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FREE WAGING HEAVY PEACE: A HIPPIE DREAM PDF

Neil Young | 512 pages | 06 Jun 2013 | Penguin Books Ltd | 9780241962169 | English | London, United Kingdom NPR Choice page

Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Other editions. Enlarge cover. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Details if other :. Thanks for telling us about the problem. Return to Book Page. For the first time, legendary Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream, songwriter, and guitarist offers a kaleidoscopic view of his personal life and musical creativity. He tells of his childhood in Ontario, where his father instilled in him a love for the written word; his first brush with mortality when he contracted polio at the age of five; struggling to pay rent during his early days with For the first time, legendary singer, songwriter, Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream guitarist Neil Young offers a kaleidoscopic view of his personal life and musical creativity. He tells of his childhood in Ontario, where his father instilled in him a love for the written word; his first brush with mortality when he contracted polio at the age of five; struggling to pay rent during his early days with ; traveling the Canadian prairies in Mort, his Buick hearse; performing in Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream remote town as a polar bear prowled beneath the floorboards; leaving Canada on a whim in to pursue his musical dreams in the pot-filled boulevards and communal canyons of Los Angeles; the brief but influential life of , which formed almost immediately after his arrival in California. Get A Copy. Hardcoverpages. More Details Original Title. Other Editions Friend Reviews. To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about Waging Heavy Peaceplease sign up. Did not Neil's subsequent actions turns a very large portion of Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream book into a series of lies? I found it shocking myself. And nobody's got a comment? Joanne Horowitz If you are talking about his relationship with and love for his wife, Pegi, then I agree with you. The way he expressed his feelings for her and then …more If you are talking about his relationship with and love for his wife, Pegi, then I agree with you. The way he expressed his feelings for her and then divorce her after 36 years for Daryl Hannah seems like a betrayal. Otherwise please clarify what you mean. See 1 question about Waging Heavy Peace…. Lists with This Book. Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 3. Rating details. More filters. Sort order. Dec 04, Joe rated it it was amazing. Neil and I are neighbors, sort of. For odd years. That is, we live on the same mountain and I pass by his gate all the time when I'm on the way to some job or other I'm in construction. We've been in the same places, sometimes, but we've never talked. I'm fine with that, and I'm sure he is, too. He's a public person but a private soul. People should be left alone when they want to be left alone. This book is all the conversations we never had. A lifetime of rambling chitchat, some of it sil Neil and I are neighbors, sort of. A lifetime of rambling chitchat, some of it silly, some of it boring, most of it straight from the heart. Neil is an amazing, funny, honest man. I already knew it from his music and his interviews, but this book fills in the blanks: his old cars, his Lionel trains, his family, his wonderful children. His son Ben sells eggs, and I've bought them - it's all part of the neighborhood. It's a mess of a book, and I love it. Don't go methodically from page one to the end. You'll go nuts. I read it pretty much the way I read an encyclopedia: here and there, skipping around, following what interests me at that particular time. Like conversing well, listening with an old friend. Which Neil and I are. Only he doesn't know it. View all 4 comments. Dec 23, Stuart rated it it was ok Shelves: . Not the best biography I have ever read. In fact, honestly, not really a biography at all. I found it incoherent, in the sense that it did not stick together. I am not sure if Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream was the effect the author wanted to create, a lot of random mini-stories thrown together. If so, he succeeded. If he was going for a biography, he failed. We get it, Neil, OK? Now can we get to the biography part? So in terms of actual biography, we get a fair amount about his roots in Ontario, which is interesting, though fragmented. We hear a lot about his hobbies; again very interesting, but can we hear about CSNY too? But again, I felt all these stories could have been organized and presented in a more coherent manner. Sorry, Neil. The music still great, though! View all 12 comments. Jan 20, Tim Hicks rated it really liked it Shelves: non-fiction. Three stars by any rational measure - but somehow I'm giving it four anyway. It rambles, repeats itself, bogs down in Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream or flies over important stuff. It's easy to say it needs an editor or a ghost writer - but it wouldn't Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream been the same and might not have been better. Near the end Young reflects that he might have been a better person. But throughout the book it's clear that for all his clashes and snap decisions, he has also spent time being a good person. We see who he worked with and Three stars by any rational measure - but somehow I'm giving it four anyway. We see who he worked with and who influenced him; we get a feel for the things he obsesses about. We see a lot of evidence that Young has had a lot of money for a long Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream. If he sees something he likes, he buys it or funds it. Near the end he has eight houses on two properties. But he never once seems like a guy who was ever motivated by money. His laser focus on music is very clear. It's lost him friends, and made him friends, and brought in that money that lets him have hobbies. And it's fascinating to see that the music focus perhaps spills over to his hobbies, in sort of a go-big-or-go-home way. And we see a bit about his relationship with his two Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream sons. It's clear that having money helped him deal with the challenges, but nevertheless it's quite remarkable that the boys appear as his friends who happen to need help doing things. A lot goes unsaid, but it's his choice. And we gradually come to understand, now that he's clean and dry, the amazing extent to which Young spent decades marinading in drugs and alcohol, and managed to steer through when some close friends didn't. Conclusion from book: he's really one of a kind, and interesting. View 1 comment. Oct 28, mark rated it it was amazing Recommends it for: Neil Young fans, memoirists, Creatives. Shelves: nonfictionmusic- biospersonalityfavoritesbiography-memoir. Neil Young is one of my best friends. I am starving for the stimulation of connection with like-minded souls. Waging Heavy Peace - Wikipedia There, he began playing music Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream started his musical career with The Squire in He eventually started a solo career, and reached worldwide fame with his Harvest album in He also toured extensively, either as a solo act or with his backing band, Crazy Horse. Neil Young will be touring Europe with his band throughout the summer. Moreover, he also does it in a way that may—at first—seem unconventional to the fans hoping to be transported back in time to the s and the s. For instance, Paul McCartney—with his friend and English author Barry Miles—decided to tackle only his youth and career with the Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream in Many Years From Nowwhile Pete Townshend wrote his autobiography himself, dealing with all aspects of Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream life and career, from his birth to his career with the Who, the films he was involved with, or his solo albums and touring. Both McCartney and Townshend narrate their story in chronological order. On the contrary, Waging Heavy Peace may sometimes be confusing to go through. While one chapter deals with his playing with Crosby, Stills and Nash, the following one may very well raise the issue of his relative estrangement from his father during his early teens. Nevertheless, once accepted by the reader, such format makes Waging Heavy Peace marvelously driving and pleasant to read. What this book lacks in continuity thus compensates in dynamism. Moreover, that impression is reinforced by the language Young uses throughout his autobiography. I know. It thus gives the impression that he is directly addressing the reader, without hiding himself behind posh vocabulary. One may even argue that such simplicity and honesty, whether in language or attitude, are the reasons why Young has been so popular for decades. Although such themes are not entirely absent from this autobiography, they are not as central as one might have expected. Nevertheless, more pages dedicated to such subjects Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream probably have been appreciated. Indeed, as much as he thought of himself as an anti-war hippie in the late s, Neil Young remains involved in various causes that matter to him today. These are the red threads at the core of his book, to such an extent that several Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream, the artist explains that he muses over writing other books completely about those particular subjects. The evolution of the making of this vehicle is an important part of this book. Neil Young is very convincing as an environmentally-responsible artist, which makes the subject of this car one of the most interesting ones in the entire book. Neil Young is very much concerned with the loss of quality of, and interest, in sound. However, one should not think of the Loner as someone living in the past, only wanting the return of vinyl for its own sake, even though he was one of the first artists to reissue many of his albums in high quality LPs with beautiful covers, inserts and inner posters. Rather, it seems that Young is obsessed with comfort and quality, even if he enjoys very much the freedom streaming music gives: listening to albums wherever and whenever one wishes to. Nevertheless, in that respect, Waging Heavy Peace can be considered as a journal about his struggle to create a high quality music format that would allow listeners to hear exactly what musicians produced in recording studios. This part of the book is truly fascinating, and it brings hope to all those who complain about the end of audio quality. Not unlike John Lennon, the Loner is someone who keeps everything, whether music, video, photos, Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream. This titanic—that some call self- centered or even vain—enterprise follows the same ideal as Waging Heavy Peacewhich is to offer high quality goods to the masses. And in that respect, this autobiography is a testimony to the intense work Young puts in everything he does. American Studies Journal. Comptes rendus. Haut de page. Suivez-nous Flux RSS. In All OpenEdition. On Transatlantica. Home Catalogue of journals OpenEdition Search. All OpenEdition. OpenEdition Freemium. OpenEdition Search Newsletter. Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream by Neil Young

Neil Young is the kind of cantankerous, multitasking rocker Preston Sturges would have dreamed up, if Sturges had lived to see hippies descend on the Sunset Strip. Then it was revealed: a locomotive switcher with handmade Lionel markings. Even die-hard Young-heads may be discouraged by Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream bottomless stream of minutiae, repetitious rants, airy-hairy musings and commercials for his Pono music program. If you want to retrace his childhood paper route, however, this is Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream place to go. And the rhapsodic, tenderly detailed way he speaks of the autos he owns or once owned tells you he would have been a great used-car salesman. As with his sometimes haphazard albums, the ratio of self-exposure to camouflage is always in flux, carefully calibrated even when its disclosures feel as nakedly warts- and-all as a well-fed body can get. The random gush of information and observation starts to coalesce into patterns; the leapfrogging backward and forward in time is gradually shaped into history, or at least becomes dried handprints in the warped concrete of memory. Many chapters are really extended thank-you notes, or heartbroken goodbyes to so many comrades in arms who have died. Mortality hangs over the happy wanderings and family gatherings, which is nothing new. Even when he was in his 20s, a refugee from both Canada and Buffalo Springfield, death loomed in his music like a silent partner. With Young, Crazy Horse amounts to an ancient-modern tradition unto themselves: death mettle. Looking to the future, newly blessed or cursed with sobriety, Young sees shadows from the past. He wonders how long he has before something like that overtakes him Young had a too-close call after brain surgery in The end of the road is lurching into view; a hearse or worse may already have his name on it. Writing the book was a kind of therapy for him, as well as a low-overhead way to Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream new material out there, test the waters. Book Review . Home Page World U.