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Review: Neil Young & Crazy Horse strike heart of gold at tour-opening concert

George Varga, The San Diego Union-Tribune on

Published in Entertainment News

SAN DIEGO — When Neil Young sang "rock and roll will never die" near the conclusion of his tour-opening Love Earth concert with Crazy Horse Wednesday in San Diego, you believed him.

Those words, from his 1978 song, "My My Hey Hey (Into the Black)," sounded like a defiant vow in the face of possible obsolescence 46 years ago. Now, they are a statement of fact from a proud maverick who sounds more committed than ever, even — or, rather, especially — at a time when rock is increasingly becoming a niche genre pushed aside by formulaic pop, hip-hop and dance music.

At 78, Young remains a staunch keeper of the flame whose passion for music burns as bright as ever. If anyone thinks this veteran singer, songwriter and guitarist is ready to kick back in his old age, he and his band immediately and convincingly refuted such notions with their powerful, nearly two-hour performance at SDSU's Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre. (They performed a second sold-out show at the same venue Thursday night.)

Young and his three-man band opened with "Cortez the Killer," an epic number from their 1975 album, "Zuma." But this was no sentimental journey down nostalgia lane, nor was it a tentative, shake-off-the-dust run through.

Their carefully calibrated version of "Cortez" built to a series of powerful climaxes Monday and lasted 15 minutes — nearly twice as long as the original on "Zuma." The song began with an opening guitar jam that lasted seven minutes before Young's reedy vocals commenced. For good measure, near the conclusion of "Cortez," he sang — for the first time anywhere in concert — a missing verse he recently came upon that had been cut from the 1975 recording.

The unearthed lyrics provided additional depth and a palpable sense of despair to Young's tour de force song about Hernán Cortez, the bloody Spanish conqueror of Mexico's Aztec Empire: "I floated on the water/ I ate that ocean wave/ Two weeks after the slaughter/ I was living in a cave/ They came too late to get me/ But there's no one here to set me free/ From this rocky grave/ To that snowed-out ocean wave."

 

The next selection was the buoyant "Cinnamon Girl," a choice cut from 1969's "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere," the first album Young and Crazy Horse made together. It clocked in at a crisp three minutes.

The rest of the concert included several other extended jams, with "Down by the River" and "Love and Only Love" both clocking in at a glorious 16 minutes (but not lasting one second too long). Conversely, Young's tender solo acoustic versions of "Comes a Time," "Heart of Gold" and "Human Highway" were each delivered with admirable concision.

The manner in which he alternated between longer and shorter selections served as a master class on how to pace a concert to build momentum and achieve maximum dynamic tension and release.

The final encore was an eight-minute rendition of "Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)," whose line "There's more to the picture than meets the eye" could be a synopsis of Young's career and his dogged determination to do things his way, every time, no matter what the trends of the day may be.

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©2024 The San Diego Union-Tribune. Visit sandiegouniontribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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