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9 posts categorized "Neil Young"

May 07, 2011

Concert review: Neil Young at Chicago Theatre

    One man, one guitar, one big sound. Neil Young orchestrated his solo concert Friday – the first of two-sold shows at the Chicago Theatre – for maximum impact. He started slow and quiet and built to a rafter-rattling finale.

    An early acoustic tune nailed the night’s theme, which focused on contrast and conflict. Instead of blowing out the chorus to sing-along proportion, Young kept “Helpless” shivery and small. Dwarfed against the vastness of an endless Canadian sky described in the song, Young’s tenor conveyed even more vulnerability than usual.

    When the guitarist shifted into electric mode, he also amped up the drama. Young brought an orchestral dimension to the arrangements, expanding the approach he used on his latest solo album, the Daniel Lanois-produced “Le Noise,” to older songs such as “Ohio” and “Down by the River.”

Continue reading "Concert review: Neil Young at Chicago Theatre" »

May 06, 2011

Top weekend show: Neil Young at Chicago Theatre

Neil Young: On this solo tour, expect the legendary singer-songwriter to play some loud, voluptuous guitar as he takes on the soundscapes from his latest, Daniel Lanois-produced album, “La Noise,”  8 p.m. Friday-Saturday at Chicago Theatre, 150 N. State St., $43, $63, $103, $128, $173, $253; ticketmaster.com.

greg@gregkot.com

March 07, 2011

Neil Young solo tour to play Chicago Theatre on May 6-7

Young Neil Young announced a spring solo tour Monday that will bring him to the Chicago Theatre on May 6-7.
 
Young will be focusing on songs from his latest, acclaimed album, “Le Noise,” which was produced by Daniel Lanois, a merger of ghostly, sometimes majestic guitar soundscapes and intimate songwriting.
 
The album yielded Young’s first ever Grammy Award for music (and second overall) when “Angry World” was named best rock song last month at the annual awards ceremony.
 
Concert promoter Jam Productions says details on tickets will be released later this month.
 
Here are all the Young tour dates announced Monday:
 
4/15 Durham, NC Durham PAC
4/17 Richmond, VA Landmark Theater
4/19 Boston Wang Theatre
4/20 Boston Wang Theatre
4/22 Providence, RI Providence PAC
4/24 New York Avery Fisher Hall
4/25 New York Avery Fisher Hall
4/27 Baltimore Hippodrome
4/28 Baltimore Hippodrome
4/30 Philadelphia Tower Theatre
5/1 Philadelphia Tower Theatre
5/3 Cincinnati Aronoff Center
5/4 Detroit Fox Theatre
5/6 Chicago Chicago Theatre
5/7 Chicago Chicago Theatre

greg@gregkot.com

February 13, 2011

Grammy Awards 2011: Arcade Fire wins album of the year

It was supposed to be Eminem's night Sunday. The night he was supposed to cash in on most of his 10 nominations at the 53rd annual Grammy Awards and complete his comeback from declining sales and drug rehab.

It wasn't to be. Instead, independent rock band Arcade Fire surprised everyone, including quite possibly themselves, by winning the Grammys' most prestigious prize for album of the year with "The Suburbs." The band proved their mettle and their worthiness with a seizure-inducing version of their song "Month of May" on the nationally televised program from Los Angeles.

Nashville country-pop trio Lady Antebellum also prevailed with family friendly pleasantness, notching five awards, including big prizes for song and record of the year ("Need You Now").

Though Eminem -- the former pariah turned mainstream celebrity cuddly enough to star in two Super Bowl ads -- lost out in the big categories, he did win for rap album of the year, "Recovery." It was likely a small consolation for an artist who had outsold everyone else in 2010 with nearly 3.5 million album sales. But his act, still peppered with explicit language and confrontational stances, still apparently leaves many Grammy voters squeamish. In Eminem's case, that's a badge of honor more than a curse.

The Grammys considered 1052 nominees in 109 categories. But that’s not enough for us. We handed out some awards of our own during the broadcast.

Not domesticated enough, apparently: After the serene beauty of Rihanna set him up, Eminem marked his turf with a fierce stream of invective that was heavily censored for TV on "Love the Way You Lie." The contrast between the two artists made for riveting theater, then Dr. Dre made his Grammy debut by going toe-to-toe with his protege. It was an overload of star power, a TV moment if there ever was one. But if anything it confirmed why Eminem didn't roll away with 10 Grammys as some had predicted -- he's still a little too vile for the staid old awards voters to handle without fire-repellant gloves.   

Gay rights in prime time: Lady Gaga, who entered the ceremony as a zygote, hoisted aloft inside an oversized “egg” by a retinue of servants dressed in flesh-colored outfits, hatched in time to perform her latest hit, “Born this Way.” It was a straightforward big dance number that flagrantly quoted Madonna, but Madonna probably couldn’t have gotten away with belting out a line like “Don’t be a drag, just be a queen” on national television two decades ago.

Smart move: Remember when the Grammys ill-advisedly matched the Jonas Brothers with Stevie Wonder a few years ago? That didn't go well as the boys were taken to school. This year, the new teen-pop phenom, 16-year-old Justin Bieber, was paired with someone relatively his own age, 12-year-old Jaden Smith, son of Will Smith, before teaming up with his mentor, Usher. It wasn't life-changing, but at least it wasn't embarrassing for the Biebs.

More over-the-top than Gaga: That would be Muse, the British band that is finally making major inroads in North America after nearly two decades. Amid the fog machines, double-necked guitar and dancers this was a band that desperately wants to be Queen, without the self-aware humor.

More surreal than Gaga: That would be Bob Dylan, backed by an army of 19th Century troubadours who looked remarkably like Mumford & Sons and the Avett Brothers. Dylan rasped, wheezed and howled his way through "Maggie's Farm" while his scruffy accomplices staged a folk-punk hootenanny behind him. Wonder what the Bieber fans made of this?

Comfort food: After all the shock and awe of Gaga, Muse, Bieber and the rest, the straight-up songcraft delivered without frills, pyro or half-dressed dancers came from the country acts, Miranda Lambert and Lady Antebellum. Pop doesn't get much more snoozy than this.

Most bizarre collaboration: Cee-Lo Green, the most gifted singer to be heard all night and looking absolutely peacock funky in a Mardi Gras Indian outfit, sang the sanitized version of his explicit hit "Forget You" backed by actress Gwyneth Paltrow and a bunch of Jim Henson's puppets. There's a long tradition of pop artists jamming with Henson's fuzzy creations, but you do have to wonder about Paltrow's credentials. She may be married to Coldplay's Chris Martin, but come on, does singing "Forget You" on "Glee" count for anything? Oh, wait, there's that whole audience ratings thing to consider, isn't there?

Classiest gesture: Rather than catering to younger viewers with some eye-popping Gaga stunt or Eminem tune, the telecast opened with a lengthy tribute to Aretha Franklin, recovering from cancer surgery. She was honored with a diva committee performing a medley of her hits. Christina Aguilera ornamented so many notes so soon it grew tiresome, but Martina McBride was elegantly restrained, and Florence Welch of Florence and the Machine built nicely to a ringing final note. Yolanda Adams connected convincingly to Aretha’s gospel roots and Jennifer Hudson threw down on “Respect.” Best of all, Franklin herself showed up on screen, looking fit and healthy enough to thank her fans, the recording academy and Clive Davis.

Janelle smokes Bruno in retro-soul throwdown: With the suit and tie, the pompadour and the melisma-soaked falsetto, Bruno Mars decided to act like he was James Brown at the Apollo. I don't really need to tell you how that turned out, do I? He sounded out of breath, like a kid who never broke a cold sweat. Janelle Monae, however, immediately followed up with a fierce, crowd-surfing version of "Cold War." She ripped a few stitches on her "retro" outfit, no doubt.

Dirty little secret: Giving credit where credit is due, Bruno Mars might actually be a better percussionist than a singer. He went off on the drums backing Monae on her song.

Most out of tune: Katy Perry, an award she pretty much owns at every TV show on which she performs.

Here are a few highlights from the pre-televised ceremonies:

Grammy Ill-logic No. 1: Though nominated for album of the year, Arcade Fire couldn’t win in a lesser category (best alternative album) for “The Suburbs,” losing out to the Black Keys, whose “Brothers” was not found worthy enough for an album-of-the-year nomination by the Recording Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Second City first: Mavis Staples won her first ever Grammy Award for best Americana album (“You Are Not Alone”) and sang the praises of her late father Pops Staples. “You laid the foundation,” Staples said, “and I am still working on the building.” Other winners with Chicago connections included Buddy Guy (best contemporary blues album) and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, which upped its lifetime Grammy haul to 62 with victories for best classical album and best classical performance (Verdi Requiem).
 
Better late … : Neil Young won his first ever Grammy for music (he had won previously for best recording package). His nod for best rock song (“Angry World”) was greeted with typically wry humor by the straw-haired rocker. “I’m not Mavis,” he said, “but I’m close.”

greg@gregkot.com

December 03, 2010

Top albums of 2010

Janelle-monae-400

Photos: Top albums | Top Box Sets

Here are my favorite albums of 2010:

1. Janelle Monae, “The ArchAndroid” (Bad Boy): The Atlanta singer’s boundary-busting debut album has ambition to burn. It’s a self-empowerment manifesto couched inside a futuristic “emotion-picture” about an android’s battle to overcome oppression – got all that? The music is equally adventurous, touching on everything from lounge jazz to hard funk. A star is born.

2. The Besnard Lakes, “The Besnard Lakes are the Roaring Night” (Jagjaguwar):  The Montreal band perfects its marriage of Brian Wilson-like melodic splendor and My Bloody Valentine-worthy guitar roar. While the lyrics are a bonfire of earthly espionage and anxiety, the music shoots for the heavens.

Continue reading "Top albums of 2010" »

October 01, 2010

Weekend's top show: Farm Aid in Milwaukee

Farm Aid: Jeff Tweedy, Kenny Chesney, Norah Jones, Jason Mraz, Band of Horses, the BoDeans, Amos Lee and Robert Francis join Farm Aid regulars Willie Nelson, Neil Young, John Mellencamp and Dave Matthews in this long-running benefit for family farmers, noon Saturday at Miller Park in Milwaukee, $39.50 to $97.50; 414-902-4000 or www.tickets.com.

greg@gregkot.com

September 22, 2010

Album review: Neil Young, 'Le Noise'

Young 4 stars (out of 4)

Neil Young calls his new album with producer Daniel Lanois “folk-metal,” and the description is pretty apt. "Le Noise" (Reprise) was recorded with just voice and guitar, but Lanois’ sonic treatments make it sound as epic as the Grand Canyon.

Young’s voice, still a thing of spectral (if highly unconventional) beauty in its high, lonesome transparency, is intimate, confiding. He’s tackling deep subjects: the death of the planet, of soldiers in inexplicable conflicts, of the soul itself as it is degraded by drugs, failed love, time.

“I made a mistake, then I did it again,” Young sings. No sugar-coating for this guy. He’s 64, and he’s in no mood for idle chit-chat or warm, fuzzy illusions.

“Hitchhiker” is a brutal litany of a life lived on a ledge, a string of bad drugs and bad decisions redeemed only by the love of wife and family. “My head did explode,” Young sings in one of his most chilling narratives. 

That singular voice is surrounded by a cocoon of what sounds like a small orchestra of instruments. It’s remarkable to think that it was all made by one sonically enhanced guitar, but one needn’t know that to appreciate the sound pouring out of the speakers. Though the album is at heart a series of small performances, easily adaptable to a living room or coffee house, it has all the scope of a wide-screen movie. In “Walk With Me,” one of the very best performances of Young’s career, thick, crashing chords give way to a cascading, wordless vocal – as if a hymn had suddenly broken out in the middle of a war zone.

The album is full of those kind of unexpected juxtapositions, a stunning statement from an artist who shows no signs of slowing down. 

greg@gregkot.com

September 17, 2010

Neil Young on playing his 'Le Noise' guitar: 'It sounded like God'

Young
Neil Young set out to make a solo acoustic album when he called up his friend Daniel Lanois to do some recording earlier this year at the producer’s home studio, an early 20th Century mansion overlooking Silver Lake in California.

When they finished, they came up with something beyond what either of them could have imagined. Young reaches for a new genre classification to describe the album, “Le Noise” (Reprise), due out Sept. 28.

“It’s folk-metal,” he says with a laugh. “We got this sound on the guitar that was very exciting to us. There’s the singularity of a folk performance on the guitar, but with a heavy-metal civilization of sound around it.”

Continue reading "Neil Young on playing his 'Le Noise' guitar: 'It sounded like God'" »

March 15, 2010

Movie review: 'Neil Young Trunk Show: Scenes from a Concert'

Rating: 3.5 stars (out of 4)

     In the transcendent scene from Jonathan Demme’s “Neil Young Trunk Show: Scenes from a Concert,”  which opens Friday in theaters, the director and guitarist take the viewer on an epic tour of a song called “No Hidden Path.”

      
        His gray hair like a halo of straw illuminated by the lights, a hunched-over Young stalks the stage while coaxing clusters of melody or abrasive howls from his guitar. He is a picture of disheveled concentration, eyes ablaze yet turned inward, immersed completely in the strings, the sound, the moment, blanking out all distraction. He huddles with his band as they play, drawing them into his orbit, then spinning away. He leans toward the drum riser, occasionally making eye contact with drummer Ralph Molina, who slams away beneath a fluttering Jolly Roger flag.
       
        Demme’s cameras do not break away to survey the crowd, or jump-cut nervously from one musician to another. Instead, they calmly allow the viewer to observe the song’s unfolding drama, a series of ebbs and surges spanning a quarter-hour. The director’s intense, unswerving gaze matches Young’s own. His close-ups hold a moment until we can see beads of sweat on the guitarist’s weathered skin, then pull away slowly to reveal the faces of all the band members caught up in the moment alongside him. Young keeps digging deeper inside the song until he’s exhausted every possibility, savoring every note until the last lingering moan of distortion.      
       

Continue reading "Movie review: 'Neil Young Trunk Show: Scenes from a Concert'" »

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