Showing posts with label Neil Young. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Young. Show all posts

Stars rock New York to fight poverty


NEW YORK - The Black Keys, Foo Fighters and Neil Young rocked New York's Central Park on Saturday with a free concert highlighting efforts to combat extreme poverty around the world.

An estimated 60,000 people flocked to the Manhattan park's Great Lawn for the event organized by the Global Poverty Project. Unlike past benefit concerts, the main aim was to raise attention, not money.

Tickets were free, but to qualify, online concertgoers had to accumulate points by watching videos on globalcitizen.org about various elements of extreme poverty, ranging from malaria to mothers dying in childbirth.




Points also added up when those applying passed on information via social networks like Twitter.

The Global Poverty Project says it has more than met its goal of securing pledges worth more than $500 million this year from aid agencies and other donors, some of which were announced between sets at the concert.

But the concert itself was about bringing the anti-poverty message to ordinary people.

With the United Nations wrapping up its annual General Assembly, this was the perfect moment to push for mass participation in the cause, Global Poverty Project CEO Hugh Evans said.

"Politicians, you know what they do?" Evans licked his finger and stuck it in the air. "They look to see where the wind is blowing. Civil society decides where that wind is blowing," he told journalists near the stage, with the Manhattan skyline in the background.

"We want to build a movement. It can't be just one concert."

In addition to the concert headliners, there was a rendition of John Lennon's "Imagine" by John Legend and performances from K'naan and Band of Horses.

Rockers used the stage to promote the poverty awareness message, helped by short videos on huge screens showing the work of anti-poverty campaigners.

"We believe these problems are solvable. All it takes is the will of the leaders, the will of the people, and that's why we're here," Legend said.

Karen Sullivan, a 43-year-old teacher attending the concert, said she agreed there was a need to get people talking about extreme poverty around the world, and accused the media of failing to spread the word.

"I think people want to know, but don't have the avenues," she said. "People say Americans don't care and I get very angry about that. I think Americans do care. They just don't know what to care about."

Perhaps many in the huge crowd, though, were at least as excited by the one-off opportunity to see their rock gods as by the idea of helping the world's poor.

"Mostly we just wanted to see the Foo Fighters. We got lucky," said fireman Stan Kowalski, 30.

Organizers say they want supporters of the Global Poverty Project to Tweet President Barack Obama and his Republican opponent Mitt Romney with requests for a detailed discussion on foreign policy during the upcoming presidential debates.

source: interaksyon.com

Flashback: Led Zeppelin Jams With Neil Young


Led Zeppelin's 1995 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame came at a very awkward time for the band. The previous year Jimmy Page and Robert Plant reunited for a tour, but they failed to invite bassist John Paul Jones. He first learned about their plans when he read about them in a newspaper. At the podium to accept the award, Jones couldn't resist a dig at his bandmates. "Thank you, my friends," he said. "For finally remembering my phone number."

Despite the tension, the group agreed to perform a three-song set that featured John Bonham's son Jason Bonham on drums. They brought out Steven Tyler and Joe Perry for their opening number of "Bring It On Home," and at the end Neil Young joined them for a sloppy, eight-minute rendition of "When the Levee Breaks." Toward the end of the song Plant sings a bit of Buffalo Springfield's "For What It's Worth" as a tribute to Young. It was the last time that Zeppelin performed together until their 2007 reunion concert in London.

According to Jimmy McDonough's Neil Young biography Shakey, the experience was so thrilling for Young that he briefly thought about recording a whole album with Zeppelin. Needless to say, that never happened. Page and Plant did agree to one more album and tour in 1998. John Paul Jones wasn't invited to be a part of that, either.

Neil Young Enlists Shepard Fairey for 'Americana' Visuals


For his new album with Crazy Horse, Americana, Neil Young asked artist Shepard Fairey to create paintings to represent each of the record's 11 songs. The series of works premiered in L.A. last night at the Perry Rubenstein Gallery and will be on display there starting this week through July 14th.

"We discovered a lot of depth in these songs and the visuals of these are just amazing," Young told Rolling Stone. "'Clementine' is so deep with its original verses and this art, you really get a feeling for the tenseness and desperation of the situation, the unresolved death and longing."

Fairey's work brought out a lot in the songs that Young believes he might not have seen otherwise. "Almost every one of them had a view that was unique to me," he said. "I wouldn’t have thought of it."

Young and Fairey have worked together before, when Fairey included Young in his May Day project, a series of portraits of some of his heroes from different walks of life, in 2010. As a result of that painting Fairey did of Young, the rocker asked Fairey to design the packaging for the 25th anniversary of the Bridge School, Young's annual Bay Area benefit.

Given their past history, this project was very much a collaboration between the two. "We talked about them. If he didn’t have an idea or he was wondering, we talked and between the two of us we came up with concepts for them," Young said. "Some of them he knew exactly what he wanted to do and they were great and I just kept saying yes."

For Fairey, the project was a labor of love. "I’m just really excited I got to do this because I love Neil’s music and I love the way that music affects people viscerally and inspires them to look deeper into the meaning of the songs," Fairey said.

Both of them are hoping to get people to reexamine songs they think they know. Americana is made up of 11 standards, from "Oh Susanna" and "Clementine" to "This Land Is Your Land" and "Wayfarin' Stranger." But Young says these aren't the songs people think they are.

"We had to bring back the original words. Everybody’s forgotten what the songs are about in the first place in their kind of rabid celebration of the beauty of the songs and the lightness of some of the verses," Young said. "They took away the counterpoints the songs were a house for, and so the songs weren’t as strong. And now with the original verses back in and the art that reflects the tension of the original message, we’ve worked on it and made a different thing out of it."

Those words were music to Fairey's ears. "I’m so glad to hear that from Neil. We discussed some of that, but I almost didn’t want to press on all my political views just in case we disagreed," Fairey said, eliciting strong laughter from both himself and Young at that last part. "But my reading into a lot of the songs was it was very relevant to the struggle reflected in [John] Steinbeck’s The Grapes Of Wrath, which people are saying this recession is the most serious thing since the Great Depression and a lot of the same dynamics are at play, so I felt like it was very relevant."

The works will live outside of the gallery. In addition to being the centerpiece for the recent 40-minute short film Young did to promote Americana, which finds the rocker visiting a gallery in search of images to accompany his book America, the paintings will also join Young and Crazy Horse on the road. "The art will be the backdrop for this short tour that we’re doing," Young said of the upcoming Americana dates, which he described as "really a very short tour."

And beyond the next tour, he sees this partnership continuing in some way. "We’re both moving pretty quickly in our lives right now, but we’ve had a good time collaborating on this and I’m sure there are gonna be more opportunities for this."

Bridge School Benefit Concert


Neil Young and his wife Pegi has been organizing the annual Bridge School benefit concert which is held every month of October. Bridge School Benefit Concert will be held this weekend October 22 and 23 at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California.



The funds raised by this benefit concert encourages people to have a positive effect on children and will benefit the nonprofit organization that educates children with severe speech and physical disabilities.




The Benefit concert will be remembered in separate DVD and CD releases including live performances from Neil Young, Pearl Jam, Norah Jones, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Paul McCartney etc.. to be released on October 24.



The Bridge School Concert 25th Anniversary Edition DVD

Disc 1:
Bruce Springsteen, "Born In The USA"
Patti Smith, "People Have The Power"
Pearl Jam, "Better Man"
David Bowie, "Heroes"
Ben Harper, "There Will Be A Light"
Bob Dylan, "Girl From The North Country"
R.E.M., "Country Feedback"
Emmylou Harris & Buddy Miller, "Love Hurts"
Fleet Foxes, "Blue Ridge Mountains"
Devendra Banhart, "At The Hop"
Bonnie Raitt, "The Road Is My Middle Name"
Billy Idol, "Rebel Yell"

Disc 2:
Brian Wilson, "Surfin' USA"
Gillian Welch, "The Way It Will Be"
The Pretenders, "Sense Of Purpose"
James Taylor, "Fire and Rain"
Simon and Garfunkel, "America"
Tom Petty, "Shadow Of A Doubt"
Dave Matthews, "Too Much"
Neil Young, "Crime In The City"
Tom Waits, "16 Shells From A Thirty-Ought Six"
Elton John and Leon Russell, "A Dream Come True"
Paul McCartney, "Get Back"
Metallica, "Disposable Heroes"
The Who, "Won't Get Fooled Again"

Disc 3:
Bridge School Documentaries:
- Backstage At The Bridge School Benefit Concert
- The Bridge School Story
- Special Feature - Student/Artist Interviews


The Bridge School Concerts 25th Anniversary Edition CD

CD 1:
Bruce Springsteen, "Born In The USA"
Dave Matthews, "Too Much"
No Doubt, "Magic’s In The Makeup"
Jack Johnson, "Gone"
Fleet Foxes, "Blue Ridge Mountains"
Neil Young & Crazy Horse, "Love And Only Love"
Sonic Youth, "Rain On Tin"
Pearl Jam, "Better Man"
Gillian Welch, "The Way It Will Be"
R.E.M. & Neil Young, "Country Feedback"
Willie Nelson, "The Great Divide"
Nils Lofgren, "Cry Just A Little"

CD 2:
Sarah McLachlan, "Elsewhere"
Paul McCartney, "Get Back"
Elton John & Leon Russell, "A Dream Come True"
Band Of Horses, "Marry Song"
Metallica, "Disposable Heroes"
Thom Yorke, "After The Gold Rush"
Sheryl Crow, "The Difficult Kind"
Tony Bennett, "Maybe This Time"
CSNY, "Déjà Vu"
Norah Jones, "Jesus, Etc"
Jonathan Richman, "I Was Dancing In The Lesbian Bar"
Brian Wilson, "Surfin' USA"
The Who, "Won't Get Fooled Again"