Weld (2 disc set)
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)
- Crime in the City
- Blowin' in the Wind
- Welfare Mothers
- Love to Burn
- Cinnamon Girl
- Mansion on the Hill
- F*!#in' Up
Disc 2:
- Cortez the Killer
- Powderfinger
- Love and Only Love
- Rockin' in the Free World
- Like a Hurricane
- Farmer John
- Tonight's the Night
- Roll Another Number (For the Road)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #26065 in Music
- Released on: 1991-10-22
- Number of discs: 2
- Format: Live
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Live Rust gets the most props, but if you're looking for a live document of Neil Young and Crazy Horse at their speaker-shredding, stage-scorching best, Weld is an absolute must-own. Fired up by the success of 1990's Ragged Glory, and outraged by the eruption of the Gulf War, Young and his cohorts attacked their 1991 tour like men on a suicide mission. An angry, gunshot-laced version of Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" is the closest thing here to an acoustic reverie; the rest of the album offers up staggeringly intense electric versions of Neil songs both current ("Crime in the City," "Love to Burn," "Rockin' in the Free World") and classic ("Cortez the Killer," "Cinnamon Girl," "Powderfinger"). The back-cover photo of a disheveled Young cradling a broken-stringed guitar pretty much says it all--no one could have unleashed a sonic onslaught this brutal, and emerged unscathed from the experience. --Dan Epstein
Customer Reviews
So you thought might like to go to the show?
Well, obviously the tour resulting in this CD is long over, but this is your best shot at going to this particular Neil Young concert. He blows you away right from the start (as does the band) but by the time the Dylan classic 'Blowin' in the wind' is played inside out in a truly amazing rendering of this song, he grabs you by the throat and doesn't let go anymore. This is a CLASSIC rock album, although Live Rust is more famous. Trust me, this is Live Rust tenfold. Cortez the Killer, Crime in the City, Powderfinger... it's all here. But you will be coming back to Blowin' in the Wind, just like me. Recorded on the verge of the Gulfwar, Young gets angry and gets the song done in just the right way. Think about what could have happened in the Gulf War, close your eyes and set the volume to 12. This is not a song, this is a work of Art, deserving to belong in every self respecting rock collection. Impressive.
Young and Crazy Horse crank it up
After "Ragged Glory," one of the all time great rock guitar albums, Young and his sometime mates took to the road and pumped up the volume. New songs and old alike get a bludgeoning that is high energy if not always the best way to hear them. What gives the record its immediacy is that it was recorded during the Gulf War. The highlight comes when, over sounds of automatic gunfire and explosions, Neil shouts the lyrics to Dylan's anti-war classic "Blowin' in the Wind" while strumming a singular electric guitar note with fury. This is Neil at his angriest, and there are simply no quiet moments. A solid live album from a great artist.
Air Assault
On the one hand this is one of the finest live documents of a performer's work ever recorded. In fact, it may be the best live 2 disc set aside from Young's own 'Live Rust' and Eric Claptons 'Derek and the Dominos - Live At the Fillmore' release. Even without the visual imagery of the 'Weld' video, the nuances that made 'this' Neil Young the 'Godfather of Grunge' can be appreciated through the audible record alone. In particular are the extreme, even by Neil Young standards, use of distortion and feedback, especially in the extended endings of songs. Neil was even inspired by his opening act, Sonic Youth, to string together a number of these finale's into the curious, experimental 'Arc' disc. You may need to garner a taste for such voluminous summations since virtually all of the songs on 'Weld' are punctuated in this manner. On the upside, there is certainly nothing lackluster about the way Young and Crazy Horse are addressing their catalog here. It's pedal to the metal all the way.
The track selection is another story. The setlists detailed on the 'Sugar Mountain' website reveal that on their 1991 tour Young and Crazy Horse offered little variation from one performance to the next. One setlist appears to have been rigidly adhered to. What you're hearing on 'Weld' is pretty much what everyone who attended a concert from this tour heard. But one can certainly take exception with some of the songs Young chose for the shows. While most people who attend a Neil and the Horse concert probably expect to hear certain classics, such as 'Like a Hurricane' and 'Cinnamon Girl', alternate versions of these tracks are readily available on a number of releases. Had Young introduced some variation in the setlist, performances of tracks such as 'Drive Back', 'Southern Pacific', and 'Alabama', he could have filled in those relatively rare performances nicely on these discs in lieu of 'Cortez the Killer', 'Tonight's the Night', 'Welfare Mothers', and 'Hey Hey My My'. Young has such an extensive catalog that releases such as this, and even his 2000 'Live At Red Rocks' disc (both of which feature performances of 'Powderfinger' and 'Tonight's the Night'), render some tracks superfluous for Young's more dedicated fans.
What makes 'Weld' special, however, are the stunning performances of more recent Young compositions, in particular 'Crime In the City', 'Love and Only Love', 'Rockin' In the Free World', 'Mansion On the Hill', 'F*!#IN Up', 'Farmer John', and 'Love To Burn', all of which are better live (and in the case of 'Crime and the City', electrified) than their studio counterparts. It has always been the case with Young and Crazy Horse that taking off whatever polish a studio affords them, 'reducing' the band to their garage-rock sound, enhances their appeal. There is also an electrified, Jimi Hendrix styled version of Bob Dylan's 'Blowin' In the Wind', and the final encore, which Young refers to as "some more trash", 'Roll Another Number', perhaps designed to bring the crowd down from the high-decibel rush Young had rolled over them before sending them on their way.
The new numbers are nicely mixed with the older material across the two discs. It's a particularly nice compilation of Young's work for people who don't own many of his discs. It's also essential to the rabid collector, however, for the great versions of Young's late 1980's production. So while the discriminating collector may disagree with the track selections, perhaps Neil the DJ knows best. He created a 2-disc work that balances the appeal for his new and old fans alike, proving once again that his acumen on the stage extends into the marketplace.




