Neil Young BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Neil Young has been making headlines again with a run of significant concerts and some new twists to his legendary career. Just days ago, he returned to the iconic site of the original Woodstock at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, a place steeped in both his own and rock history. At the August 25th show, Young and his new band The Chrome Hearts—featuring Spooner Oldham, Micah Nelson, Corey McCormick, and Anthony LoGerfo—delivered a memorable set, including a surprise revival of "Roll Another Number (For The Road)," a classic he hadn’t played since 2024. Fans at Bethel got a dose of electric nostalgia, with Young weaving together songs from as far back as his Buffalo Springfield days, up through his more recent material. The concert ended on a high with his anthem "Rockin’ in the Free World," always a crowd favorite, and according to Jambands.com, the show drew a direct line from his 1969 Woodstock performance to now.
Also in the news, Young’s shows this week have doubled as a space for political commentary and musical deep cuts. At Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater in New York this past Saturday, Young dusted off "Long Walk Home," a Reagan-era protest song, for the first time in 36 years. This time he updated its lyrics to reference the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, blending the personal, the political, and the historical with his usual conviction. The show also saw him revive "Singer Without a Song," absent from his sets since 2013, and close with an impassioned call to "Take America back" during "Rockin’ in the Free World," as reported by Live For Live Music.
Earlier in the week in Toronto, he performed "This Note’s For You," his famously anti-corporate anthem, for the first time in 28 years. The song, a sarcastic jab at commercial endorsements in music, came loaded with historical baggage—its video was once banned by MTV, then awarded Video of the Year in 1989. Rolling Stone noted the symbolism of bringing it back at the Budweiser Stage, continuing Young’s decades-long stance against the commercialization of rock.
On the business and activism front, Young is partnering with Farm Aid to bring sustainable, family-farm-sourced food—HOMEGROWN Concessions—to venues along his tour, a move spotlighted by local event outlets and reinforcing his steadfast environmental and social commitments. His Love Earth Tour continues to move across the country, and upcoming stops even include a set at Farm Aid’s 40th anniversary with Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews, and Billy Strings.
Social media buzz remains high, with fan-shot videos from each concert circulating widely on YouTube and platforms like X, especially since his return to major markets and festival stages like Glastonbury. No major personal controversies or unverified scandals have surfaced in recent days—coverage remains solidly focused on his performances, his evolving set lists, and the unmistakable stamp of his voice on topical issues through music. Nearly 80, Neil Young’s recent days have only reinforced his place as a living legend, never complacent, still surprising even the most devoted among his audience.
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