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- <text id=94TT1426>
- <title>
- Oct. 17, 1994: Music:Not Dinosaurs--Giants
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 17, 1994 Sex in America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/MUSIC, Page 79
- Not Dinosaurs--Giants
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Superlative albums by Neil Young and Eric Clapton reveal two
- rock stalwarts who continue to renew and deepen their work
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Cocks
- </p>
- <p> This is sweet. It shouldn't be, probably wasn't meant to be,
- but still is. Sweet to see two rock-`n'-roll stalwarts, still
- formidable, bearing down hard, unmindful of age or fashion,
- getting back to basics with a worldly vengeance. For Neil Young
- that means the kind of raw, saber-toothed rock that has always
- lurked on the flip side of his folkie heart. For Eric Clapton
- it amounts to a return to the blues. But there are no elder
- statesmen to be heard on Young's new album, Sleeps with Angels,
- or on Clapton's From the Cradle. These are two paragons, playing
- and singing with sidelong majesty, determined not to let themselves
- get ossified into legend.
- </p>
- <p> After a deceptively gentle start with My Heart, Young steps
- forward with a few pertinent reflections on longevity in Prime
- of Life. The man who once announced so adamantly that "it's
- better to burn out than it is to rust" now summons up autumnal
- reveries of shadows climbing a garden wall and the first leaf
- that falls. The aging but still loving couple in the song inquire
- gently after each other's welfare, reassert their love and realize,
- "It's the prime of life, where the spirit grows/And the mirror
- shows both ways."
- </p>
- <p> That mirror is like the witching glass in Snow White. Elsewhere
- on the album, it can reflect dark corridors as Young free-associates,
- remembering on the title track, for example, a friend who died
- too soon. In the second verse of Western Hero, Young sounds
- as if he had been touched by the D-day memorials just past,
- but instead of summoning old shades once again, his lyric constructs
- a taut envoi to American idealism.
- </p>
- <p> Like a lot of Young's other recordings, Sleeps with Angels combines
- reverie and disillusion in equal measure. A feisty, scruffy
- throwaway like Piece of Crap, an assault on environmental hypocrisy,
- shows that Young passed along more than a taste for worn plaid
- shirts to those upstarts in Seattle. (The current generation
- of rock musicians considers Young something of a godfather.)
- The tune has a snarling, implacable drive and guitar work that
- can make your back fillings vibrate.
- </p>
- <p> The album's centerpiece is a 14 1/2-minute song called Change
- Your Mind that is equal parts rhapsody and guitar dementia and
- that describes the full course of a difficult love affair. It's
- a great Young song, clear of eye, bold of heart, with enough
- digressions to make it sound like something played live, for
- the first time, from some ghostly Fillmore stage. There is even
- a harmony in the chorus that is near Beatlesesque. On its own,
- this song is a demonstration that Young never has to worry about
- the depredations of rust. He has performed a classic Young leapboth
- backward and forward. Bymaking one of his periodic reunions
- with Crazy Horse, the stormy band that shakes him loose and
- with which he recorded his classic early albums, Young has given
- himself a permanent lease on renewal.
- </p>
- <p> Eric Clapton moves more gingerly. He first made his reputation
- as a blues player of high funk and preternatural fingering,
- but on From the Cradle things are clearly different. The playing
- doesn't blister, and the voice doesn't challenge. Something
- else is happening here, and it has been received with some reservation.
- It's a familiar argument: Clapton is too slick, too successful
- to have the blues, much less play them. It's as if he was being
- criticized for the undoubted elegance of his wardrobe rather
- than the unchallenged finesse of his picking.
- </p>
- <p> This sort of silly reflection often follows in the wake of great
- success, and so it has been with Clapton. The sales of his last
- album, Unplugged, with its heart-rending and (for a time) inescapable
- single Tears in Heaven, all seem to have counted against him
- this time in the eyes of critics. And it is true that on From
- the Cradle, which comprises 16 classic blues numbers ranging
- from the Willie Dixon war-horse Hoochie Coochie Man to Lowell
- Fulson's Sinner's Prayer, Claptons playing lacks fire. But in
- its place he brings a great worldliness, something that sounds
- like wisdom.
- </p>
- <p> Blues Before Sunrise begins the album and sets the tone. It's
- a wary, weary kind of blues, and Clapton puts it over like a
- man groggy from an overdose of bad luck. By the time he reaches
- the album's midpoint, James Lane's Blues Leave Me Alone, Clapton
- has navigated the shoals of despair and is heading for very
- deep waters. There was a time when he practically lived at those
- longitudes,but like some explorer using charts from his first
- voyage, Clapton now tacks with more assurance. He knows the
- winds, and he's been through the storms before. They pass.
- </p>
- <p> That feeling of a sure and steady hand is what some have mistaken
- for complacency. But Clapton takes nothing for granted. You
- can hear him bend the low-key bravura of It Hurts Me Too into
- a plea as strong but uninsistent as a prayer. There may be something
- cosmopolitan about the blues on From the Cradle, but that quality
- doesn't come from spurious sophistication. It originates, rather,
- from some wider experience of the world and a consequent deeper
- sadness. It does not snarl. It whispers, the sound of a hard
- traveler halfway along a dark road.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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