Neil Young and Crazy Horse
Psychedelic Pill
Warner Bros./Reprise




Neil Young has
never really given a hoot about polish. And
if his first-thought-best-thought, flamethrower
approach to creation has occasionally
resulted in works of uneven quality, it
has also spawned some of his very best—Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, Tonight’s
the Night, and Zuma
among them. And no
stance is a gesture of artistic courage that’s
appallingly absent among musicians in the
multimedia age.
Young’s latest, Psychedelic Pill, is a ferociously
stubborn assertion that he has no
intent to waver from his commitment to
feeling, art, or for that matter, artlessness if
that’s what moves him. Young’s fellow soul
barbarians Crazy Horse are along for the
ride again, and the crackling, electric racket
they create on Psychedelic Pill is deliriously
sprawling, fractured, patina’d, and at times
tectonically powerful. Sonically speaking,
the template is little different from the
recipe the band concocted around the time
of Rust Never Sleeps—chugging, mid-tempo,
hazy, and distorted jams that shift and drift
around Young’s queasy Bigsby cries and
drummer Ralph Molina’s rather subjective
notions of time.
Psychedelic Pill’s finest moments are
when that formula is taken to extremes.
The three finest tracks are the longest, and
at 27:37, 16:50, and 16:29 minutes respectively,
“Driftin’ Back,” “Ramada Inn,” and
“Walk Like a Giant” are minor key, melancholy
fever dreams that alternately explode
and meander around Young’s boundless,
stream-of-consciousness leads. The latter
ends with about three minutes of Neil and
Crazy Horse approximating the thunder of
a giant’s plodding steps. If there were any
justice, it would find saccharine pop’s most
shameless peddlers looking over their shoulders
and considering their imminent doom.
—Charles Saufley
Must-hear track: “Walk Like a Giant”