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  1. Apr 22, 2022 · Jack Nitzsche is inextricably linked to Neil Young, and even though the pair didn’t speak for years, we’re glad that they made up, and that Young is able to carry on arguing for his old friend, even if the celebrated composer was highly problematic in his personal life. Listen to ‘A Man Needs a Maid’ below. Jack Nitzsche is an icon of ...

  2. Bernard Alfred " Jack " Nitzsche (/ ˈniːtʃi / NEECH-ee; [3] April 22, 1937 – August 25, 2000) was an American musician, arranger, songwriter, composer, and record producer. [4] He came to prominence in the early 1960s as the right-hand-man of producer Phil Spector, and went on to work with the Rolling Stones, Neil Young, and others.

    • It Was Based on A Screenplay For A Movie That Never Happened
    • It Was Young's Last Ride with The Original Crazy Horse
    • The Album Wasn't An Instant Classic
    • Young's Pianist Had Never Played Before
    • 'Southern Man' Kicked Off A Rock 'Feud' with Lynyrd Skynyrd

    The title of the album was a direct reference to a screenplay of the same name by Dean Stockwell (any Quantum Leap fans out there?) and Herb Bermann. It was an end-of-the-world film, with the final sceneapparently featuring a tidal wave crashing toward a popular hippy hangout in Topanga Canyon, whose regulars included Young and Joni Mitchell. Young...

    Young's intent was to combine band members from both CSNY, which had just released its second album, Déjà Vu, and Crazy Horse, which played on Young's 1969 album Everybody Knows This is Nowhere. You can hear it on songs like "Only Love Can Break Your Heart," which features members of Crazy Horse alongside CSNY bass player Greg Reeves and Stephen St...

    When After the Gold Rush was released, it was critically panned, particularly by Rolling Stone, which called it "half-baked." "Neil Young devotees," the critic wrote, "will probably spend the next few weeks trying desperately to convince themselves that After the Gold Rushis good music." It took Rolling Stone a little longer to convince themselves ...

    While most of the band was made up of seasoned musicians from CSNY and Crazy Horse, there was also newcomer Nils Lofgren, who was 19 at the time. Young met him at the Washington, D.C., club the Cellar Door and invited him to play piano for the After the Gold Rushsessions. There was only one problem — Lofgren had never played before. "I was back Eas...

    One of the most angry and pointed songs onAfter the Gold Rushwas "Southern Man," a vivid portrait of anti-Black racism in the U.S. South. "I saw cotton and I saw black, tall white mansions and little shacks," Young sings. "Southern Man, when will you pay them back?" The song is told from the point of view of a white man from the South, and many Sou...

  3. Another Jack Nitzsche interview form Spectro Pop: "Jack was pretty drunk when he gave this interview. He had hepatitis when he was young, and his body did not handle alcohol consumption real well. He was living on a property in Bear Gulch, which was owned by Neil Young. At this time there had been some talks that maybe Jack was going to have to ...

  4. Apr 17, 2005 · Because of licensing expenses and restrictions, some of Nitzsche’s most notable work is absent -- his landmark “Performance” film score, the Stones songs featuring his piano playing (“Have ...

  5. Mar 21, 2017 · Some of Nitzsche’s most enduring rock productions were conducted in collaboration with Neil Young, beginning with his production and arrangement of Buffalo Springfield’s “Expecting to Fly”, considered by many critics to be a touchstone of the psychedelic era. In 1968, he produced Young’s eponymously titled solo debut with David Briggs.

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  7. Sep 10, 2000 · Farewell, Jack Nitzsche. A thousand red roses sent by Neil Young were arranged beside the casket at the Jack Nitzsche memorial service two weeks ago in Hollywood. A note was attached: "For all the ...