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Crazy Horse (band)




  Img Crazy_horse_w_neil_youngjpg
  Img Capt Crazy Horse with Neil Young, left to right: Danny Whitten, Neil Young, Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot, Jack Nitzsche c 1970
  Background group_or_band
  Alias Danny & the Memories<br>The Rockets
  Origin Columbus, Georgia
  Genre Rock <br> Hard Rock
  Years Active 1969 &mdash Present
  Label Reprise <br> Epic <br> Rhino
  Associated Acts Neil Young
  Current Members Billy Talbot <br> Ralph Molina <br> Frank "Poncho" Sampedro
  Past Members Danny Whitten </br> Jack Nitzsche </br> Nils Lofgren </br>George Whitsell</br>Greg LeRoy</br>John Blanton</br>Rick Curtis</br>Michael Curtis</br>Sonny Mone</br>Matt Piucci


Crazy Horse is a Rock Band best known for its long association with Canadian singer/songwriter Neil Young , despite having released five albums of its own over a 19-year span. It has been co-credited with Young as '''Neil Young and Crazy Horse''' on 13 albums, from '' Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere '' (1969) to '' Live At The Fillmore East '' (2006), and has made contributions to an additional 10 albums by the singer, including his three compilations.


HISTORY

The band began in 1962 as the Doo Wop group Danny & The Memories , with Danny being guitarist Danny Whitten , and counting future Crazy Horse stalwarts Billy Talbot and Ralph Molina as members, the latter two are the only individuals present in every incarnation of the band. The group evolved through nascent San Francisco Folk-psychedelia , eventually ending up in Los Angeles and becoming The Rockets by 1966 with Whitten on guitar, Talbot on bass, and Molina on drums, along with Bobby Notkoff on violin and guitarist brothers Leon Whitsell and George Whitsell , who played on the Rockets' only album, a self-titled set in 1968.

During that year, Whitten had encountered Young, recently departed for good from Buffalo Springfield , playing gigs at the famed sixties Whisky A Go Go club in L.A. Young jammed with the Rockets on several occasions, and asked Whitten, Talbot and Molina to back him up for his second solo album ''Everybody Knows This is Nowhere'', which included " Cinnamon Girl ," " Down By The River ," and "Cowgirl in the Sand", all distinctive guitar work-outs that would be vastly influential on Alternative and Grunge bands in the 1980s and 1990s, and remain staples of Young's concert sets to this day. The trio broke up the Rockets and formed Crazy Horse in 1969 as a permanent unit, touring with Young in early 1970. This tour would be featured on the 2006 album '' Live At The Fillmore East ''.

Young accepted an invitation to join Crosby, Stills & Nash , but used Crazy Horse on his third solo album '' After The Gold Rush '', the band riding the coattails of Young's high visibility as a result of his recent projects. Most of the band (except Molina) were dismissed early in the album sessions, and ended up playing on only three tracks.

With Young experiencing health problems and committed to other projects from late 1970 through most of 1971, Crazy Horse capitalized on its new-found fame and signed its own recording contract, releasing two albums on Young's label, Reprise Records . Adding producer/keyboardist Jack Nitzsche and guitarist Nils Lofgren as semi-permanent members, whom the band met while recording ''After the Gold Rush'', this quintet recorded its Eponymous Album , the debut arriving in stores in early 1971. The album contained many strong compositions, the highlight being a song by Whitten that received several cover versions, " I Don't Want To Talk About It ," most prominently that by Rod Stewart on his '' Atlantic Crossing '' album of 1975 . Also in 1971, the core band with Young recorded in a support capacity for Buffy Sainte Marie , appearing on her '' She Used To Wanna Be A Ballerina '' album.

Lofgren departed to continue his own career, and Nitzsche moved on to work on Young's '' Harvest '' album, leaving Whitten as the remaining creative force. Unfortunately, Whitten's promise as both guitarist and songwriter was cut short, as he developed a serious drug habit, becoming problematic and a liability in meeting commitments. Talbot and Molina drafted several musicians to replace Whitten, bringing back George Whitsell and several others for the pair of Crazy Horse albums from 1972, but by mid-year Whitten had begun to unravel. During the fall of 1972, Whitten was placed on retainer by Young, purportedly to join Young's band for a tour, recordings from which would become the '' Time Fades Away '' album. After failing to pass audition with the group who had backed Young on ''Harvest'', a depressed Whitten returned to Los Angeles, dying days later alone of a heroin overdose on November 18.McDonough, pp. 387-388 Given the fact that these musicians, dubbed The Stray Gators , consisted of a group of highly talented and seasoned Nashville session professionals, it seems inevitable that such an audition would be flunked by a Whitten operating at far less than peak capacity. After Whitten's death, Crazy Horse would not release an album of their own for almost six years, and by then their recording career had fizzled out.

documentary
In early 1973, Young re-assembled the 1971-era Crazy Horse with Talbot, Molina, Lofgren, and Nitzsche, with Young sideman Ben Keith on board to tour and play Young's new songs. Because of its dark themes and uncommercial sound, the album documenting the songs auditioned on these concerts, '' Tonight's The Night '' was initially rejected by Reprise, its release delayed two years until 1975. That same year, Crazy Horse, down again to Talbot and Molina, announced Frank "Poncho" Sampredo as their new guitarist, his recording debut with the band being Young's '' Zuma '' album of 1975. With the exception of a brief hiatus in the late 1980s, Sampedro has remained a member of the line-up since.

In 1978, the band released its fourth album '' Crazy Moon '' before rejoining Young for his classic albums '' Rust Never Sleeps '' and '' Live Rust '', both appearing in 1979 . The groups's oft-criticized sloppy garage-band approach fit in well in the Post-punk rock and roll world of the late seventies, with Young and the Horse running through songs old and new with fire and abandon. Hailed as two of the best in Young's career, the exuberant drive of the ''Rust'' albums owed greatly to the presence of Crazy Horse.

While sessions with Young had led to appearances by the band on each of his albums during the seventies with the exceptions of ''Harvest'', ''Time Fades Away'', and the '' Journey Through The Past '' soundtrack, Young spent the eighties experimenting with genres that were mostly outside the band's idiom. They backed Young sporadically during that decade, playing only on '' Re·ac·tor '', '' Life '', and a few tracks on '' Trans '' and '' Hawks And Doves '', although the sessions for the latter had taken place years earlier. The entire band had initially folded into Young's Blue Notes outfit for '' This Note's For You '', but after the trials of making ''Life'' and its poor reception, Young fell out with the band, dismissing them during the sessions.McDonough, pp. 616-617 While Sampedro remained in various band permutations with Young over the next two years, in early 1988 Molina and Talbot recruited two new Crazy Horse members, Sonny Mone and Matt Piucci (former singer, guitar player and songwriter of The Rain Parade), to record the spitefully-titled album '' Left For Dead '' in 1989. To date, it is the band's last album of new material.

The split was short-lived, as Young and Crazy Horse reunited in 1990 for the acclaimed album '' Ragged Glory '' and its subsequent tour and live album '' Arc-Weld '' in 1991 . They continue to be Young's "on call" band, backing the singer on his albums '' Sleeps With Angels '', '' Broken Arrow '', '' Year Of The Horse '' and ''Greendale''. Sampredo did not appear on the ''Greendale'' CD, but he did rejoin the band on the subsequent tour, playing keyboards for the ''Greendale'' material and guitar for the encores.

In the Neil Young biography '' Shakey '', it was mentioned that Crazy Horse was working on a new album in 1995 and 1996, interrupted by Young's recall of the band for '' Broken Arrow ''. The album remains unfinished and unreleased.

In 2005, '', omitting any tracks from '' Loose ''.


LINE-UP


Current



Past Members



DISCOGRAPHY


The Rockets



Crazy Horse



Neil Young and Crazy Horse



Other collaborations



Billy Talbot solo



FOOTNOTES


  • McDonough, Jimmy. ''Shakey, Neil Young's Biography'' (First Edition), 2002. ISBN 0-679-42772-4






REFERENCES