Silver & Gold Press Release

Well-known for his mercurial musical instincts, Neil Young took a creative route, circuitous even for him, to arrive at Silver & Gold, his latest release on Reprise Records.

Produced by the artist and Ben Keith and utilizing a top-flight assemblage of supporting musicians including drummers Jim Keltner and Oscar Butterworth, bassist Donald ‘Duck’ Dunn and keyboardist Spooner Oldham (as well as Keith, himself, on pedal steel guitar and dobro), Silver & Gold went through three distinct incarnations over its nearly three-year gestation period.

The point of origin for the album’s ten tracks can be traced to mid-1997 when Young returned from headlining the H.O.R.D.E. tour with the evolving notion of recording his first-ever totally solo album. While, over the course of his four-decade career, there have been abundant examples of his solo artistry - “Heart Of Gold” springs most readily to mind - the concept of a full tunestack of vocal and acoustic guitar originals had yet to be realized.
“While I was on tour,” remarks the artist, “I had written a couple of new songs, including ‘Silver And Gold’ and ‘Without Rings,’ and I wanted to record them right away while my voice was still in shape from all the performing I’d done. I was also developing the idea of doing an album called Acoustica, which obviously was going to be all-acoustic, but using cheap little instruments, things you could buy at a world music store for $19.95, and then miking them really loud.”

Setting to work in the fall of that year in the state-of-the-art studio built on his Northern California ranch, Young recorded his new material in a musical setting that he describes as “kind of out of tune and funky sounding, but with something going for it. But ultimately it wasn’t where I wanted to go and I started rethinking the project.”

By early 1998, Young had taken yet another sharp creative turn, this time veering completely off the solo path and recruiting the above-mentioned musicians for a full-fledged ensemble effort. So successful was this new approach that the artist went on to pen two fresh tracks, “Buffalo Springfield Again” and “The Great Divide,” for inclusion on the work-in-progress. “Playing with these guys was fun,” Young asserts. “We ended up doing a pretty straight-ahead record, but the songs were mostly more personal and inward-looking, so having a sensitive group of musicians to work with was really the right way to go. These guys are very sympathetic to the writer’s point of view. They really know how to listen to a song.”

But the work-in-progress took an additional detour when, in the mist of Silver & Gold - Version 3.0 - Young, working simultaneously with his former bandmate Stephen Stills on tracks for a long-awaited Buffalo Springfield box set, first began entertaining the possibility of joining a revitalized Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.

“In the process of listening to all those old tunes,” recounts Young, “we realized that there was still more that we could have done together. Stephen was working on a new Crosby, Stills & Nash album, so he played a song he’d written for them, and it really clicked with me. I volunteered to come down to L.A. to play on it and, once I got there and was back in the studio with those guys, they sounded so good and it was so great to see them all again, that I just hung in there.”

The result was Looking Forward, the first CSN&Y release in over a decade and an album that would eventually contain four songs originally intended for Silver & Gold. In his enthusiasm for the CSN&Y reunion, Young offered his partners their choice of any of the material he had been assembling for his own album: the Young compositions “Looking Forward,” “Slowpoke,” “Out Of Control” and “Queen Of Them All” were duly transferred to Looking Forward, with the original instrumental tracks augmented by new vocals from the quartet.

“Some people questioned the wisdom of letting those songs go,” admits Neil. “But I felt at the time that my album may have been suffering under its own weight and that by taking them out I could free up the whole thing. I listened again and, with the new running order, it seemed like an entirely different album to me, raised to a whole new level.”

But the creative tweaking didn’t stop there. Still intrigued by the idea of a wholly solo venture, Young embarked on a selected string of dates accompanied only by himself. Two dates at Bass Hall in Austin, Texas in May of last year provided a chance for him to perform much of the Silver & Gold material (along with such classics as “Long May You Run” and “Harvest”) in their originally intended form, albeit without the tiny instrumental accompaniment. Those landmark Austin appearances have now formed the basis of a special Silver & Gold DVD, released in conjunction with the album of the same name, but with a somewhat expanded repertoire.

“I did almost every song I know at those shows,” Young enthuses, “I was really having a good time. The place was sounding good and I felt really comfortable even with the cameras there. It was one of those rare occasions when it seemed like I couldn’t do anything wrong. We definitely filmed the best show of the tour.”

This said, fans of Neil Young are left with audio and visual documents of a remarkable creative process, the permutations of which are as impressive as its final outcome.

Silver & Gold, the album, features ten Neil Young originals, eight of which were newly written for the project, as well as versions of the title track and “Razor Love,” both of which date from 1982 and have often been performed live. Seven other selections feature the potent instrumental lineup Young gathered for the purpose, while the solo acoustic “Without Rings” dates from the first edition of Silver & Gold.

The result, as might be expected, is quintessentially Neil Young - consummately crafted, brilliantly executed and fully realized. All of which proves the positive virtue of taking one’s time - especially when one is the legendary Neil Young.

A TRACK BY TRACK COMMENTARY BY NEIL YOUNG
“Good To See You” - “I wrote this on the back of the bus, early on in the tour. All I had was the line ‘Good to see you,’ and I thought, ‘Well, what good is that?’ But it said what needed to be said. It’s about coming home after being gone a long time.”
“Silver & Gold” - “This one says to me that relationships are more important than material things. You could take a look at me and say I was really full of it, because I have so many possessions, it’s ridiculous. But it’s dawning on me how useless most of them are.”

“Daddy Went Walkin’“ - “It’s got my father in it, but I think it’s about everybody’s father, everybody’s parents. It’s like taking a look at these old folks who have lost their mates, or who’ve gotten a divorce years ago, like my parents. And it’s about kids hoping that their parents will get back together again. It’s a hope all kids in that situation have, I think.”

“Buffalo Springfield Again” - “What’s cool about CSN&Y, is it gives Stephen and me a chance to play around with what we were doing back then and take it to another level. When he came up to the ranch to work on the box set, part of it was kind of depressing, in the end, because I think we both felt like it had all been cut short. We realized how much more there was for us to do.”

“The Great Divide” - “This is a good example of a song that you can’t just break out when you’re sitting around with a bunch of friends having a good time. You have to have exactly the right people and the right situation. Fortunately I did. Ben Keith plays steel on this one and Oscar Butterworth did a great job on drums.”

“Horseshoe Man” - “He’s the one we can all count on, the one who makes things interesting. He fixes broken hearts by taking the pieces and throwing them up and down. He shakes things up.”

“Red Sun” - “I wrote this song on a really fresh day. My head was feeling good and I was really open. I remember, I was by myself when I did it and, by the end, I was crying. It was very emotional. I kept hearing Emmylou Harris’ voice on it and I finally ended up taking it to Tucson to Linda Ronstadt’s house, where she and Emmylou were working on an album with Dolly Parton. They ended up singing on a lot of the songs on this album, but this one really got to me. The song’s got a little bit of religion in it and Emmylou’s voice, especially, is suited to that.”

“Distant Camera” - ““There was one thing I let go on this album. It’s on this song and it still bothers me. There was a misplaced beat and nobody liked it but me, and I wanted to leave it in because that’s just the way it had happened originally. But I took it out. And to this day, whenever I hear this song, I think about that kick drum. And I probably always will. That’s just the way my mind works.”

“Razor Love” - “It cuts clean through. It’s the kind of love that cuts clean through everything.”

“Without Rings” - “This is one of the first songs I recorded, back when I thought I was doing an acoustic solo album. It’s another one I wrote in the back of the bus, somewhere in Florida at some weird amusement park in the middle of the Everglades. I had this big piece of newspaper with felt tip marker writing all over it. It’s kind of like ‘Mr. Soul,’ inasmuch as it was written on a piece of newspaper with a felt tip marker and it all came out in one long line and then it was done.”