Showing posts with label Neil Young & Crazy Horse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Young & Crazy Horse. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Toast (2001)

Sometime in late 2000 or early 2001, Neil Young went into the studio with Crazy Horse and cut an album that was to be named 'Toast', after the studio where it was recorded. The only song to see the light of day from these sessions was 'Goin’ Home', which appeared on the underwhelming 'Are You Passionate?', but for years Young has claimed that 'Toast' is on the verge of being officially released, and he was enthusiastic about it in a Rolling Stone interview in in 2008, saying "It's an amazing listening experience. It was recorded in 5.1. It’s a mind-blowing record, and I don’t think it's a commercial record, but it's great rock & roll, very moody, kind of jazzy. It was recorded in the same place where Coltrane was recorded, so there's a lot of heavy stuff in there". He expanded on the songs, saying "The music of 'Toast' is about a relationship. There is a time in many relationships that go bad, a time long before the break up, where it dawns on one of the people, maybe both, that it’s over. This was that time. The sound is murky and dark, but not in a bad way, and from the first note, you can feel the sadness that permeates the recording. That song, with its refrain, "Don't say you love me", is called 'Quit', while the next one 'Standing In The Light' is sort of like a Deep Purple hit. 'Goin' Home' follows, painting a landscape where time doesn't matter - because everything is going south. A lady is lost in her car. The dark city surrounds her - past, present and future. Then the scene changes to a religious guy who just lost his job as a logger - he can't cut any more tress and so he's turning on Jesus, and then the album closes with 'Gateway Of Love', beckoning with "background noise on a changing sky". I had forgotten about these songs, put them out of my mind and went on living my life". However, like many of Young's unreleased albums it currently remains locked away, so we'll have to find another way to hear it. Although 'Toast' was never released, it seems that Young really was intending it to appear, as he played all the songs from it on his 2001 world tour, and many of these concerts were recorded. While 'Quit' did eventually appear on 'Are You Passionate' alongside 'Goin' Home', this was a re-recorded version with Booker T. & The M.G.s, so I've taken a recording with Crazy Horse from a Montreux gig, and added the other four tracks from his Japanese concert at the Fuji Rock Festival, so that we can hear an approximation of what the album might have sounded like. As it is quite short at just 33 minutes, I've added a cover that Young has performed a few times with Crazy Horse but which never seems to have made it to an official live album, rounding it out to a more acceptable 44 minutes. 



Track listing 

01 Quit
02 Standing In The Light Of Love
03 Goin' Home
04 Hold You In My Arms
05 Gateway Of Love
06 All Along The Watchtower

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Odeon:Budokan (1976)

I've mentioned before that I don't tend to post live albums on the site, but this is an exception as it was supposed to be released by Young himself, but like so many of his proposed releases it seems to have fallen by the wayside. The idea was to take concert recordings from his 1976 world tour with Crazy Horse and put together a live record of it, and it was eventually decided to take the songs from gigs at the Budokan Hall in Japan and the Hammersmith Odeon in the UK. The concerts consisted of an acoustic half and an electric half, and so a  mixture of each was to be taken from the recordings, and for many years it wasn't known which songs would be picked until, a few years ago, a video emerged on Youtube of edited video footage from both shows entitled 'Yesteryear Of The Horse' (still available here if you want to watch it), and so I've used that as a basis for the track listing that I've gone with. I've sourced the material from bootleg recordings rather than ripping the Youtube video as it gave better sound quality, and I've tried to edit the songs together to make a seamless live set, although you will notice a difference in the ambiance of the two venues. You can see why Young had considered releasing this as a live album, as it does contain some unique versions of his songs, such as 'Mellow My Mind' and 'Human Highway' with banjo accompaniment, piano versions of 'No One Seems To Know' and 'Stringman' (there's a bit of mic rubbing, but it was only played the once in London), and the band's first attempt at a live take of 'Country Home'. There has been talk recently of this album still being on the cards for an official release, but we've heard that so often before that I thought I'd post a copy now anyway, just in case that comes to nothing. 



Track listing

01 Tell Me Why
02 Stringman
03 Human Highway
04 Down By The River
05 Cortez The Killer
06 Mellow My Mind
07 Too Far Gone
08 No One Seems To Know
09 Country Home
10 Don't Cry No Tears
11 Cowgirl In The Sand
12 Lotta Love
13 The Losing End 
14 Drive Back

Track 1 Hammersmith Odeon, London  29th March 1976
Tracks 2 - 5 Hammersmith Odeon, London  31st March 1976
Tracks 6 - 14 Budokan Hall, Tokyo  11th March 1976


Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Oh, Lonesome Me (1975)

This album is an imagining by The Reconstructor, based on an original idea for a track listing by sydfloyd, of what could have been Neil Young & Crazy Horse's second album, had Young not decided to deliver the solo 'After The Goldrush', and had Crazy Horse not been gearing up to release their eponymous debut album the following year. If Young & Crazy Horse had stayed together they might have come up with something along the lines of this reconstruction, taking songs from 'Crazy Horse' (which might have been added to the track listing, and therefore sung by the band rather than Young), and adding ones that Young had written but didn't include on 'After The Goldrush', along with Crazy Horse versions of some that did. 'Birds', for instance, is a different version to that on ATG, and 'Winterlong' was only available on live bootlegs until around 1976, despite being a great song. I've put this together and posted it as The Reconstructor doesn't post links, and so I've found all the songs and I've also done a bit of editing to some of them. 



Track listing

01 Winterlong 
02 Look At All The Things
03 Everybody's Alone
04 Downtown
05 Wonderin'
06 It Might Have Been 
07 Oh, Lonesome Me
08 I Don't Want To Talk About It
09 When You Dance, I Can Really Love
10 I Believe In You
11 Dance Dance Dance
12 Birds