Ever since he started rumbling about releasing his archives some 20,
30 years ago it's been so long, it's hard to keep track of the
specifics Neil Young talked about it as a mammoth box set, or perhaps
a series of box sets each chronicling a different era in his career, comprised
entirely of unreleased recordings, some live, some studio. It was an eagerly
anticipated set, since everybody knew that he had scores of unreleased
recordings in his vaults. Not just songs, but full albums that were scrapped
at the last minute. He regularly tested out new songs on tour, sometimes
rewriting them later, sometimes never releasing them on album. Some of
his peers had similar habits Bob Dylan had a similar treasure trove
of unreleased recordings but unlike Dylan, Young took an active
interest in archiving this material himself. Given the amount of unreleased
tapes, some patience was in order, but as the years stretched into decades,
with Neil tinkering away, changing his mind, waiting for digital sound
to get out of the dark ages, it was easy to wonder if the set would ever
come out. When it did, it was not with a splash, as was the official Bob
Dylan Bootleg Series, which was inaugurated as a triple-disc box in 1991.
No, Young eased his way into the series by releasing a single disc called
Crazy Horse at the Fillmore 1970 late in 2006.
Billed as the second volume of the "Performance Series"
clearly, the numbers are assigned chronologically in order of recording,
not release Crazy Horse at the Fillmore 1970 is not dissimilar
to the subsequent entries in Dylan's bootleg series: it focuses on a specific,
significant tour in Young's past. In this case, it's Neil's 1970 tour
with Crazy Horse, supporting Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, his first
record with the band. This was the original lineup of Crazy Horse featuring
Danny Whitten, who would die tragically of a heroin overdose a mere two
years later, making this a pivotal tour in Young's history. Whitten's
ghost haunted Young & Crazy Horse throughout the '70s, particularly
on his gloomy masterpiece Tonight's the Night, which featured a version
of Whitten's great "Come on Baby Let's Go Downtown" recorded
during the group's stint at the Fillmore East in March 1970, which this
album documents in a fuller fashion. That version of "Downtown"
on Tonight's the Night hints at the power of this performance: simultaneously
lithe and lumbering, it captures how Neil & Crazy Horse could sound
at once unpredictable and inevitable. Part of that came from bassist Billy
Talbot and drummer Ralph Molina, whose ramshackle rhythms were uniquely
suited for Young, and pianist Jack Nitzsche also added texture to this
tour, but this performance reveals how empathetic the interplay between
Young and Whitten was. These guitarists weren't rivals; they interlocked
and rode Talbot and Molina's steady, if occasionally misshapen, groove
for as long as they could go and in the case of the 12-minute "Down
by the River" and the 16-minute "Cowgirl in the Sand,"
it was very long indeed, but they're never boring; they're hypnotic in
their circular riffs and solos. Add to that a ragged, beautiful "Winterlong"
and the sweet, loping "Wonderin'" performed here, but
not released until Young revived and revamped it for his 1983 rockabilly
record Everybody's Rockin' and this is truly a special performance
and more than worthy beginning to the archives project.
That doesn't mean that this release is faultless. The main complaint
that can be lodged against Crazy Horse at the Fillmore 1970 is that it's
not a complete representation of a 1970 show. During this tour, Neil opened
with an acoustic set and then had Crazy Horse come out for an electric
set; the acoustic is not here, but most of the electric is, with only
"Cinnamon Girl" absent and it's absent because there
was not existing high-quality tape for it, unlike the rest of music that's
featured here. So, it comes down to a matter of taste: for hardcore fans
used to bootleg quality, they may lament the lack of a full show, but
for those who want the best of this legendary stay at the Fillmore East
in the best possible audio quality (including a DVD of the show, where
the main program plays to photos of the band from the tour), that's what
this set gives you. And in doing so, it gives a good indication that as
Neil slowly rolls out the archives, he'll emphasize quality over completeness
for better and for worse.
(by Stephen Thomas Erlewine , All
Music Guide)
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