I shouldn’t have doubted Neil. FITR has greatly exceeded my expectations. I really like this album, and it keeps getting better with each play. Over the past couple months as the new songs destined for FITR were rolled out, I posted a number of comments on Thrasher's Wheat stating that I was less than thrilled by them; in fact, I thought they were some of the weakest material Neil has done. I stand by my criticisms, particularly that a bit more word craft could have done wonders in some songs. But overall, the album overcomes those weaknesses, and manages to be the best thing he's done in quite a while.

While I was criticizing the new stuff, I was also listening quite heavily to the criminally underrated “Re-Ac-Tor”, one of my favorite Neil albums, at least when I’m in the mood. And I found myself hard pressed to reconcile my view that the new songs were weak, when I find the epic “T-Bone” so compelling. (To me, “T-Bone” is “Ordinary People #1” – a great repeating jam of life describing the average Joe who’s got enough to get by (mashed potatoes) but could use a bit more (t-bone) to live the good life.) So, in thinking about it, I realized that I was spending too much time parsing picayune details of the new songs – I needed to let them wash over me to see the bigger picture. I starting thinking (hoping) that the FITR album, collecting all these songs in one place, would somehow result in the whole being more than the sum of the parts, kind of like “Re-Ac-Tor.” Neil’s songs have never been primarily about the lyrics, and clunky lyrics can be overshadowed (or at least neutered) if the overall feel of the music is sufficiently well constructed.

I've listened to FITR in its entirety several times straight through, and that is exactly what happened. I think you and others who repeatedly voiced your approval of these songs were absolutely right. This album rocks – it hits a really great groove right from the start, and the fun never lets up. It’s got some great melodies too, something that wasn’t as apparent to me initially, to complement the raw blues chug of many songs. Unlike some of you, I needed to hear the songs all together to get it. "Cough up the bucks" is on heavy rotation in my brain, and I'm loving it. Last night, I woke up at 2 am to “Fuel Line” – that song’s got another winning hook. This is an album of grit and passion, and while not Neil's masterpiece, it's pretty damned good, and more outright fun than anything he’s done since (dare I say this) “Everybody’s Rockin’” (another unfortunately underrated gem). FITR is the best new Neil since at least “Sleeps with Angels.” Long may he run.

Happy Easter,
Charlie

First, thank you Charlie for your sincere letter. Second, we're not publishing this just to say "Oh, we told you so."

We think we're doing this more in the spirit of letting the music itself inform our impressions. These days with the 'net, everything is so instantaneous that virtually nothing has a chance to age and ripen. And we've long held firm that it is only with this patience can one ever begin to fathom the complexity and intricacies of Neil's music.

Lastly, we think that it's no mere coincidence that the current tour in Canada contains at least 4 songs from Tonight's The Night, as well as, "Change Your Mind". Given the critical reception to Tonight's The Night, maybe Neil is having a sense of deja vu all over again?

So thanks Charlie. We must say it takes a brave man to admit that they may have to re-evaluate their opinion.

So, do you have the courage to change your mind when you come to a fork in the road?

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Saint John, Canada Concert Reviews of Neil Young: 4/11/09

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Photo by w.e.butler on Flickr


Nice photo gallery by w.e.butler on Flickr of Neil Young at Saint John, New Brunswick Newfoundland, Canada.

Thanks w.e.butler & neilyoung.org!


Neil Young will be performing tonight at Harbour Station, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

"Albuquerque" Video by Neil Young : St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada - 4/7/09



Neil Young - "Albuquerque", Mile One Centre in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada on April 7, 2009.

Thanks RodneyMaxwellFord!

More rave concert reviews of tour kickoff in St. John's, 4/6 & 7/2009.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Halifax, Canada Concert Reviews: 4/10/09

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Neil Young at Metro Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - 4/10/09
Photo by Ted Pritchard


From Young puts good in Good Friday - Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca by S. Cooke:
'Thanks for being here, it’s like a deja vu experience. We had a good time last time and we’ll try and do it a little differently for you tonight,' Young told the crowd after opening with a tune unheard in November, When You Dance, I Can Really Love, and a spirited Are You Ready for the Country, with Ben Keith’s lap steel guitar floating over his fearless leader’s pounding on a battered upright piano.

There were other, fresher treats in store, like a stripped-down version of Pocahontas, marked by Chad Cromwell’s tribal drumbeat, and a raggedy Barstoon Blues, which provided a moment of levity when the band started one song and Young another.

'Well, what do you want to do?' he shrugged at Cromwell with a note of mock exasperation. 'Well, OK, we’ll do both of ’em.

'This is like rehearsals for retirement, only we don’t want to get it down,' Young told the crowd, which was cheering with encouragement. 'We always don’t want to be ready for that.

'Some of these songs we’ve never played, you’d never believe it.'



Neil Young will be performing tonight at Metro Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

Concert Review of the Moment: St. John's, Canada Concert Reviews: 4/6 & 7/2009

Neil Young News: St. John's, Canada Concert Reviews: 4/6 & 7/2009: "Kip Bonnell said...
I'm still in awe over the St. John's shows...wow! Neil and his band were simply amazing and inspiring. It's an incredible thing to have listened to the genius of his music on his albums, and its sheer range of emotion, and then see it unfold in person for the very first time.

Lost in Space was a gift...Spirit Road was drool-worthy. Everything just gelled, including the newer songs which stand comfortably alongside his best, in my opinion.

The ultimate highlight for me: Change Your Mind. That song acted as a portal for me into the rest of Neil's catalogue when I first heard it back in '94. At the time, it was like a musical band-aid for the strange feelings so many of my generation had following Kurt Cobain's death a few months earlier. It was gripping to hear it performed live at this point in my life--it gave reference to the past, and somehow put everything I'm doing now in context.

I hope Neil enjoyed his time here in Newfoundland...we were truly honoured by his presence, humour, wit...and timeless music.

Kip, in St. John's

More Neil Young at St. John's, Canada Concert Reviews: 4/6 & 7/2009.

Lost in Space: Video - St. John's, Newfoundland, 4/7/09



Neil Young - "Lost in Space", St. John's, Newfoundland - 4/7/09

The first ever live performance of song "Lost in Space" from 1980's Hawks & Doves.

More rave concert reviews of tour kickoff in St. John's, 4/6 & 7/2009.

Thanks RodneyMaxwellFord!

And here's a totally bizarre video cover by Justice of the Unicorns of Lost in Space.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Interview with Johnny Magic

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From KAKE-TV - Wichita Gains New Notoriety With New Neil Young Song, Music Video:
Jonathan Goodwin, of H-Line Conversions, modified Neil Young’s ’59 Lincoln into an environmental wonder.

Young’s Lincoln has been converted into an electric car that now gets 100 miles or more to the gallon.

Now, Neil Young has written a song called “Johnny Magic”, referring to Goodwin.

It all started when someone in the shop referred to Goodwin as “Johnny Magic.”

“And somehow that stuck in Neil’s head. And the next thing I know, he’s running around with the guitar for a couple of weeks playing out different parts of the song,” Goodwin says.

Neil Young’s new music video shows Young driving his converted “LincVolt” through Wichita.

More on Neil Young's "Johnny Magic" video.

"Are You Ready for the Country?" @ St. John's, Newfoundland - 4/7/09



Neil Young - "Are You Ready for the Country?", St. John's, Newfoundland - 4/7/09

More rave concert reviews of tour kickoff in St. John's, 4/6 & 7/2009.

Thanks RodneyMaxwellFord!

Monday, April 06, 2009

St. John's, Canada Concert Reviews: 4/6 & 7/2009



"Words" - 4/7/09

Thanks Julie and RodneyMaxwellFord.

From The Telegram - St. John’s, NL: Arts & Entertainment | The night is Young by JUSTIN BRAKE:
"Launching his 2009 Continental Tour in Newfoundland and Labrador, Young and his electric band (Ben Keith, Chad Cromwell, Rick Rosas, Pegi Young, and Anthony Crawford) performed what not only shaped up to be as electrifying a show as their reputation predicates, but they played a few 'bonus tracks,' in the words of Young himself."


Neil Young will be performing tonight at Mile One Centre, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

Got a report? Drop a comment below. No registration required.

Check Sugar Mountain for setlist updates and statistics. Also, see Grid Chart on Rust Radio.

Also, see Neil Young 2009 Canada & U.S. Concert Tour & Reviews and the right, middle sidebar for continuous real time RSS feed updates.

"GET AROUND" LONG-FORM VIDEO

BREAKING: Get Around Preview Video now up.

Full video will be streamed on www.jaman.com
tomorrow.

Standby for an update later this evening.


Get Around trailer from Shakey Pictures on Vimeo.

From NY Times:
NEW "GET AROUND" LONG-FORM VIDEO COMING SOON!
By Scoop Asphalt

The Video premiere of GET AROUND, featuring ALL the music of "Fork in the Road" will be available at 12:01 AM PST Tuesday April 7, worldwide. This long-form video runs 43 minutes and was shot on a Texas Highway between La Grange and Austin shortly before "South By Southwest" extravaganza began in Austin.

GET AROUND will not be available anywhere else because of its long running time exceeding the capabilities of most major outlets. The long form video also will be available with High Definition Sound as part of a new Blu-Ray currently in post-production at Shakey Pictures.

The new GET AROUND Blu-Ray includes all of the videos made for Fork. Shakey Pictures hopes you enjoy taking a ride in Lincvolt with Neil as he sings the entire "Fork in the Road" album plus the additional bonus track, "Get Around."

Incidentally, the "Fork In the Road", is now #15 #12 #11 #9 on the Amazon Best Sellers Listing.

Fuel Line Video by Neil Young

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Yet another innovative and totally revolutionary video from the auteur genius Neil Young and his exhaustively creative Shakey Pix crew.

Go to Shakey's Garage for "Fuel Line" Video for new "Fork In the Road" CD (some early fan reactions).

Thanks S, C, & P!!!

ps - watch out for Officer Carmichael!

Incidentally, the "Fork In the Road", is now #15 #12 #11 on the Amazon Best Sellers Listing.

Other recent Neil Young videos:

- "When Worlds Collide"
- Video Premiere: "Johnny Magic" #2
- "Johnny Magic" Video #1 Premiere
- "Light A Candle" video by Neil Young
- "Fork In the Road" - New Video!
- "Cough Up The Bucks"
- "Just Singing A Song"
- "Get Around"
- Hit the Road

Photo: Rick Rosas and Ben Keith

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Rick Rosas & Ben Keith @ Cutting Room, NYC, NY 07-19-2007
Photo by Johnny Marr


Here's a nice photo by Johnny Marr of Rick Rosas and Ben Keith at The Cutting Room, New York City, NY on 07-19-2007. Photo taken on a break with the Pegi Young Band.

Thanks Johnny!

More of Johnny's photography.

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Sun Green Was Right



Speaking of some of Neil Young's previous so-called "mis-fires" and the predicted "calamity" of the impending Fork in the Road we just thought we'd take a breath and step back.

But not too far. We won't go back to the disappointing "Time Fades Away". Or the baffling "TRANS". Or the un-Neil like "Everybody's Rockin'".

We'll start by going back to 2006's blisteringly negative "Living with War" reviews and reactions. The album was roundly panned and we've long maintained critics were not going negative over the music but the message. Singing "Let's Impeach The President" doesn't exactly make for a lot of friends in the mainstream media. But here we are three years later and Spain wants to arrest George W. Bush for war crimes.

But let's go back a bit further to 2003's so called disaster Greendale. As we've argued repeatedly over the years about the vastly underrated and underappreciated Greendale, the inconvenient truth of Greendale was that Sun Green -- and Neil Young -- were right.

greendale flag
We could point to a host of observations from Greendale that seemed a bit far-fetched then but now seem quite prescient. But we'll just point out this Greendale post where we referenced the impending collapse of Antarctica's Wilkins ice shelf. And as you see in the above video, Antarctica's Wilkins ice shelf has indeed collapsed.

So down the road when we're all driving electric cars, just remember 2009's silly little car album "Fork In The Road".

Hit the Road: And Here's Another New Neil Young Video



"Hit the Road" video from that slacker Neil Young for new "Fork In the Road" CD.

Thanks Karen & Liza!

Incidentally, the "Fork In the Road", is now #15 #12 #11 on the Amazon Best Sellers Listing.

Recent Neil Young videos:

- "When Worlds Collide"
- Video Premiere: "Johnny Magic" #2
- "Johnny Magic" Video #1 Premiere
- "Light A Candle" video by Neil Young
- "Fork In the Road" - New Video!
- "Cough Up The Bucks"
- "Just Singing A Song"
- "Get Around"

4% Club Sharpens Knives in Anticipation of Tuesday's FITR Release

Our dear friends in The 4% Club are sharpening their knives in anticipation of the release on Tuesday of Neil Young's "Fork In The Road".

Just witness the reaction of The 4% Club to the semi-positive review by UNCUT of FITR. (WARNING: The comments section is filled with the unhinged rantings of The 4% Club.)

Of course, everyone is invited to the listening party chat for "Fork In The Road"'s release.

Chrome Dreams II: Album's In Order Review

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Over the years, longtime Neil Young fan Mike "Expecting To Fly" has periodically gone back into his collection and conducted a chronologically review of Neil Young's entire body of work. The result has been the Neil Young Album's In Order series which we proudly host here on Thrasher's Wheat.

So here's the latest installment with 2007's Chrome Dreams II while we're on the cusp of yet another Neil release of "Fork In The Road" on Tuesday.
One of the fortunate privileges I've had over my years as a fan of Neil Young is to be present at the inaugural live performances of new songs never heard by a paying audience. The latest experience like this was in Boise, Idaho (review) which is just a few miles down the road from where I first discovered Neil Young. The four new songs were Dirty Old Man, Spirit Road, The Believer, and the epic No Hidden Path. The concert was fantastic for many reasons but I'm thankful to be present when new songs are played in public for the first time.

Chrome Dreams II came out just a few days after that show. It was comprised of seven new songs, a couple of old unreleased songs re-recorded with the current band and one bona fide museum piece. I thought that the two re-recorded tunes Beautiful Bluebird and Boxcar fit in well with the remainder of the new songs. There are some really wonderful moments in the album too. The lead guitar part in Shining Light takes me back to 1967 Buffalo Springfield; it sounds as if it came right out of those sessions. Spirit Road is spirited. I heard Ever After playing at a Starbucks I was walking past and it sounded so great to hear it in this unexpected setting. The Way features a boys choir; the song reminds me of something Brian Wilson might come up with.

The item that discomforts me in the album is the inclusion of a 19 year old recording of Ordinary People in the album. It doesn't fit for me. Perhaps if he had rerecorded this one with perhaps a new verse or two and left this track for the Archives...oh well. Neil Young of course can do whatever he wants with his own music but I can't shake the feeling this was a mistake. Had he not included it, the album would have been left with 9 songs and 48 minutes, plenty long.

Thankfully, he did include a new classic, No Hidden Path. I remember reading some sort of quote I think in Thrasher's Wheat in which Neil said in an article that he thinks he has another "Hurricane" in him. This could be it, it's that good in my opinion. And wow, I was there the first time he played it in public.

I very much enjoyed listening to Chrome Dreams II today.

Mike
Expecting To Fly

More of Mike "Expecting To Fly"'s Album's In Order Neil Young reviews.

Thanks, as always, e2f!

Listening Party Chat for "Fork In The Road" Release

On Tuesday, April 7, a listening party chat session will be held for the release of Neil Young's "Fork In The Road" (initial reaction commentary).

Two listening parties will be held to accommodate different time zones. The first will be at 3:00 PM, EST, and another at 9:00 PM EST. Listen to the album together. Chat. Discuss. This may sound somewhat silly but it is actually quite fun.

Chat: http://tinyurl.com/c2xfoc
Twitter alerts: http://www.twitter.com/streamland

Chat host Karen says:
The Streamland chat room is not exclusively a rustie chat room. It evolved out of the LV chat and is certainly a chat room where we discuss all things neil young, but all are welcome, one does not have to be a rustie to come by. We will in the future be discussing some of my other obsessions, namely Ryan Adams, and Keith Haman and Grizzly Circus, and having more listening parties accordingly.

The only rule in streamland is ... kindness :)

Thanks for setting up Karen! Chat on!

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Yet Another New Neil Young Video: "When Worlds Collide"

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Yet another new video from that slacker Neil Young for "Fork In the Road".

Just uploaded to SPIN.com Premiere "When Worlds Collide". Also, here's some reaction to the song on last year's tour in Europe.

Incidentally, the "Fork In the Road", is now #15 #12 #11 on the Amazon Best Sellers Listing.

Recent Neil Young videos:

- Video Premiere: "Johnny Magic" #2
- "Johnny Magic" Video #1 Premiere
- "Light A Candle" video by Neil Young
- "Fork In the Road" - New Video!
- "Cough Up The Bucks"
- "Just Singing A Song"
- "Get Around"

UNCUT Album Review: Neil Young's Fork In The Road

From The UNCUT Album Review: Neil Young - Fork In The Road by JOHN ROBINSON:
As with its closest precedent, the brief, bracing, garage rock blast of 2006’s Living With War, what’s on offer here is not Neil Young the shy, meditative, folk singer we’ve lately heard emoting from newly released archival recordings. Instead, this is the work of a man who has – again, so soon – been moved by current events to put something down on paper. If Young’s 2009 subject matter makes him a journalist, so does his method. This is no florid essay, but rather angry editorial banged out on a tight deadline, with little regard for the niceties of technique.

Over all, you wonder if it’s a supremely intelligent way to connect with a middle American audience whose No 1 pre-election priority was not solving the war but the restarting of the economy, and a country whose auto industry is in terminal crisis. Remember the guy in the CSNY film who walked out during “Let’s Impeach The President”, saying the band could “suck my dick”? Neil wants him back on board, and perhaps cars is how he thinks he’s going to speak to him.

More on fan reaction to "Fork In the Road".

"Native New Yorker": New Booker T. Jones Track

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On April 21, Booker T. will release his new album Potato Hole featuring both The Drive-By Truckers and Neil Young. And we are quite excited the more and more we hear about it.

Like take for instance this new preview track "Native New Yorker". Says Booker T.:
Neil Young, who plays guitar on this track, had an instant understanding of where we were going with this one. The only thing to work out was the structure. Then he just looked at me through the studio glass and we played.

Also, here's a clip of Booker T. and The Drive-By Truckers in the studio on Amazon.com.

Thanks Saori!

More on POTATO HOLE: Booker T, Drive-By Truckers & Neil Young Album.

And check out this gig stream of Booker T. & Drive-By Truckers. Simply awesome!

Drive-By Truckers Live at Variety Playhouse on 2009-04-01 (April 1, 2009)



01) Pound It Out
02) Green Onions
03) Nan
04) Warped Sister
05) Space City
06) Born Under A Bad Sign
07) Native New Yorker
08) Reunion Time
09) Potato Hole
10) She Breaks
11) Hey Ya
12) Time Is Tight
13) E:) Get Behind The Mule

01) Lookout Mountain
02) 3 Dimes Down
03) Ronnie And Neil
04) Uncle Frank
05) Goode's Field Road
06) I'm Sorry Huston
07) Women Without Whiskey
08) Sink Hole
09) The Company I Keep
10) Gravity's Gone
11) Steve McQueen

01) E:) Home Field Advantage*
02) Zip City*
03) Let There Be Rock*
04) Angels And Fuselage**

More on Internet Archive: Details: Drive-By Truckers Live at Variety Playhouse on 2009-04-01.

Thanks neilyoung.org & Sloan!

Comment of the Moment: New Video of "Get Around"

So what's up with all these new Neil Young videos from the upcoming and eagerly anticipated "Fork In The Road" CD?

As with all things Neil, there's such a fine line between love and hate. Commenting on new video of "Get Around", TechWreck said...
Hey guys. What can I say.... I LIKE the song. Who else besides maybe Radiohead can attempt 3 or 4 concept albums in a decade. In a few years when Neil is either not producing new material or worse yet, WE outlive him...you will look back on the artistry of this period from Prarie Wind through Fork in the Road and probably re-evaluate. Name the other artists who are tackling subjects like enviroment, consumerism, freedom, government and corporate corruption and ALSO tackling the issues of the heart we all face. I saw this as a love song to Peggy, he's focused on Linc-Volt but he's still running around with her. Neil please keep pumping out what ya got even if others call it crap. I'm buying your POC, I don't often purchase anything by anyone else these days.

Rustedwreck

More commentary on new Neil Young video of "Get Around".

Friday, April 03, 2009

Photo: Neil Young @ 2008 Bridge School Benefit Concert

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Neil Young at Bridge School Benefit Concert - 2008:10:26
Photo by Johnny Marr


Here's a great shot by Johnny Marr of Neil Young at the 2008 Bridge School Benefit Concert.

Johnny does some excellent work and his photos have been used for the covers of Broken Arrow magazine. Here are a few other recent cover shots by Johnny:

- Broken Arrow Magazine - May 2005 (#98)

- Broken Arrow Magazine - November 2006 (#104)

- Broken Arrow Magazine - November 2008 (#112)

New Neil Young Fan Site: neilyoung.org

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A new Neil Young fan site has just launched: neilyoung.org - reconnecting thoughts and actions.

The site collects links to Internet pages about Neil Young. Links to tour news, concert reviews, album information, new videos, picture galleries, new downloads, interesting blogs, tributes, song covers, you name it!

When you find an interesting page that's not on the list yet, you can easily add a link.

The site has been put together by Roel who runs Rust Radio and Fredrik who runs Neil Young Songbook.

This site promises to be another valuable site for all Neil fans similar to Sugar Mountain, Rust Radio, NYAS, HyperRust, Bad News Beat, Human Highway, and all the other Neil sites.

It's really fantastic to see so many folks get involved in developing Neil sites, blogs, galleries, feeds, etc. It always kinda bugged me how sophisticated and diverse the Dylan web community is relative to Neil's. It looks like Neil fans are finally giving Bob fans a run for it. Not that it's competition anyways. ;)

Excellent job Roel & Fredrik!!!

Keep on Linkin' in the Free World!

Thursday, April 02, 2009

New Video of "Get Around"

UPDATE: After posting earlier using the embed code provided, this video has now been blocked to Thrasher's Wheat due to "unauthorized use". Apparently, MOG has exclusivity. We regret the inconvenience.



New Video of Neil Young's "Get Around".

Thanks Michael @ MOG & Gil!

More on Neil Young's "Fork In The Road" CD and lyrics.

Recent Neil Young videos:

- Video Premiere: "Johnny Magic" #2
- "Johnny Magic" Video #1 Premiere
- "Light A Candle" video by Neil Young
- "Fork In the Road" - New Video!
- "Cough Up The Bucks"
- "Just Singing A Song"

And, if you're feeling creative, check out Neil Young's Johnny Magic Video Contest.

Listening Party for "Fork In The Road" on MySpace

We understand that we need to keep an eye on Neil Young's MySpace place.

We hear there just might be a FITR listening party coming up soon.

Did someone say party???

More on Neil Young's "Fork In The Road" CD and lyrics.

Booker T. Rocks with Neil Young and Drive-By Truckers

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On April 21, Booker T. will release his new album Potato Hole featuring both The Drive-By Truckers and Neil Young. Needless to say, expectations are quite high.

From Guardian.co.uk by Sean Michaels (music "reporter"*):
Booker T Jones might be making the best rock'n'roll album of the year. The legendary soul and funk man, and leader of the MGs, is to release his first solo album in more than a decade – and he's doing it with the help of Drive-By Truckers and Neil Young.

In the liner notes Booker T. writes a thanks to Neil for: "being like a race horse, unable to wait to get out of the gate, and for playing with so much heart and brilliance".

Here's a clip of Booker T. and The Drive-By Truckers in the studio on Amazon.com.

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More on POTATO HOLE: Booker T, Drive-By Truckers & Neil Young Album.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Time Fades Away To Finally Be Re-released

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In a stunning decision, Neil Young has announced that he will be re-releasing "Time Fades Away" on June 2. This decision pushes back the release on The Neil Young Archives Volume 1 which had been scheduled for this release date.

The announcement comes after a 4 year campaign by fans to have "Time Fades Away" re-released after being out of print since the mid-1980's. The online petition campaign began in February 2005 and has received over 15,000 signatures thus far.

In a statement, Neil Young said:
"My fans have spoken. They want to hear "Time Fades Away" after being out of print for so long. And in order to satisfy my fans, I'm going to re-release the album in it's original format only -- vinyl.

As far as the Archives go, well they've waited this long, so they can wait a little while later. It was a tough decision because I never really cared that much for the album. But after hearing all the complaints about the Archives Box set and trying to address them, I feel that re-releasing "Time Fades Away" is my only option to placate my fan base."

The statement goes on to say that the vinyl album will also be available as a deluxe version with new music videos for each song. The videos will be included on a VHS tape in the deluxe version along with the original lyrics sheet that the 1973 release contained.

Probably no one is more surprised with this announcement than ourselves given that we have long maintained that the Archives most likely will be released before TFA.

Given these developments, Thrasher's Wheat plans to suspend the online petition campaign. But we will not do so until we have the re-release in our hands. Or The Archives.

Happy ARC Day!

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Sign the Release "Time Fades Away" Petition
Join The 10,000+ Who Have Already Signed




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