Monday, September 27, 2010

Neil Young 40: Sugar Mountain

By now the continual teasing about the Archives had become maddening. Things weren’t helped by Neil’s insistence that the two installments in the “Performance Series” (Volumes 2 and 3 out of at least 12) that had already come out would be included in the Archives box when it finally, supposedly, would appear. To make things even more confusing, an installment dubbed Volume 0 (as in zero) was released with the explanation that it was not going to be part of the box set. (As it turned out, it was included in the DVD and Blu-ray versions of the box.)

Sugar Mountain was recorded over two nights in November 1968, from which the classic B-side that gave this collection its title had been recorded. It’s a fascinating document, captured at a point in his career where he was known (if at all) as the guy from Buffalo Springfield who had yet to release his first solo album. He mixes songs from the Springfield with his new originals deftly, interspersed with somewhat stoney commentary between songs. Each of the “raps”, some of which go on for a few minutes, is given its own track, which can be convenient. It’s a small room, so the performance is intimate, almost conversational. He manages to keep the crowd rapt for all eight minutes of “The Last Trip To Tulsa”. There’s even an early performance of “Birds”, which wouldn’t make an album for two years, and a demonstration of the melody for “Winterlong”, which was nine years away from record stores. And of course, the classic “Sugar Mountain” fits fine in its initial context.

Later eras would be heavily mined for release, which has managed to elevate Sugar Mountain in stature, but the selection from a repertoire that would only balloon exponentially is special. He wasn’t truly famous yet, making it a nice snapshot indeed. Even if the cover photo was from the year before.

Neil Young Sugar Mountain: Live At Canterbury House 1968 (2008)—

2 comments:

  1. I long ago gave up trying to figure out what Neil Young is doing with these releases. I really enjoy Canterbury House, especially the between song patter. It's interesting to compare this performance to the one captured on the Massey Hall set. By 1971 Young is a far more confident performer with a songbook nearly anyone would envy. But of course the close connection to the audience is also long gone, which is something you can really feel when listening to Sugar Mountain.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I got a lot more out of Fillmore East and Massey Hall than I did these, as can be read. Fillmore was too short. (I'll be able to discuss Riverboat in context of the Archives when we get there.)

    What he's trying to accomplish will only be understood better when all the Archives are out. I can't imagine how he's going to fill in the eight gaps between Massey Hall and Dreamin' Man.

    ReplyDelete