Steve Young
Steve Young has never fit comfortably into categories. He follows his own
musical and spiritual quest, weaving together Southern roots with a wide
experience of life, and creating new traditions in American music.
Young was born in Georgia and grew up in Alabama, Georgia and Texas in a family
which moved frequently in search of work. By the time he had completed high
school in Beaumont, Texas, he was playing guitar and writing songs which
incorporated influences of folk , country , gospel, and blues musicians and
people like Hank Williams , Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins and others. Once as a
teenager he was blown away by seeing Carlos Montoya , a Flamenco Guitarist. He
managed to use that too!
By his late teens, Young was back in Alabama, where he established some
reputation on the local music scene. However, the wandering spirit soon took
over again. He immersed himself briefly in the Greenwich Village folk scene, at
a time when Bob Dylan and others were just being noticed.
Returning to Alabama, Steve found that "my New York folk-protest songs didn't
fly in the South." Searching for more receptive audiences, he made short forays
to California and other locations before moving to the West Coast in 1964.
In California, he worked with musicians like Van Dyke Parks and Stephen Stills,
at one point holding a day job as a mailman. A major-label record deal led to a
short-lived stint with a psychedelic country-folk band, Stone Country.
Settling into a solo career, Steve Young became an integral part of the movement
which defined the California country-rock sound. Appearing on Steve's 1969
classic album, Rock, Salt & Nails were fellow pioneers like Gene Clark, Chris
Hillman, Bernie Leadon and Gram Parsons.
Through 12 albums and countless live performances, Steve Young's music has
remained fresh and aggressive, with a sense of deepening spirituality, and a
consistent intellectual and artistic challenge, to himself and to his audience.
Many of the stars of the music industry have recorded Steve Young songs, and in
some cases forged a career image around them. "Lonesome, Orn'ry & Mean," for
example, became the signature tune for 'Outlaw' Waylon Jennings. Hank Williams
Jr.'s cover of "Montgomery In The Rain" remains a classic.
Certainly the most-covered Steve Young song of all is "Seven Bridges Road,"
which has been recorded at various times by artists like Joan Baez, Rita
Coolidge, Iain Matthews, the Eagles, [Ricochet, and, most recently, Dolly Parton.
While Steve Young songs have brought commercial success to others, Young has
never been close enough to the mainstream to sustain his occasional brushes with
stardom . He has been unwilling to accept the loss of artistic control that the
industry expects of its stars.
And while Steve has lived in country music towns like Nashville and Austin, and
his songs have had a strong impact on the direction of country music, he rejects
the country label for himself. Young is in many ways a cultural dynamic in
himself.
[Part Cherokee (from his father) by birth,] steeped in Baptist fundamentalism as
a child, yet attracted to a Zen spirituality, the young man from the South with
a nomadic spirit went on to create a unique form of American roots music with a
truly global perspective.
Steve Young has literally toured the world. He has performed in many countries
of Europe, in Australia and New Zealand, in Micronesia, China and Mongolia, in
Egypt and East Africa and beyond. Wherever he has gone, he has filled the dual
role of ambassador for American music and student of the cultures of others.
Young's live performances express the depth and power of his vision. He draws on
his own songs, on Southern folk songs from varied traditions, on collaborations
and on the best of contemporary songwriters such as J.D. Loudermilk, David Olney
and others.
Steve continues to tour extensively in the U.S., Canada and Europe, as well as
more distant portions of the globe. As a writer, recording artist and a live
performer, he is an artist at the very peak of his powers -- quite simply , not
to be missed.
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