試す 金 - 無料
KEEPING IT NEIL
The Independent
|February 09, 2025
Glastonbury headliner and contrarian-in-chief Neil Young may have just given us the first Maga anthem. Stevie Chick explores the life of the godfather of grunge, his ominous rock augury and his new unreleased album from the Seventies
-
Days before Donald Trump began his second reign of error, a new track surfaced that captured the spirit of this ominous moment in history, its chorus warning: “Big change is coming/ Coming right home to you.” This urgent salvo isn’t the work of some young punk firebrand or righteous rap soothsayer, but instead a man with more than six decades in the game.
For that is Neil Young there, stomping with purpose through the snow in the music video, his bulky figure, wild eyes and icewhite lambchops making him resemble a haphazardly shaven bear. “Could be bad and it could be great,” he adds, of that titular “Big Change” – though given the song’s visions of “big drums drumming/ heading up the wrong parade”, the news doesn’t sound promising.
Cometh the hour, cometh the Crazy Horseman. Neil Young has traced his own wayward, ragged and glorious path for more than 60 years. Disdainful of fame and, sometimes, his dearest friends and bandmates, in blind allegiance to his beliefs in that moment (and that moment alone), he has split successful groups at their peak and jack-knifed in unexpected creative directions (and been sued for it). He withdrew his music from Spotify for two years to protest Joe Rogan “spreading fake information about vaccines” and – on his aptly named webpage The Times Contrarian briefly announced he was boycotting this year’s Glastonbury, which he is scheduled to headline, because the BBC’s involvement made the festival “a corporate turn-off”.
Somewhat baffling, that last one. But it confirms the mulish nature that has won him the admiration of generations of kindred iconoclasts, from Devo to Nirvana and Pearl Jam, for whom his integrity and relevance are inextinguishable.
このストーリーは、The Independent の February 09, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Independent からのその他のストーリー
The Independent
Turning cataclysmic hurt into something dazzling
Lily Allen's superb storytelling in her album West End Girl makes for a captivating listen, and watch, says Blue Kirkhope
2 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
Usyk's pyramid scheme is nothing new in fight game
In a recent boxing world where one man promised a crowd of 150,000 outdoors in San Francisco and Floyd Mayweather will return in Las Vegas in September, a heavyweight world title fight in front of the pyramids at Giza fits right in.
2 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
What can we learn from the Gulf airspace shutdown?
Ask Simon Calder
1 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
'I stand by my decision' not to join attacks, says Starmer
Sir Keir Starmer has defiantly hit back at Donald Trump and defended his decision not to allow British military bases to be used by the US for the first wave of strikes against Iran, telling the Commons: “I stand by my decision.”
3 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
Junta frees 10,000 from jail but Suu Kyi's fate unknown
Family fear for welfare of Myanmar's former de facto leader
2 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
WARM AND FUZZY
Beavers fight a road project in Pixar's wonderfully animated 'Hoppers'. Clarisse Loughrey finds plenty to gnaw on
2 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
Ross hosts dismal exercise in culture-war needling
The joyless, empty 'Handcuffed: Last Pair Standing' chains together opposite types for kicks, writes Louis Chilton
2 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
Starmer was right to keep Britain out of this war
Sir Keir Starmer, as is often noted, is by profession a lawyer. It is only to be expected that he respects international law and upholds it where he can.
3 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
Middle East chaos spreads as Iran continues retaliation
Donald Trump claims he took ‘last, best chance to strike’
4 mins
March 03, 2026
The Independent
Security chief could press for a more militarised Iran
Ali Larijani, the leader of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, is the man regarded by experts as the most likely to step into the power vacuum left by the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei after joint US-Israel strikes.
2 mins
March 03, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
