Greendale
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Neil Young
Greendale
(Warner Music)

You could call Greendale Neil Young’s version of The Waltons meets Waco – The Movie by way of Spoon River Anthology, writ for guitar, bass, drums and vocal. A series of ten related narratives involving a drug bust gone wrong, the murder of a cop and the FBI persecution of an eco-activist, its range sweeps from 18th century homespun homilies to 21st century corporate corruption and government paranoia (“Hey Mr Clean, you’re dirty now too”).

He’s already shot the film of course, but there’s also the making of a novel in here, with dialogue so natural it makes one laugh out loud. “Carmichael, you asshole,” sobs the cop’s widow at his graveside. “Remember, hey Mr. Las Vegas/You used to be so cool/We met Wayne Newton down at Pebble Beach/And you acted like a fool.”

Elsewhere, ‘Leave The Driving’ is the other side of the coin flipped on ‘Let’s Roll’ off the dreadful Are You Passionate?, an account of a highway cop shooting that morphs into a sarcastic comment on Bush’s Homelands policy.

But if Young’s lyrical instincts have never been sharper, his melodies are generic enough, and musically Greendale is all over the place – or at least as all over the place as can be when dealing with musicians so adept at making their shortcomings work for them. Don’t be thrown by tunes like ‘Double E’, rusted blues retreads that cough and splutter like an old jalopy on a winter’s morning. Here, the Crazy Horse rhythm section’s attempts to play nimble blues shuffles are like watching septuagenarian kickboxing – excruciating and yet strangely compelling.

Time will doubtlessly put Greendale in context with fascinating curios like On The Beach and Tonight’s The Night. Here, Young has sought to resolve the paradox of espousing 60s values while operating as a Time Warner/Clear Channel product by continuing to be an awkward bugger.


Peter Murphy End
Rating: 3.5 / 5



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(27 articles in total in Hotpress.com archive)

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‘Rockin In The Free World’ sees much air-punching and dancing and is resuscitated for three glorious finales – a spectacular finish by any measure.



REVIEW: 01 Jul 2009
Shakey’s long awaited archives box set



NEWS: 19 Jun 2009
The times for his only show in Ireland this summer



REVIEW: 27 Mar 2009
Craggy eco-concept record not the car-crash it could have been



NEWS: 05 Mar 2009
He also has a new album out in April



REVIEW: 04 Jul 2008
Shakey on top form for enthralling Malahide performance



REVIEW: 04 Jul 2008
Near-religious experience in Cork as Shakey performs at his best



NEWS: 04 Mar 2008
Neil Young is Ireland-bound this summer for a brace of shows in Malahide Castle, Dublin (June 29) and Live At The Marquee, Cork (30).



REVIEW: 06 Nov 2007
Unlike his recent output, there’s no overarching preoccupation here, there is only a bunch of good tunes.



REVIEW: 25 May 2006
Recorded in six days and rushed out – first on the ‘net and now as an album release proper – Neil Young’s 32nd album is without a doubt his most...



REVIEW: 15 Sep 2005
From balmy folk revivalist to angst-rock totem, there are many Neil Youngs. Sometimes, you wish there was only one: the feckless, snarling fallen angel of On...



REVIEW: 02 Jun 2003
Lyrically the 57-year-old’s never been in better form.



NEWS: 12 May 2003
Art of gold: the opening gig of Neil Young's acoustic three-night stand in Vicar St makes Bono, Edge, Ron Wood and of course your correspondent Stuart Clark...



NEWS: 12 May 2003
Art of gold: the opening gig of Neil Young's three-night stand at Vicar St makes Bono, The Edge, Ronnie Wood and of course your correspondent Stuart Clark...



NEWS: 10 Mar 2003
Neil Young's three landmark shows in Vicar St sell out in fifteen minutes



REVIEW: 03 Apr 2002
This time out, the sound is Stax and the vibe is, in Ginsberg's words, holy soul jellyroll, blues but no haikus



REVIEW: 19 Oct 1994
Neil Young: “My Heart” (Reprise)



REVIEW: 24 Aug 1994
NEIL YOUNG: “Sleeps With Angels” (Reprise)



REVIEW: 23 Nov 2000
As Neil Young enters his fifth decade of writing and performing music, the world needs to be reminded of his god-like contributions, particularly as recent...



REVIEW: 20 Oct 1993
Neil Young: "Long May You Run" (Reprise)



REVIEW: 14 Nov 1991
If you were to look up the meaning of the word weld in the Oxford English Dictionary you'd find: *Weld v. unite (pieces of esp. heated metal etc.) into solid...



REVIEW: 27 Apr 2000
"Good to see you, good to see you again", is the phrase Neil Young begins Silver And Gold with, and never were truer words spoken.




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