While he steadfastly refused to go into detail about exactly what's gone wrong between himself and former bandmate David Crosby, Neil Young made it very clear that the relationship is indeed fractured during an interview with Howard Stern this morning.
Following his recent official confirmation of a heavily rumored orchestral project, Neil Young has released details of the album, titled 'Storytone' and due Nov. 4.
On Oct. 14, Neil Young will follow up his 2012 autobiography, 'Waging Heavy Peace,' with a second volume that looks back on his life and career against the backdrop of his long obsession with cars.
The artistic reemergence hinted at on Neil Young's bluesy 1988 return to Reprise Records, 'This Note's for You,' was realized a year later with 'Freedom' -- his most varied, most topical, most complete work since the '70s.
Offering further proof that there's truth to those rumors about Neil Young working on a new album with an orchestra, rock's most prolific grizzled Canadian is now streaming a studio version of his new song 'Who's Gonna Stand Up?' that finds him backed by -- you guessed it -- an orchestra.
David Crosby knows a thing or two about making big mistakes in full view of the public, and he's learned to be perfectly blunt about blunders -- both his own and those committed by people close to him.