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Neil Young Once Voted Republican, but Evolved

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Gandalf Grey

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Jul 7, 2004, 7:28:24 PM7/7/04
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Please Come to Ohio

Neil Young once voted Republican. Here's how he got his groove back.
By Richard Byrne
Web Exclusive: 07.06.04


On the demo tape that won him a record deal back in 1991, Bottle Rockets'
leader Brian Henneman sang a song about Neil Young. Fittingly, Henneman's
portrait (co-written with longtime collaborator Scott Taylor) was more of a
woodcut than a watercolor. "Neil once voted Republican," sings Henneman in
one verse. "And that pissed off a lot of fans / He's just a guy who gets
confused / He's a lot like me / He's a lot like you."

The song nails both the confusion and the common touch in Young's politics.
Ecology, poverty, the drug, and Richard Nixon are recurring themes, but the
overall impression left with the listener is that of a man striking a series
of eccentric postures. It is the politics of the wet middle finger held in
the air to gauge the breeze.

Yet puzzling out those politics is essential to understanding Young's
artistry. Throughout much of his career, and on his latest record, Greendale
(Reprise), Young's middle finger has been more than a gesture. It has been a
way to tell -- and without a Weatherman -- which way America's political
winds are blowing.

One-Way Street

Young offered few hints about his politics in his early songs. It was Steven
Stills, not Young, who penned Buffalo Springfield's lone hit, the
much-ballyhooed protest anthem "For What It's Worth."

Young's first songs, meanwhile, reveled in self-absorption. Even as his
skills sharpened (Buffalo Springfield's "Mr. Soul" and "Broken Arrow," or
early solo tracks such as "The Loner" and "Cowgirl in the Sand"), his lyrics
remained fiercely jealous of their own privacy.

Young's initial stint with Crosby, Stills and Nash, in 1969, marked the
first emergence of a political side to his music, but it was a surprising
spark. After all, CSN's eponymous first record was a pure folk-pop
confection, with nary a trace of the previous year's turbulence in its
grooves. Yet it was Crosby, Still, Nash & Young that recorded "Ohio," Young'
s bleak, anarchic elegy for those who died in the shootings at Kent State
University on May 4, 1971.

Thirty-three years later, "Ohio" remains the touchstone for American protest
rock. In its mere 55 words (one repeated verse bookending a repeated
chorus), it proved more articulate than any other such song from that era.

Place the economical rage of "tin soldiers and Nixon coming" alongside the
Doors' hammy dirges, or the Jefferson Airplane's histrionics (1969's
Volunteers), or the hippy-dippy nonsense cranked out by Young's own
bandmates (David Crosby's "Almost Cut My Hair" on Déją Vu, or Graham Nash's
hysterical agit-pop sing-along "Chicago" from 4 Way Street). Young's song
trumps them all.

"Ohio" gave Young a taste for the megaphone. His first solo record after
joining CSNY, After the Goldrush, infused his cryptic contrarianism with a
new willingness to tackle issues larger than himself.

There were growing pains, of course. "Southern Man" was dated before the
record's August 1970 release. After the Goldrush's title track was more
successful: Its symbolism was dizzyingly potent, yet its despairing
ecological message was unambiguous.

Young's biggest hit, Harvest (1972), put politics back on the shelf, aside
from another slap at the South of George Wallace on "Alabama." Yet the
scandal brewing in Richard Nixon's White House threw politics on the nation'
s front burner, and America's anger, disillusionment, and sheer exhaustion
found its quintessential rock reflection in Young's music of that era.

'Gate Keeper

Much of what has been written about Young's classic mid-'70s troika -- Time
Fades AwayOn the Beach (1974), and Tonight's the Night (recorded in 1973,
released in 1975) -- focuses on the personal crises that inspired these
records. Drug-related deaths among Young's musical colleagues and hangers-on
did play a major role in shaping them, but the records also possess
oft-ignored political and cultural commentary.

On the surface, there were the bizarre references to Miami Beach (where both
Nixon and George McGovern were nominated in 1972) in the liner notes and on
tour. The cover of On the Beach features a copy of a newspaper with the
headline "Senator Buckley Calls On Nixon To Resign."

Dig deeper into the songs, and there are many pronouncements. "All day
presidents look out windows," sings Young on the title track of Time Fades
Away. "All night sentries watch the moonglow." On the Beach's final song,
"Ambulance Blues," takes Nixon head-on with a verse that repeats to end the
song: "I never knew a man could tell so many lies / He had a different story
for every set of eyes / How can he remember who he's talkin' to? / 'Cause I
know it ain't me, and I hope it isn't you."

But it's not only Watergate that bothered Young. He was obsessed with the
dark detritus that had washed up in the wake of the changes of the 1960s. On
The Beach's "Revolution Blues" ranks among the scariest songs that Young has
recorded, catching the gleeful psychopathic mayhem of Charles Manson and his
followers in bold lyrical strokes such as "I see bloody fountains / And 10
million dune buggies / Comin' down the mountains."

But perhaps Tonight's the Night strikes the most abrupt note, with the
explicit rejection of the Woodstock where CSNY had performed and
subsequently celebrated with a cover of Joni Mitchell's song on that record'
s "Roll Another Number (For the Road)": "I'm not goin' back to Woodstock for
a while / Though I long to hear that lonesome hippie smile / I'm a million
miles away / From that helicopter day / No, I don't believe I'll be goin'
back that way."

When critics tout Tonight's the Night as a link in the evolutionary chain
that created punk, it's usually these lyrics that they point to as proof.
But these words -- along with the much-debated "Campaigner," which appeared
on his 1977 three-record greatest-hits collection, Decade -- were also Neil
Young's final spade of dirt on the era's idealism and agony.

Re * Ac* Tion* Ary

"Campaigner" is a song that is much misunderstood. It has been cited
countless times as the dawn of Young's reactionary politics, mostly due to
the tune's repeated insistence that "even Richard Nixon has got soul."

Extended and ultimately fruitless exegeses aside, let's simply observe that
the song turns that notorious phrase over and over, as a cat might toy with
a trapped mouse. What can be said with little dispute is that the era to
which "Campaigner" belongs is the one in which Young transformed himself
from an observer to a pundit of sorts.

1979's Rust Never Sleeps has been justly celebrated as one of Young's best
works. Haunted by history, obsessed with aging and violence in equal
measure, the record boasts some of Young's best work. But it also held hints
of a newly minted reactionary strain in his songwriting. "Welfare Mothers"
ranks high among the meanest songs that he's written, a theme song of sorts
for the bashing of the poor that heralded Ronald Reagan's election.

It was around this time that Young began giving interviews in which he made
himself out to be something of a redneck, insulting Jimmy Carter and
celebrating Reagan's defense policies. Young's songs of the era made similar
noises. Check out the title track of 1980's Hawks & Doves, which wallowed
shamelessly in its jingoism. Once again, Young's wet middle finger had
caught the wind of political change.

Just as his records in the 1980s and '90s ruthlessly shed musical skins
(soft country to metallic rock to something akin to Kraftwerk on Trans),
they also took up multiple causes and spoke with multiple voices. The effect
was jarring and confusing. The voices not only mixed, they ultimately
shouted each other down. There's Young championing the family farm at Farm
Aid. There's Young railing against the corporate takeover of music on 1988's
This Note's for You. There's Young touring with the ultimate nostalgia trip,
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Young's restless contrarianism had become
something closer to aimlessness.

It's a state of mind best summed up in Young's most popular song of the
period. 1989's "Rockin' in the Free World" recycled the scuzzy street scene
that he's been fond of evoking since 1973's "Time Fades Away." There's anger
in the song, but it's a directionless anger, bouncing from anti-American
hatred ("Don't feel like Satan / But I am to them) to self-loathing and
dread ("We got a thousand points of light / For the homeless man / We got a
kinder, gentler / Machine-gun hand"). "Rockin' in the Free World" is less an
anthem than a Babel of image and sloganeering that perfectly echoed its time
rather than interpreting it.

Greendale Pastures

Whether Young had lost his touch by the turn of the millennium was an open
question. The terrorist attacks of September 11 didn't rouse his muse in any
useful manner, if the blundering hamfistedness of "Let's Roll" ("We're goin'
after Satan / On the wings of a dove") on Are You Passionate? was any
indication.

But Young's latest record, Greendale, offers strong evidence of his
continuing relevance. Not that Greendale isn't complicated or messy or
contrary -- it's all of those and more. But the record's gambit of short
stories set in an imaginary town does yoke Young's political sloganeering to
a sturdy narrative.

Greendale's story pivots on the senseless shooting of a cop in a sleepy,
complacent town, and Young layers the voices of characters and shifts
perspectives in a way that conjures the complexity and grit of HBO's
terrific serial The Wire (which also essays America's war on drugs). It
creates a space for Young to adopt personas who opine on politics, law
enforcement, the media, and the environment.

The record is filled with gems of observation that recall Young's best work.
On "Leave the Driving," he relates the incident that shakes the town's
complacency, then pulls back for a second to put this small tragedy in a
larger context that "Let's Roll" notably fumbled: "The whole town was
stunned / They closed the coast highway for 12 hours / No one could believe
it / Jed was one of ours. / Meanwhile across the ocean / Living in the
Internet / Is the cause of an explosion / No one has heard yet."

Greendale's clumsy cops, earth freaks, and exploding nuclear families
represent a refreshing return to form for Young -- and not a moment too
soon. In a musical culture that's increasingly escapist, the contrary and
changeable Neil Young is now the closest thing to a bastion of reality in
rock and roll. That Young is once again saying something meaningful from
that platform is a welcome development.

--
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such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107

"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so
long as I'm the dictator." - GW Bush 12/18/2000.

"To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that
we are to stand by the president right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic
and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public."
---Theodore Roosevelt

"For us to get bogged down in the quagmire
of an Iraqi civil war would be the height of foolishness."
---Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, 1991

The Pretzel

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Jul 8, 2004, 3:25:46 AM7/8/04
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snip>

We got a thousand points of light

For the homeless man
We got a kinder, gentler,
Machine gun hand
We got department stores
and toilet paper
Got styrofoam boxes
for the ozone layer
Got a man of the people,
says keep hope alive
Got fuel to burn,
got roads to drive.


Jeffrey Scott Linder

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Jul 12, 2004, 5:42:48 PM7/12/04
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"Gandalf Grey" <ganda...@infectedmail.com> wrote:

>Please Come to Ohio
>
>Neil Young once voted Republican. Here's how he got his groove back.
>By Richard Byrne
>Web Exclusive: 07.06.04
>

When did Neil Young become a citizen?

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