Discussion:Crazy Horse (album)

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merci pour l'ébauche et l'avancement faible. Pas trop fatiguante cette évaluation ?. Dingy (d) 17 juillet 2013 à 05:15 (CEST)[répondre]
toujours une ébauche ? Dingy (d) 17 juillet 2013 à 21:47 (CEST)[répondre]

Article Rolling Stone[modifier le code]

Un jour il faudra intégrer ce qui suit:

RollingStone.com review of Crazy Horse album by Parke Puterbaugh (RS 890 - February 28, 2002):
"Danny Whitten was a man out of time; his artful, uncluttered songs seem steeped more in the verities of early rock & roll than in the convolutions of the late Sixties. Listen to the unabashed balladic sentimentality of 'I Don't Want to Talk About It' and the grinding R&R basics of 'Dirty, Dirty' and 'Downtown.' The last of these, if you pay close attention, is a shocker -- an upbeat ode to cruising for drugs that sounds like a West Coast complement to the Velvet Underground's 'I'm Waiting for the Man.'
The Eagles get all the credit for exposing the dark side of the California dream, but you can peek at the lobby of the Hotel California on Crazy Horse, too. The opening track, Nitzsche's chugging, bluesy 'Gone Dead Train,' reveals itself as an elaborate metaphor for impotence; the troubled Whitten lays his cards on the tempestuous, self-revelatory 'Look at All the Things'; and Lofgren's stormy 'Beggars Day' can been interpreted as his fatalistic view of Whitten's drug problems ('All your mercy can't save me'). Danny Whitten died at twenty-nine of a heroin overdose on November 18th, 1972. It's all documented on "Tonight's the Night", Neil Young's elegy for Whitten and fellow drug casualty, roadie Bruce Berry, but it was foreshadowed on Crazy Horse (album)."
Dingy (d) 17 juillet 2013 à 20:32 (CEST)[répondre]