Sound+Image

PETER GABRIEL

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In June 1974, with ‘On The Beach’ safely in the bag, Neil Young reconvened with Elliot Mazer, co-producer of ‘Harvest’ and the live set ‘Time Fades Away’, to craft something with both the commercial appeal of ‘Harvest’ and the bleak intimacy of ‘On The Beach’. The backdrop was Young’s crumbling relationsh­ip with actress Carrie Snodgrass after he’d met waitress and future wife Pegi Morton. By January 1975 the album ‘Homegrown’ was complete. With the major-label machine cranked up and ready to go and the sleeve printed, Young, troubled by the record’s acutely personal nature, blocked its release, plumping instead for the previously shelved (to Young’s chagrin) ‘Tonight’s The Night’, itself hardly a barrel of laughs. Young now believes he should have known better.

Some songs were subsequent­ly recycled and re-recorded: Love Is A Rose was a hit for Linda Ronstadt before surfacing on ‘Decade’; White Line and Little Wing appeared on ‘Ragged Glory’ and ‘Hawks & Doves’ respective­ly; the title track and Star Of Bethlehem found their way on to ‘American Stars’N’Bars’.

Now comes the original ‘Homegrown’, although other unreleased tracks from the sessions may emerge as ‘Homefires’. The familiar material remains stark and beautiful. And while White Line’s “That old white line is a friend of mine” speaks for itself, Emmylou Harris is glowing on Star Of Bethlehem, and Love Is A Rose is jauntiness itself.

Of the more unfamiliar, Florida is atonal spoken-word indulgence and the interminab­le We Don’t Smoke It is wheeziness itself. But there is gold to be mined from this self-lacerating despair. Vacancy is as acerbic (“Can we pretend to live in harmony?”) as it is rocking; Separate Ways begins: “I won’t apologise”, and stays stubborn; the piano-led Mexico sees lost love lamented as lust is scheduled south of the border; Try offers Snodgrass fleeting hopes of reconcilia­tion; the gentle Kansas kicks like an adulterous mule: “It’s so good to have you sleeping by my side/Although I’m not so sure if I even know your name”.

‘Homegrown’ was strong enough to have been released in 1975 and Young is right to exhume it now. But that doesn’t mean he was necessaril­y wrong back then. He may have been baring his soul, but he was smart enough to know just how rotten that soul had fleetingly become.

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