Sunday, June 24, 2012
Rock Music's Greatest Band Returns After 15 Years
As y'all know, I'm mostly devoted to pop music these days. I have been for a few years now. But when I was thirteen I became quite smitten with the music of Neil Young. And miraculously he followed me throughout my entire life, with his prodigiously diverse back-catalog connecting to me through each contrasting phase of my life. If you knew what a perplexing cornucopia of divergent phases my life has been through (almost anything you could imagine), you'd understand how expansive Neil's catalog is and why he'll always be my most favoritest artist of all time. :')
Over the last three years, the guitar-laden Crazy Horse incarnation of Neil has been my favorite. While his other works tend toward melancholia and introspection, Crazy Horse speaks to me with pure, unadulterated fun. They're wholly unpetentious in their pursuit of an unmitigated bar-stomping groove and sick, tasty guitar fury in generous servings. Their songs can still be articulate and meaningful, but in a more primal way, less intellectual than it is spiritual.
So you can imagine how invested I was in the re-emergence of Neil's longest, truest companions. After a decade provided almost exclusively with tedious political concepts and easy-listening lite-folk records, the 2010s seem to present Neil Young at the peak of his powers once again. Le Noise, released in 2010, gave us a more coherent counterpart to the impressive yet untempered sonic experimentation from 1995's Dead Man soundtrack, which itself was a superior take on the ponderous but well-intentioned Arc noise album from 1991. Now, in 2012 comes Americana, which is effortlessly, decisively, and beyond doubt, the best album Neil has made since the last Crazy Horse album fifteen years ago.
As often happens when Neil reunites with The Horse, he sounds younger than he has in many years. In fact, they actually manage to sound younger on Americana than they did on the last Crazy Horse album, 1996's ethereal and serene Broken Arrow. Americana is young and hungry, overflowing with classic Crazy Horse tropes that retain unexpected precision. Punchy, powerful songs such as "High Flyin' Bird" and "Travel On" genuinely might as well have been lifted from 1975's Zuma or 1977's American Stars 'N' Bars. The instrumentations are crisp and unbashful. The voice of the world-weary but warm-hearted old man that permeated all of Neil's 00s records and some his 90s ones too, is dead and buried in the ferocious articulation of Americana's various anthems. Even The Horse sounds younger than they did last; providing immaculate harmonies as strong as their timeless vocal contributions to "Dangerbird" and "Hey Hey My My."
In archetypal Neil fashion, this is an album that simultaneously sounds exactly like what you've heard him do before -- AND it's a preposterous new-fangled concept you never could have imagined Neil doing in a billion years. It's an album entirely of very old songs, most of them traditional folk songs. But they're not played like cover songs, they're given brand new Crazy Horse instrumentations and sincerely original melodies. It's astounding, but even humdrum standards like "Oh Susannah" and "Clementine" become these ecstatically groovy, picture-perfect, fist pumping Crazy Horse anthems that completely belong to Neil.
Some fans are disappointed that these aren't original Neil compositions, but I see that as a slightly vain appreciation of the situation. Neil may not have copyright over these tracks, but he invented their instrumentations and their melodies, and he chose nothing but songs that sounds as much like Neil as Neil himself does. Each one is absolutely soaked in classic "Neil lore."
Every single thing on here might as well be a Neil original. Even "God Save The Queen," whose awkward political anthemia would feel comfortably at home alongside America The Beautiful on Neil's 2006 record Living With War, and that's the least of them. "Travel On" borrows the wayward drifting theme from a dozen obscure Neil album cuts ("The Wayward Wind," "This Town," "Four Strong Winds"), adds the leery stumbling of "Roll Another Number (For The Road)," equips it with the down-home trot of "Everybody Knows This is Nowhere" and the feel-good repetition of "Homegrown," and you have one of the most perfectly archetypal Neil tunes in existence.
"High Flyin' Bird" is a like a fierce younger brother to brooding fan-favorite jam "Dangerbird." "Wayfarin' Stranger" is a subtle and beautiful ode to death that would feel amongst kin alongside the myriad of similarly mysterious and dark acoustic hymns from Neil's past: "New Mama" on Tonight's The Night, "Drive-By" on Sleeps With Angels, "Music Arcade" on Broken Arrow, and "Through My Sails" on Zuma. Neil even revisits his Everybody's Rockin' concept for the first time since the 80s, with the very ably performed Sillhouttes cover "Get A Job" -- the only song on this collection that isn't a folk song.
The new melodies allow these very old lyrics to fall on modern ears as if they were new, and surprisingly these are excellent lyrics indeed. In lyrical terms, death haunts this record more so than on Tonight's The Night or Sleeps With Angels. More than half the album's songs are specifically about death. In his own versions Neil perserves grim, dark stanzas that have faded away from the schoolbook versions we heard as children. My favorite is this verse from "Clementine" that sounds nearly conjured from George R.R. Martin's a Song of Ice and Fire: "In my dreams she still doth haunt me, broken garments soaked in brine. Though in life I used to hug her, in death I draw the line." I mean, grim image, right? A brine-soaked ghost is creepy enough, but even to posit the question of whether or not to hug her (and to thus pose hugging her as a possibility) makes it seem as though she's a flesh and blood zombie standing before him. So chilling.
All together it's an astoundingly delicious set of tracks, which would probably rank in my top 15 Neil Young albums -- which means something since he has 40 albums! The only thing it lacks is a truly great extended-jam in the tradition of "Cortez the Killer" or "Like a Hurricane;" including that would probably bump it up to the top 10. It's an album I can't imagine a Neil diehard not loving.
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No love for Greendale, then? :p
ReplyDeleteI mean, I know you don't think it's a true Crazy Horse album, but not even a mention? You're just gonna let the elephant hang out in the room?
I had a revelation about that song Clementine after I noticed that line. The liner notes talk about how the meaning of the song changes whether it's considered to be sung from the point of view of the father or the lover. I think it's a song about both, probably from the perspective of the lover, but it demonstrates two opposing approaches towards death. The father is devastated by his daughter's tragic death, and lets his grief consume him. Now he sleeps with Clementine. The lover is similarly haunted by her death, but rather than let the dead girl drag him down with her, he decides to move on, find another girl (who just so happens to be Clementine's little sister), and forget her. It might sound a bit insincere (on the contrary, he seems to have genuinely missed her), but let me ask you this. Who's happier? The grieving father who committed suicide, or the frustrated lover who has moved on to greener pastures?
P.S. I just realized the obvious truth that this is a perfect album to listen to on the 4th of July.
It was for love of Greendale that I neglected to mention it, as I don't like it as much as I used to. While the components are promising (good instrumentations, good lyrical concepts), the songs are virtually amelodic, and they're unwieldy long for having so few instrumental segments. They're like spoken word recitations with accompaniment more than songs. My favorite Neil album of the 00s is now Living With War. Another tedious political rant but one with excellent melodies. =]
ReplyDeleteIf it is any solace, over on the CRF Americana was roundly panned, and Greendale was mentioned as being superior. How anyone could not consider Americana one of the greatest Neil Young albums is beyond me, but such is the nature of fandom. Also Bandit is still my favorite Neil song of the 00s, jfyi. Though I've escaped Bandit's doom for the time being, it is the life I used to live and I am destined to return to it in the end.
Actually, I just realized that the dichotomy between Greendale and Americana is a perfect example of the difference between rock operas and concept albums. Despite the lack of instrumental segments (although the opening to Carmichael is sublime), I appreciate Greendale as much as a story as I do as a piece of music.
ReplyDeletePlus, man, I freakin' saw it live! But then, I should soon hopefully be able to say that about Americana as well. Although, I strongly doubt that the presentation for Americana will be nearly as elaborate and impressive as that of Greendale, which was practically like watching a literal rock opera (as opposed to a rock concert) on stage in front of you.
Two different tastes, I guess. Because though I would be honored to have had a chance to see Pink Floyd perform the Wall in concert (and 'perform' is absolutely the right word for that), I probably would have enjoyed even more getting a chance to watch them play their music out among the eerie remains of Pompeii.
We also both saw Living With War live! :'D
ReplyDeleteGood interpretation on Clementine by the way.