Neil Young and Crazy Horse Set New Release Date for Way Down in the Rust Bucket
The Ragged Glory -era live album and film will arrive in February
Published Jan 13, 2021
In Neil Young s flurry of activity before the end of 2020, planned Crazy Horse live album and film
Way Down in the Rust Bucket did not see release. Now, Young and his long-running outfit have given the project a new release date.
Initially slated to arrive in December, both the
Way Down in the Rust Bucket film and double album will now see release on February 26 through Reprise.
Way Down in the Rust Bucket captures a Young and Crazy Horse performance from November 1990, when the group played to an 800-person crowd at the Catalyst in Santa Cruz, CA. The show took place two months after the release of
Neil Young Sells 50% of his Catalogue For $150 million
Neil Young has sold 50 per cent of his music catalogue said to be worth an estimated $150 million (£UK110 million/$AU192 million).
Young is the latest artist to sign a lucrative deal with Hipgnosis Songs Fund, following their recent acquisition of 100 per cent of former Fleetwood Mac musician Lindsey Buckingham’s entire music collection and producer Jimmy Iovine’s producer royalties.
Half of Neil’s music collection amounts to 1,180 songs.
The firm’s founder, Merck Mercuriadis, said: “This is a deal that changes Hipgnosis forever.
“I bought my first Neil Young album aged seven. ‘Harvest’ was my companion and I know every note, every word, every pause and silence intimately.
The Musicians Who Demanded Trump Stop Playing Their Music in 2020
28 Dec 2020
This year, President Donald Trump was confronted by more than a dozen musicians and bands with demands that he stop using their music at his rallies and events.
The attacks by left-wing artists and other apolitical musicians started the minute Trump began holding rallies after he came down from Trump Tower to announce he was running for president in June of 2015. Before that year closed, then candidate Trump was assailed by rock star Steven Tyler and his band, Aerosmith, for using songs including “Dream On,” and “Living on the Edge.” But the hits just kept on rolling with artists including Adele, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, Neil Young, and even representatives for the Beatles, all of whom demanded that Trump pull their music from his events.
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