Long before Bruce Springsteen came a-calling, Nils Lofgren was hoping to
break out from the shadow of Neil Young and do his own thing. Evidently Springsteen
made him change his mind.
I have a ‘Best Of’ Nils Lofgren CD, now
downloaded on to the iPod, which seems to have fallen out of print nowadays
though similar collections are available. This one, however, seems to be the
only one that contains his live version of ‘Any Time At All’, the sturdy Lennon-led
Beatles’ song that opened the second side of their Hard Day’s Night
LP in 1964. Many of the other tracks are terrific too, evidence that The Boss
knew what he was doing when he recruited Nils, always a fine guitar player, to
replace Steve Van Zant in 1984. Check out ‘Back It Up’, ‘Goin’ Back’ (the 1966 Goffin-King
song, not quite up to Dusty’s version but still lovely), ‘Keith Don’t Go’ (urging
Keef R not to risk a trip to Toronto to face drugs charges in 1977), ‘I Came To
Dance’, ‘Shine Silently’ and ‘Baltimore’ (the Randy Newman song).
This
quite brief interview with Nils is from May 1975, when I was Melody Maker’s
US correspondent in the Big Apple, and in the light of what the future brought makes
strange reading.
“It’s not that I don’t like playing with Neil
Young,” said Nils Lofgren between shots on the pool table in A&M’s office
last week.
“It’s
just that the time is right now for me to be doing my own thing instead of
being a back-up man. I guess I could go on playing with Neil for as long as he
wanted, but that’s not what I want.”
What
Nils really wants is simple: a solo career as well as a chance to put his own
music across to fans in the kind of numbers that Young attracts.
“Actually,”
he said, leaning the pool cue up against the wall, and gazing over the New York
skyline from A&M’s 32nd floor habitat, “what I’d like is to play with Neil on
tour but for Neil to give me a chance to sing my songs during his set. I’d do
three or four songs in the middle.”
Would
Neil allow that? “I dunno. On the last tour I had the first half to myself and
I went back on to play with Neil for his half. It felt wrong. I mean... how
could I go out and play my balls off as a supporting act when I know I was also
the top act on the bill as well. A support act ought to give the headliner a
hard time, but I would have been giving myself a hard time. It was a weird situation.”
Nils
was making a quick trip to New York last week to help promote his first real
solo LP which was released last month by A&M with whom he signed well over
a year ago. His first album for the label was a Grin album, but the band
subsequently split up and Nils became a solo artist on the label.
Two
previous albums by Grin on Columbia had met with good critical response but
they failed to sell, despite Nils’ growing reputation as an integral part of
the Neil Young band. Nils played on the Crazy Horse album and
contributed an awful lot towards After The Goldrush, still regarded
as Neil Young’s definitive contribution to the vinyl library.
Nils,
who sings, plays intricate guitar and delicate piano, is a diminutive musician
who owes his breaks to Young and who seems hard pressed to sort out the
conflicting loyalties.
Grin
split last summer, a mutual decision within the group caused by their general
disappointment at not hitting the big time despite the critical praise heaped
upon them. It wasn’t, says Nils, a hard decision and it was something of a
relief for him to find himself on his own, especially when it came to writing.
For his solo work, Nils turned to drummer Aynsley
Dunbar (currently playing with a new band, Journey) and veteran R&B bass
player Wornell Jones for studio help.
“Now
I’d like to form a band with those two, but neither of them are available.
Aynsley has his new band and obviously he won’t give that up for me even though
we get on well together. I couldn’t afford to pay either of them permanently,”
said Nils.
“In
the next two months I’m going to go out to Los Angeles and look for musicians
to form another band, but this will be the Nils Lofgren band instead of Grin,
which was a proper group unit. I really can’t wait to get moving again.”
Right
now Nils tends to dismiss his past in a few quick sentences, preferring to talk
about his hopes for the future and his chances of putting together a band of
his own. “I want to get a show together as well as a band. I know the music
will be o.k., but people today seem to want to watch something as well as
listen.”
To
this end, Nils, a trained gymnast, is practising some leaps and jumps that will
put even Pete Townshend to shame. “I’m practising with a sort of small
trampoline so that I can do a flip-over whilst still playing my guitar. I’ve
tried it without the guitar and that’s easy, but playing as well... I dunno.”
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