On the Beach (Neil Young album) explained

On the Beach
Type:studio
Artist:Neil Young
Cover:Neil Young - On the Beach.png
Released:[1]
Recorded:November 30, 1973 – April 7, 1974
Genre:Country rock, Blues rock
Length:39:40
Label:Reprise
Producer:
Prev Title:Time Fades Away
Prev Year:1973
Next Title:Tonight's the Night
Next Year:1975

On the Beach is the fifth studio album by Canadian-American musician Neil Young, released by Reprise Records in July 1974. The album is the second of the so-called "Ditch Trilogy" of albums that Young recorded following the major success of 1972's Harvest, whereupon the scope of his success and acclaim became apparent; On the Beach was inspired by his feelings of retreat, alienation, and melancholy in response to this success.

Background

Looking back on the album for the liner notes to the Decade box set, Young wrote of the song Heart of Gold, "This song put me in the middle of the road. Traveling there soon became a bore, so I headed for the ditch. A rougher ride but I saw more interesting people there." Recorded after (but released before) Tonight's the Night, On the Beach shares some of that album's bleakness and crude production—which came as a shock to fans and critics alike, as this was the long-awaited studio follow-up to the commercially and critically successful Harvest—but also included hints pointing towards a more subtle outlook, particularly on the opening track, "Walk On".

While the original Rolling Stone review described it as "one of the most despairing albums of the decade", later critics such as Allmusic's William Ruhlmann used the benefit of hindsight to conclude that Young "[w]as saying goodbye to despair, not being overwhelmed by it". The despair of Tonight's the Night, communicated through intentional underproduction and lyrical pessimism, gives way to a more polished album that is still pessimistic but to a lesser degree.

Much like Tonight's the Night, On the Beach was not a commercial success at the time of its release, but over time has attained a high regard from fans and critics alike. The album was recorded in a haphazard manner, with Young utilizing a variety of session musicians, and often changing their instruments while offering only barebones arrangements for them to follow (in a similar style to Tonight's the Night). He also would opt for rough, monitor mixes of songs rather than a more polished sound, alienating his sound engineers in the process.

Throughout the recording of the album, Young and his colleagues consumed a homemade concoction dubbed "Honey Slides", a goop of sauteed marijuana and honey that "felt like heroin", at the behest of session musician and de facto producer Rusty Kershaw.[2] This may account for the mellow mood of the album, particularly the second half of the LP. Young has said of it "Good album. One side of it particularly—the side with 'Ambulance Blues', 'Motion Pictures' and 'On the Beach'—it's out there. It's a great take."

Writing

On the Beach is a folk rock[3] album exploring themes of anger, alienation, and cautious optimism.

"Walk On", the album's opener, has Young combining his melancholy outlook with a wish to move on and keep living. In the liner notes to Decade, Young describes the song as "My over defensive reaction to criticisms of Tonight's The Night and the seemingly endless flow of money coming from you people out there."

The social commentary "See the Sky About to Rain" dates from Harvest. It had been covered by The Byrds a year earlier on their eponymous reunion album.

"Revolution Blues" was inspired by Charles Manson, whom Young had met in his Topanga Canyon days about six months before the Tate–LaBianca murders.[4] [5] David Crosby and Young's other bandmates objected to playing the song live. "Man, they didn't know if they wanted to stand on the same stage as me when I was doin' it. I was goin', 'It's just a fuckin' song. What's the big deal? It's about culture. It's about what's really happening.[6] In a 1985 interview, Young remembers meeting Manson and being spooked by him:

"For the Turnstiles" is a country-folk hybrid featuring Young's banjo guitar and a harmony vocal from Ben Keith, who also plays dobro on the track. Its lyrics are a critique of the music side of the entertainment industry. In the Decade liner notes, Young states "If statues could speak and Casey was still at bat, some promoter somewhere would be making deals with ticketron right now."

The side closes with "Vampire Blues", a cynical attack on the oil industry.[7]

Side two opens with "On the Beach", a slow, bluesy meditation on the downsides of fame.

"Motion Pictures" is an elegy for Young's relationship with actress Carrie Snodgress.[8] Young remembers in Waging Heavy Peace: The song was written in a Los Angeles hotel room while watching TV.[9] Kershaw remembers the atmosphere while writing the song in Shakey:

"Ambulance Blues" closes the album. In a 1992 interview for the French Guitare & Claviers magazine, Young discussed Bert Jansch's influence on the song: The song explores Young's feelings about his critics, Richard Nixon, and the state of CSNY. The line "You're all just pissing in the wind" was a direct quote from Young's manager Elliot Roberts regarding the inactivity of the quartet.[10] The song also references the Riverboat, a small coffeehouse in Toronto's Yorkville neighbourhood which was an early venue for folk-inspired artists like Gordon Lightfoot, Bruce Cockburn, Joni Mitchell, Simon & Garfunkel, and Arlo Guthrie.[11] [12] The line "Oh, Isabella, proud Isabella, they tore you down and plowed you under" references 88 Isabella Street, an old rooming house in Toronto where Neil and Rick James stayed for a period. It was demolished in the early 1970s and an apartment now stands on its location. Young confirms in a 2023 post to the "Letters to the Editor" section of his website that the verse about the man who tells so many lies was indeed written for Richard Nixon.

Recording

Most of the album was recorded at Sunset Sound in Hollywood in late March and early April 1974. Two tracks, "Walk On" and "For the Turnstiles" were recorded months prior at Young's ranch. David Briggs fell ill and missed most of the sessions. Sideman Ben Keith took the lead in recruiting Rusty Kershaw and members of The Band to play on the album. Members of both Crazy Horse and CSNY also contributed to the sessions.

Young recorded several new songs at his ranch in November and December 1973. These included "Winterlong" from Decade, "Borrowed Tune" from Tonight's the Night, demos of "Traces" and "Ambulance Blues" as well as new attempts at "Bad Fog of Loneliness", "Human Highway", and "Mellow My Mind". The sessions also produced the album tracks "Walk On" and "For the Turnstiles". Ben Keith humorously remembers recording the latter song on dobro and banjo with Young and pushing his vocal abilities to the limit: "I'd sing these off, weird harmonies, and Neil'd go, 'Oh, that's cool—do that.' I didn't know I could sing that high—I still can't. I must've been sittin' on a crack and got my balls in there."

The remaining sessions were held at Sunset Sound, where Young had previously recorded with Buffalo Springfield and Crazy Horse. The mood of the sessions was heavily influenced by the honey slides, creating a very melancholy, depressed atmosphere. Additionally, Young was at the time realizing that his relationship with Carrie Snodgress was disintegrating. Rusty Kershaw insisted on taking a relaxed approach to recording, rejecting the need to rehearse the material beforehand. He explains in Shakey:

Dissatisfied with their complacent performances, Kershaw managed to motivate the other musicians to inject extra energy and unease into the recording of "Revolution Blues" through wild behavior and crazy antics in the studio: "I said, 'Look, man, you don’t sound like you're tryin' to start a fuckin' revolution. Here's how you start that.' And I just started breakin' a bunch of shit and Ben jumped right in there. I said, 'That's a revolution, muth' fucker.' Goddamn, that sparked Neil right off. He got it on the next take."

Album cover

The album cover was designed by art director Gary Burden with photography by Bob Seidemann. It features Young facing the ocean at Santa Monica Beach with an umbrella and a 1959 Cadillac sticking up out of the sand. Young explains in his 2015 memoir, Waging Heavy Peace:

Release

In addition to its release on vinyl, On the Beach was also released on cassette and 8-track cartridge, though the track listing for the latter formats was the reverse of that on the vinyl album. It remained unavailable on CD until 2003, when a remastered version was finally released. It has since been re-released as Disc 2 of the 4-CD box set Neil Young Original Release Series Discs 5-8. The album is also available in high-resolution audio on the Neil Young Archives website,[13] where four additional album outtakes were added in February 2021.

Originally Young had intended for the A and B sides of the LP to be in reverse order but was convinced by David Briggs to swap them at the last moment. Young has said that he later came to regret caving in, although both the cassette and 8-track versions were released with the sides swapped.[14]

For about two decades, rarity made a cult out of On the Beach.[15] The title was deleted from vinyl in the early 1980s and was only briefly available on cassette and 8-track cartridge tape, or European imports or bootlegs. Along with three other mid-period Young albums, it was withheld from re-release until 2003. The reasons for this remain murky, but there is some evidence that Young himself did not want the album out on CD, variously citing "fidelity problems" and legal issues. Beginning in 2000, over 5,000 fans signed an online petition calling for the release of the album on CD.[16] It was finally released on CD on Reprise Records in August 2003.[17]

Promotion

Young did not tour behind the album, instead joining CSNY for their Summer 1974 large stadium tour, chronicled in the 2014 live album CSNY 1974, where the group played "Walk On", "Revolution Blues" and "On the Beach" and Young would perform "Ambulance Blues" solo acoustic. Prior to the tour, Young would also play a widely bootlegged solo acoustic set at The Bottom Line in New York, where he would debut the album's songs and famously share his recipe for honey slides.

Reception

Reviewing in (1981), Robert Christgau wrote: "Something in [Young's] obsessive self-examination is easy to dislike and something in his whiny thinness hard to enjoy. But even 'Ambulance Blues,' an eight-minute throwaway, is studded with great lines, one of which is 'It's hard to know the meaning of this song.' And I can hum it for you if you'd like."

Pitchfork listed it #65 on their list of the Top 100 Albums of the 1970s. On the Beach was certified gold in the United States, selling 500,000 copies. In 2007, On the Beach was placed at #40 in Bob Mersereau's book The Top 100 Canadian Albums. It was voted number 195 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums in 2000.[18] In 2020, Rolling Stone included the album at number 311 on their list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, writing: "Reeling from the losses that sparked Tonight's the Night the previous year, Neil Young shelved that album for a while and made this one instead: a wild fireball of anger (“Revolution Blues”), nihilism (“For the Turnstiles”), and tentative optimism (“Walk On”). The album peaks on Side Two, a stoned symphony of grieving whose three songs (“On the Beach,” “Motion Pictures,” “Ambulance Blues”) are among the most emotionally real in Young's catalogue."[19]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Neil Young. All track timings are from the original vinyl release, R 2180.[20]

Side one

  1. "Walk On" (2:40)
    • Neil Young – guitar, vocal; Ben Keith – slide guitar, vocal; Billy Talbot – bass; Ralph Molina – drums, vocal
    • Recorded at Studio, Broken Arrow Ranch, 11/30/1973. Produced by David Briggs & Neil Young.
  2. "See the Sky About to Rain" (5:03)
  3. "Revolution Blues" (4:02)
    • Neil Young – guitar, vocal; Ben Keith – Wurlitzer electric piano; David Crosby – guitar; Rick Danko – bass; Levon Helm – drums
    • Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, 4/6/1974. Produced by Neil Young & Mark Harman.
  4. "For the Turnstiles" (3:13)
    • Neil Young – banjo guitar, vocal; Ben Keith – dobro, vocal
    • Recorded at Studio, Broken Arrow Ranch, 12/14/1973. Produced by Neil Young.
  5. "Vampire Blues" (4:11)
    • Neil Young – guitar, vocal; Ben Keith – organ, vocal, hair drum; George Whitsell – guitar; Tim Drummond – bass, percussion; Ralph Molina – drums
    • Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, 4/7/1974. Produced by Neil Young & Mark Harman.

Side two

  1. "On the Beach" (7:04)
    • Neil Young – guitar, vocal; Ben Keith – hand drums; Graham Nash – Wurlitzer electric piano; Tim Drummond – bass; Ralph Molina – drums
    • Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA, 3/28/1974. Produced by Neil Young & Al Schmitt.
  2. "Motion Pictures" (4:20)
    • Neil Young – guitar, vocal, harmonica; Ben Keith – bass; Rusty Kershaw – slide guitar; Ralph Molina – hand drums
    • Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, 3/26/1974. Produced by Neil Young & Al Schmitt.
  3. "Ambulance Blues" (8:57)
    • Neil Young – guitar, vocal, harmonica, electric tambourine; Ben Keith – bass; Rusty Kershaw – fiddle; Ralph Molina – hand drums
    • Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, 3/25/1974. Produced by Neil Young & Al Schmitt.

Personnel

Technical

Note

Charts

Chart (1974)! scope="col"
Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[21] 34
US Billboard Top LPs & Tape[22] 16
UK Album Charts[23] 42
Canadian RPM 100 Albums[24] 13
French Album Charts[25] 3
Japanese Album Charts[26] 48
Norwegian VG-lista Albums[27] 10
Dutch MegaCharts Albums[28] 5
US Cash Box Top 100 Albums[29] 8
US Record World Album Chart[30] 16

Singles

YearSingleChartPosition
1974"Walk On"US Billboard Pop Singles[31] 69
US Cashbox Pop Singles54
US Record World Pop Singles66
Year End Album Charts

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Neil Young Archives. Neilyoungarchives.com. 8 August 2018.
  2. Shakey: Neil Young's Biography by Jimmy McDonough, p. 439
  3. CMJ New Music Monthly. March 2001. 61. Reviews.
  4. Greene, A. (3 June 2015) Web site: Readers' Poll: The 10 Best Neil Young Deep Cuts. 3 June 2015 . Rolling Stone. 17 May 2020.
  5. Williams, A. (21 November 2017) News: How Charles Manson Nearly Made It in Hollywood. The New York Times. 21 November 2017 . 17 May 2020 . Williams . Alex .
  6. Kent, Nick. 1995. The Dark Stuff : Selected Writings on Rock Music, 1972-1995. New York: Da Capo Press.
  7. Perpetua, M. (24 June 2011) Web site: The 15 Greatest Songs About Vampires. 24 June 2011 . Rolling Stone. 17 May 2020.
  8. Web site: Motion Pictures by Neil Young . Songfacts.com.
  9. Comments to the audience. May 16, 1974. The Bottom Line, New York.
  10. Doggett, Peter. 2019. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young : The Biography. New York: Touchstone.
  11. Encyclopedia: The Canadian Encyclopedia . Riverboat . 2011-02-13.
  12. Web site: Toronto's Historical Plaques – Riverboat Coffee House . 2011-02-13.
  13. Web site: Neil Young Archives. Neilyoungarchives.com.
  14. Web site: Neil Young : On the Beach. Discogs.com. 2024-07-16.
  15. https://www.cbc.ca/music/why-on-the-beach-is-one-of-neil-young-s-most-underrated-enduring-albums-1.5363478
  16. Web site: Guestbook. Thrasherswheat.org.
  17. Web site: Neil Young : On the Beach. Discogs.com. 2024-07-16.
  18. Book: All Time Top 1000 Albums. Colin Larkin. Colin Larkin (writer). Virgin Books. 2000. 3rd. 0-7535-0493-6. 99.
  19. 2020-09-22. The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. 2021-01-17. Rolling Stone. en-US.
  20. Web site: Neil Young : On the Beach. Discogs.com. 2024-07-16.
  21. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. Australian Chart Book. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. illustrated. St Ives, N.S.W.. 295. David Kent (historian).
  22. Stephen Stills. 2020-07-05. Billboard.
  23. Web site: STEPHEN STILLS full Official Chart History Official Charts Company. 2020-07-05. Officialcharts.com.
  24. Web site: Canada. Library and Archives. 2013-04-16. The RPM story. 2020-07-05. Bac-lac.gc.ca.
  25. Web site: InfoDisc : Les Albums (Interprètes, Classements, Ventes, Certifications, Les Tops, Les N° 1...). 2020-12-22. Infodisc.fr.
  26. Web site: クロスビー,スティルス,ナッシュ&ヤングの売上ランキング. 2020-10-11. Oricon.co.jp.
  27. Web site: Norwegian charts portal. 2020-06-21. Norwegiancharts.com.
  28. Web site: Hung. Steffen. The Stills-Young Band - Long May You Run. 2020-06-21. Hitparade.ch.
  29. Web site: CASH BOX MAGAZINE: Music and coin machine magazine 1942 to 1996. 2020-07-05. Worldradiohistory.com.
  30. Web site: RECORD WORLD MAGAZINE: 1942 to 1982. 2020-07-05. Worldradiohistory.com.
  31. Neil Young. 2021-04-03. Billboard.
  32. Web site: 2014-04-29. Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada. 2021-04-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20140429080444/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-119.01-e.php?&file_num=nlc008388.3891&type=1&interval=20&PHPSESSID=c6btf3r8hs459qqt5ln3o3dcv5. 2014-04-29.