Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 244
Length: 4:03
Plays (last 30 days): 0
I got lost on the human highway
Take my head refreshing fountain
Take my eyes from what they've seen.
Take my head and change my mind
How could people get so unkind.
I come down from the crooked mansion
I went lookin' for the D.J.'s daughter
Since that day I heard it mentioned
That my name is on the line.
Now, my name is on the line
How could people get so unkind.
Now, my name is on the line
How could people get so unkind.
I come down from the misty mountain
I got lost on the human highway
Take my head refreshing fountain
Take my eyes from what they've seen.
Take my head and change my mind
How could people get so unkind.
Actually Young is a Canuck.
Which makes him American. Right? Am I right?
Neil Young sideman Ben Keith dies
Thanks for posting this - sad news, to be sure, but something I was unaware of.
BRUTAL!
mmhmm...
Not sure if it's intentional, but I hear echoes of Ewan MacColl's classic here.
Neil Young sideman Ben Keith dies
Last Updated: Wednesday, July 28, 2010
CBC News
Ben Keith, a steel guitarist and multi-instrumentalist who played for 40 years with Neil Young, has died. He was 73.
Keith died of a heart attack at Young's California ranch, according to Jonathan Demme, who has directed Young's concert films.
Keith had recently been touring with Young's wife Pegi in support of her album Foul Deeds and working with Young on a new project.
He had worked with Young since 1971 and played on more than a dozen recordings, including Harvest, Comes a Time, Harvest Moon and Greendale.
Young dedicated the song Old Man to his long-time collaborator at a show in Winnipeg on Monday.
"This is for Ben Keith. His spirit will live on. The earth has taken him," he said.
Keith had played with Bob Dylan, Ringo Starr, Linda Ronstadt, Willie Nelson and dozens of other artists in a career dating back to the late 1950s.
A session musician in Nashville, Keith played steel guitar on Patsy Cline's 1961 hit I Fall to Pieces and worked with many other country artists including Johnny Cash.
He is credited with helping Young develop his signature sound on the album Harvest and especially on the song Old Man.
He'd come into the studio as a session musician and didn't know Young when they started playing together in 1971.
In a 2005 interview, Young remembered that session.
"Ben and I developed the style during those sessions. When we did Old Man and talked about what he could play, I said 'Try to play those single notes and make it sound doubled. Just ride those babies all the way through there, that's a great sound,'" Young said.
Keith went on to play with Crosby, Stills and Nash and secured a spot in Young's band when he went solo.
He played many other instruments, as well as steel guitar, and his versatility is seen in Neil Young Trunk Show, Demme's documentary about Young's 2007-08 concert tour.
He also had a small role in Young's stage production of concept album Greendale as Grandpa Green.
Keith made his solo debut in 1984, playing alongside J.J. Cale and Paul Butterfield on To a Wild Rose, and released Seven Gates: A Christmas Album in 1994.
He also produced Jewel's debut album, Pieces of You, which launched her career, according to allmusic.com.
Thank you for this very intersting informations!!
Who (or what) is Jimmy Fallon?
Actually Young is a Canuck.
This one I like.
Neil Young sideman Ben Keith dies
Last Updated: Wednesday, July 28, 2010
CBC News
Ben Keith, a steel guitarist and multi-instrumentalist who played for 40 years with Neil Young, has died. He was 73.
Keith died of a heart attack at Young's California ranch, according to Jonathan Demme, who has directed Young's concert films.
Keith had recently been touring with Young's wife Pegi in support of her album Foul Deeds and working with Young on a new project.
He had worked with Young since 1971 and played on more than a dozen recordings, including Harvest, Comes a Time, Harvest Moon and Greendale.
Young dedicated the song Old Man to his long-time collaborator at a show in Winnipeg on Monday.
"This is for Ben Keith. His spirit will live on. The earth has taken him," he said.
Keith had played with Bob Dylan, Ringo Starr, Linda Ronstadt, Willie Nelson and dozens of other artists in a career dating back to the late 1950s.
A session musician in Nashville, Keith played steel guitar on Patsy Cline's 1961 hit I Fall to Pieces and worked with many other country artists including Johnny Cash.
He is credited with helping Young develop his signature sound on the album Harvest and especially on the song Old Man.
He'd come into the studio as a session musician and didn't know Young when they started playing together in 1971.
In a 2005 interview, Young remembered that session.
"Ben and I developed the style during those sessions. When we did Old Man and talked about what he could play, I said 'Try to play those single notes and make it sound doubled. Just ride those babies all the way through there, that's a great sound,'" Young said.
Keith went on to play with Crosby, Stills and Nash and secured a spot in Young's band when he went solo.
He played many other instruments, as well as steel guitar, and his versatility is seen in Neil Young Trunk Show, Demme's documentary about Young's 2007-08 concert tour.
He also had a small role in Young's stage production of concept album Greendale as Grandpa Green.
Keith made his solo debut in 1984, playing alongside J.J. Cale and Paul Butterfield on To a Wild Rose, and released Seven Gates: A Christmas Album in 1994.
He also produced Jewel's debut album, Pieces of You, which launched her career, according to allmusic.com.
If I could strike one artist/band from the playlist, NY would top the list, on the grounds of how often I have to suffer them. Then, Coldplay, then Bowie.
Listen, if Bill won't kill Dengue Fever, there's no chance in hell he's going to remove Neil Young. Fugeddaboudit.
If I could strike one artist/band from the playlist, NY would top the list, on the grounds of how often I have to suffer them. Then, Coldplay, then Bowie.
Absolutely.
BRUTAL!
i agree, was the original on Zuma?
I Like this version. The original was on "Comes a Time", an album I have loved from the first time I heard it.
Thanks for the tip. Looking for it now.
/ sez me
i agree, was the original on Zuma?
I always thought it was the unbelievably cool songs that he consistently turned out
/ sez me
Yeah, innaresting, as Young would say...
8.