While
Crazy Horse have often been praised as one of America's great rock & roll bands, that's usually when they've been working in collaboration with fan, friend, and frequent patron
Neil Young. On their own,
Crazy Horse have recorded a handful of worthwhile albums, but they've never connected with audiences the same way they have when working with
Young. Of course, it doesn't help that the band has never had a consistent frontman, guitarist, or songwriter of their own, with bassist
Billy Talbot and drummer
Ralph Molina the only musicians to play on every
Crazy Horse album. (Original guitarist
Danny Whitten died of a drug overdose in 1972, while
Frank "Poncho" Sampedro has often drifted out of the group, usually to work with
Young.)
Crazy Horse's career has followed a strange and crooked path, but they've also made some fine music along the way, and
Gone Dead Train is a compilation which attempts to make sense of the band's checkered recording history outside of their work with
Neil Young (though his unmistakable guitar tone is apparent on several tracks here).
Gone Dead Train features material from four of
Crazy Horse's five albums (the band's wildly disappointing second album,
Loose, has thankfully been ignored), and while each record has a distinct personality of its own, the sequence gives the material an admirable flow, from the gutbucket country-rock stomp of their self-titled 1971 debut to the "
Neil Young without
Neil Young" fury of 1989's
Left for Dead. The disc also includes two cuts from the first and only album (released in 1968) by
the Rockets, which featured
Talbot,
Molina, and
Whitten before they formed
Crazy Horse (and the woozy "Pills Blues" sounds like an uncomfortable foreshadowing of the drug problems that would take
Whitten's life four years later).
Gone Dead Train shows that
Crazy Horse don't have to have
Neil Young around to make great rock & roll records, and makes you wish they'd head into the studio on their own a bit more often.
–
Mark Deming, Rovi