Imperial Valley Press

Pegi Young, musician and activist, dead at 66

-

NEW YORK (AP) — Pegi Young, who with fellow musician and then-husband Neil Young helped found the Bridge School for children with speech and physical impairment­s, has died.

Young died of cancer Tuesday in California, according to spokeswoma­n Michelle Gutenstein-Hinz. She was 66. Additional details about her death were not immediatel­y available.

Pegi Young first conceived of the California-based school in 1986 after she and her husband struggled to educate their son Ben, born with cerebral palsy. Over the next three decades, the Youngs helped stage all-star concert benefits, with guest performers including Bruce Springstee­n, David Bowie and Tom Petty.

“I look at it with a great deal of satisfacti­on,” Pegi Young told speakersin­code.com in 2016. “It’s kind of amazing that the school has not only sustained itself for all these years by way of the concert, of course, but how it’s grown and evolved.

“We started with the four parent-placed kids, very humbled beginnings, and it has just grown to have a global impact. Obviously, looking at the need for the endowment, to keep the school going, that’s been the big focus for us, and it has been for some time.”

The Youngs, who also had a daughter, Amber, had been one of rock’s most enduring couples. They met in 1974, when Pegi was living in a teepee, and married four years later. Neil Young’s 1992 country-rock ballad, “Harvest Moon,” is a tribute to Pegi.

“Because I’m still in love with you,” he sings. “I want to see you dance again. Because I’m still in love with you/On this harvest moon.”

 ?? PHOTO/TONY AVELAR ?? In this Oct. 24, 2010 file photo, Neil Young (left) and his wife Pegi Young perform during the Bridge School Benefit concert in Mountain View, Calif. AP
PHOTO/TONY AVELAR In this Oct. 24, 2010 file photo, Neil Young (left) and his wife Pegi Young perform during the Bridge School Benefit concert in Mountain View, Calif. AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States