Steve Young - A Living
American Treasure
by Van Dyke Parks
It was "the American Century".
It's history was written by the winners.
Steve Young's music reflects an intimate singular view of that
perspective.
His compassion holds its DNA.
Part of that is innate. But much of it was tempered by Steve's
unique
experience on his own road----the road less traveled. There
Steve studies
include what life is being ground under in the name of
progress. He's bent
over cotton, taken a bullet. and survived the ravages of fame
& fortune,
maintaining a rare humility.
In the age of Corporate rock, Steve Young's palpable anti-hero
brings hope
to Southern California, the Home of the Homeless.
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In 1963--
Steve and I met. We were rich with optimism. Folk music was
just about to
plug in, to amplify its central concern for civil rights, our
generation's
cause celebre. Civil rights drove the coffee-house lyrics of
every
folk-singer. Music veterans of the McCarthy era (who'd seen
the witch hunt
of idea-suppression) mixed easily with the new radical-chic
that was to
shake the very foundations of American politics. It took
courage. Steve had
it.
"Going 'electric'" raised the hair of folk purists. But folk
music had a
bigger political role to play. It had to amplify to compete as
a
radio-reality. "He who hesitates is lost", as illustrated in
that famous
confrontation at Newport between Phil Ochs and Bob Dylan.
Dylan went
electric on-air while Phil stayed behind, in the small rooms
of discontent.Steve came to this coffee-house melange with two
other Favorite Sons of
Alabama, Richard and Jim. He was the heat behind their beat.
Audiences were
nailed to the floor with Steve's incredible voice, incendiary
guitar
virtuosity, birth-right to the blues, and vise-like grip of
Scotch/Irish
traditions.
He'd come to Los Angeles informed by a life rich in adversity,
balancing
conflicted faiths.
In him is the blood of The Cherokee and the Welsh, the triumph
a European
cconqueror, and the perspective of the vanquished Native.
Spiritual
discovery is written all over him. It's in his lyrics, and in
the epic
American poetry he's elevated with his music.
He still has more questions than answers. In that, he stands
apart from the
crowd (as he did in when we met). Back then, I took his sense
of
uncertainty then as a sign of sanity. It was not temporary.
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In 1963--
The Byroads fired the first salvo across the radio waves of
the Atlantic,
with the folk-rock classic "Mr. Tambourine Man". Most of the
regulars who'd
been single performers were courted by others who new it could
work for
them.Steve and I thought about it. We formed a group called
the Gas
Company. In one concert, we opened for the Lovin' Spoonful,
Steve playing
lead guitar, and an eager Steven Stills on rhythm guitar. It
was an
exciting scramble.
I identified with Steve Young. He lived on Mariposa, in
Hollywood, with a
several other exiles from Alabama. They called it "Tobacco
Road". There
was a picture of the infamous Governor George Wallace hanging
in the living
room. Somebody had penciled in a mustache, and he looked like
a
dead-wringer for Adolf Hitler.
These enlightened southerners were looking for new ways of
self-definition. I sought refuge with them. They made me feel
less ashamed
of my own southern birth.
We were approached repeatedly by record companies, (either
singly or as a
group), to sign on the dotted line. But in each case, there
was the specter
of "selling out", and Steve was wary.
For what profit it a man if he gain the whole world, but lose
his soul!
Steve is a "player" who's kept his soul.
When he's not in Nashville, (or touring), he lives on the
other side of the
clock in L.A., in the hills where the coyote survey the city
skyline beyond
the cactus. He's picked up a Spanish fluency in its immigrant
wash. His
home is an alter where Buddha meets Selena in a dream escape.
His is the
romantic's dream, with cautious optimism.
We meet as old friends. I recognize him for what he is: a
prophet in his
own land. He's concerned with sobriety. But he needn't be.
He's as sober a
man as I know, next to my own father. It's a solace in this
material age.
Some 30 years and 20 albums later, he still remains a powerful
force in
American songwriting, able to question the comfortable,
comfort the
questioning. Sometimes we're lucky enough to play the same
room. Catch us
if you can.
Recently he came back to L.A. from the road, and I got to play
on this
close-to-the-vest CD at the invitation of J.C.Crowley, (whose
work I've
long admired). It adds dimension to Steve's immense body of
work. It
celebrates Steve's acute vision.
Unique, with an uncompromising, unvarnished truth, here is
Steve Young---
"A Living American Treasure".
Van Dyke Parks
Los Angeles 1999 |