Neil Young's latest album |
How ironic is this? Neil
Young announced in March of this year that Pono - the company he founded in
order to develop a dedicated music player and a music downloading service that
would provide "high-quality" recorded audio - was almost ready to begin
the release of "the finest quality, highest-resolution digital music from
both major labels and prominent independent labels" using the FLAC audio
file format. It has been a long-term ambition of his. But, then, about a month
later - on International Record Store Day (April 19th., 2014) - Young released A Letter Home, the most low-tech
recording imaginable. It is full of muffled audio, speed distortions, pops,
crackles, and constant hiss - probably the worst-sounding album you've ever
heard. What the heck was going on?
No, Neil was not being a
cynical hypocrite. The audio is dreadful, but that's the point. The sound of
the album is part of its essential concept. The choice of songs, the way they
are presented, and the degraded sound of the music itself - all of these elements
are enmeshed in an intriguing whole. It's more of a performance piece - a work
of art - than a typical commercial collection of pop songs.
Neil inside the Voice-o-Graph booth |
The reason for the inferior
sound? A Letter Home was recorded in
a Voice-o-Graph booth at Jack White's Third Man record store in Nashville,
Tennessee. These booths were once a staple of fairgrounds, arcades, and tourist
attractions - there used to be one, for example, on the 86th. floor of the
Empire State Building. The idea of these booths was to record your voice
direct-to-disc - a 65-second message, poem or song - which you could then mail
to relatives and friends. The Voice-o-Graph was manufactured by the
International Mutoscope Corporation. Between 1910 and 1960, it produced about
40 different models.
When Neil Young heard that
White had acquired - and refurbished - a 1947 Voice-o-Graph vinyl recording
booth, he decided to check it out. The Voice-o-Graph looks like a phone booth.
White obtained his in June, 2013 from a novelties collector based in
Washington, D.C. He then spent a few months having it fixed up: acoustic tiles and
carpet were added; a digital clock was installed, so that customers could keep
an eye on the recording time; and a small window was cut into one of the walls
of the booth, so that you could watch as the direct-to-disc cutting was taking
place. Some important technical refinements were also achieved: the head
cutters were modified in order to change the speed of the discs that were
produced from 78 r.p.m. to 45 r.p.m. (this extended the recording time from 65
seconds to about 140 seconds - depending on how thick the grooves were); the
motors were adjusted in order to allow a more consistent sound; and new discs
were found, in order to extend the longevity of the final product (the original
discs were made of a laminated cardboard - now they use clear, polyvinyl discs
that measure 6" in diameter). The updated version of this 1947 Voice-o-Graph
was inaugurated at White's Third Man Records on Record Store Day in 2013. Since
then, over 1,000 discs have been made - customers paying $15 a shot. The
original 65-second discs in 1947 cost 35 cents.
Once Neil had stepped inside
the booth and experimented with his own first recording on the device, he conceived
the idea of doing a whole album's worth. He cleverly combined two guiding
ideas: the original intent of the Voice-o-Graph - used to record a brief
message to loved-ones (A Letter Home);
and doing an album of cover-songs - pitched in a retro-fashion as songs that
inspired him in his younger days, before he became a songwriter in his own
right. The inferior sound quality would then no longer be seen as an obvious
detriment to the final product - it would actually enhance the presentation. As Neil Young puts it: the album is "a
collection of rediscovered songs from the past recorded on ancient
electro-mechanical technology that captures and unleashes the essence of
something that could have been gone forever."
A
Letter Home is Neil Young's 34th. studio album. It was
produced ("reproduced") by Neil Young and Jack White. It features
Neil on guitar, piano, harmonica and vocals; and Jack on piano and vocals on
two of the tracks. There are 11 songs on the album. The first four sit comfortably
with Young's folky-background: "Changes" by Phil Ochs, Dylan's "Girl
From the North Country", "Needle of Death" by Bert Jansch, and "Early
Morning Rain" by fellow-Canadian Gordon Lightfoot. From there, the styles
become more varied: some country - Willie Nelson's "Crazy" and "On
The Road Again"; a 12-bar blues by Ivory Joe Hunter - "Since I Met
You Baby"; some more folky stuff - "Reason to Believe" by Tim
Hardin, and another Lightfoot piece, "If You Could Read My Mind"; the
Springsteen piece "My Home Town"; and some late-fifties pop from the
Everly Brothers - "I Wonder if I Care as Much". It's primarily 50s
and 60s material - the Springsteen track is notably anachronistic.
Neil with his mother, Rassy Young |
There are two voice-only tracks -
one at the very beginning and the other in the middle - where Neil addresses
his mother "Rassy" (Edna Ragland Young, who died in 1990) in the
style of "a letter home". In
the middle vocal piece, Young sets the context for the musical choices on the
album: "Jack and I have discovered a lot of the old guitar songs; we've
rediscovered songs that I used to sing at Grosvenor [1123 Grosvenor Avenue -
Neil's and Rassy's home in Winnipeg in the early 60s], when we were together
there - you know - the records I used to play ... I'm gonna send some of these
to you."
Emerging from the booth |
The voice-only track that opens
the disc establishes the concept for the album: "Hi, Mom! It's great to be
able to talk to you ... My friend Jack has got this box [the Voice-o-Graph
booth] that I can talk to you from ... to tell you how much I love you and to also
tell you that I think you should start talking to Daddy again ..." [Rassy
and Scott, Neil's father, had separated in 1957, when Neil was 12, and divorced
in 1960.] And then Neil's comments get really quirky: "You know how we
used to watch the weatherman all the time on TV, and we used to know what was
happening, you know, up there in Winnipeg? Well, I met this guy named Al. He's
the weatherman for the whole planet, if you can imagine that. He's sometimes
not popular because - this is very strange - but people turn on the weatherman
... They say bad things about him and put him down. So things haven't been that
great lately ... Every once in a while all hell breaks loose, Mum, and the
whole thing is like nothing I've ever seen before. And it seems to be happening
everywhere, all the time." And then, appropriately, he goes directly into
a poignant rendition of Phil Ochs lovely song "Changes".
Sit by my side, come as close as the
air,
Share in a memory of gray;
Wander in my words, dream about the pictures
That I play of changes.
Green leaves of summer turn red in the fall
To brown and to yellow they fade.
And then they have to die, trapped within
the circle time parade of changes.
Share in a memory of gray;
Wander in my words, dream about the pictures
That I play of changes.
Green leaves of summer turn red in the fall
To brown and to yellow they fade.
And then they have to die, trapped within
the circle time parade of changes.
For most of A Letter Home, Neil is playing acoustic
guitar. On three tracks he uses piano (how did they fit the piano into the
Voice-o-Graph booth - maybe Jack White's 1947 Voice-o-Graph booth works like
the Tardis?). He adds harmonica on a few tracks. And the use of whistling on "Needle
of Death" is a simple, but effective mood-setting technique.
"A Letter Home" on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon (right) - Jack White to the right of Neil Young |
The low-tech, inferior audio
is surprisingly varied. Neil's high-pitched, tenor voice comes through clearly
most of the time, even though he often adopts a quiet, contemplative approach.
When the guitar playing is primarily in the Travis-picking style, it registers
well; but when the guitar accompaniment is mostly flat-pick strumming, it can
become undifferentiated and muddy. And if there is too much going on - "On
The Road Again", for example, has piano, harmonica and double vocals - the
sound becomes a murky wash.
For me, the standout tracks
on here are "Changes", "Needle of Death", "Crazy",
"If You Could Read My Mind", and "I Wonder if I Care as
Much". "Needle of Death", a Bert Jansch song, is particularly moving.
Young doesn't push the vocal - he does it in an understated style. As he
comments right after the performance: "That's a heavy song". It
reminded me of Danny Whitten, a former member of Crazy Horse, who had been a
heroin addict. Neil wrote "The Needle and the Damage Done" about his
friend.
Much of Neil Young's output in
the last decade has been meditative. He has been doing a lot of self-assessment
- looking back at his life and his experiences. The near-death shock he had in
2005, when he suffered a brain aneurysm, probably prompted much of this contemplation;
but it didn't slow him down. In the last ten years, he has averaged about one
album of new material each year - solo and in tandem with Crazy Horse. He has
also published a memoir - Waging Heavy Peace (2012). And he's been
working diligently at organizing and releasing his Neil Young Archives series -
remastered CDs of live shows.
A Voice-o-Graph disc: it cost 35c in 1947; $15 now at Jack White's store |
A
Letter Home - in addition to its status as a unique
audio experiment - is another Neil Young exercise in nostalgia. As you listen
to the performances on this disc, you can't help but feel the aura of poignant reminiscence.
Neil Young singing Dylan? Neil Young singing Lightfoot? All three of these
master songwriters have had their brush with death. All three are in the
twilight of their careers.
Neil Young performing Bert Jansch's "Needle of Death" in the booth. |
A
Letter Home is a clever work of 'meta-music' (similar to
the notion of meta-fiction in literature). What I mean is that its unique
status as a combination of covers album and audio experiment pushes you to
respond to it in a different way. And this is precisely how Young conceived the
project. It's typical of this rock artist who has always defiantly done his own
thing. He has been fearless throughout his career - willing to take risks, in
order to follow his own artistic vision.
Granted, A Letter Home may not be one of those
Neil Young albums that you come back to on a regular basis. But it's a
strangely atmospheric and listenable work - as long as you divine its intent,
accept the audio limitations of its recording technique, and listen with an
open mind and an open heart.
Resources: details about the
technical improvements to Jack White's 1947 Voice-o-Graph come from an article
on the Wondering Sound website by John Morthland.
damn - i was waiting for the pono version! thx for the insight clive - i actually had recorded my first (and last) LP in that booth you mention at the top of the Empire State building in the early 60's - Puff the Magic Dragon!
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