His Heart Of Gold Was Pretty Dark
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame once praised Neil Young for knowing that “self-renewal is the only way to avoid burning out”. Translation: For six decades, Young has burned everything to the ground just to see what the ashes look like.
Fans may see a gentle hippie, but his inner circle saw a relentless force who left a trail of broken hearts, scorched-earth feuds, lawsuits, and cult encounters in his wake.
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1. He Was Born In Chaos
It was the perfect way to kick off the life of a future Canadian legend: According to family lore, Neil Young was conceived in the middle of a Toronto snowstorm while his parents were trapped in a tiny apartment. Nine months later, he arrived at Toronto General Hospital on November 12, 1945. His parents—opposites in every way—were in love back then. It wouldn’t last.
Mark Estabrook, Wikimedia Commons
2. His Family Feuded
Young’s parents were a study in contrasts. His mother, Rassy, fearless, volatile, and raised in comfort, clashed with his father, Scott, handsome, charming, and from the wrong side of the tracks. They fought over everything, including how to raise Neil and his older brother, Bob. Early on, Neil learned that love was fragile, unstable, and painful.
June Callwood, author, activist, and family friend, would later describe the situation with shocking candor…
Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images
3. He Was Caught In The Crossfire
Callwood, who often visited the family, did not pull any punches. She said that Neil’s parents were too wrapped up in themselves—and their crumbling marriage—to notice their children at all. But she didn’t stop there. She called Neil a “sullen, fat, dark-eyed little baby. Not a happy baby…he didn’t get affection, hugs from either of his parents”.
Little did anyone know that Neil’s childhood troubles were only just beginning.
4. He Was Not Well
Five-year-old Neil’s living nightmare got worse in 1951, when he woke up feverish and groaning in pain. The next day, the doctor’s worst fears hung over the family like a shadow. As his parents raced the 145-km (90-mile) journey from Omemee to Toronto, Little Neil, wearing a surgical mask and clutching a toy train, rode silently in the back of the car.
They drove through the stormy night, petrified of the life-shattering diagnosis that was awaiting them…
5. His Life Was Rocked To The Core
Doctors confirmed it: Neil had polio. In the pre-vaccine era, this was devastating news. They rushed him into tests, spinal taps, and strict isolation. Six agonizing days passed while his family went home to quarantine and stew in their fears. When they could finally bring Neil home, it was a joyful moment, but the road ahead was uncertain and full of questions…
Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images
6. He Had A Tough Road Ahead
Neil’s journey to recovery was a long and frightening one. The only thing the doctors could promise his mother was that he wasn’t going to pass away. The left side of his body barely moved, and no one knew if he’d ever walk again, but Neil was no quitter. He would force himself with small, stumbling steps at first.
His mother said, “When Neil makes up his mind he’s gonna do somethin’, he does, y’know—and nothing could stop him”. Too bad his next challenge lurked just around the corner.
Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images
7. His Family Was Falling Apart
By 1954, while on assignment, Neil’s father Scott had fallen for another woman—and didn’t bother hiding it. Instead, he wrote his wife a long letter demanding a divorce. Then, in a bizarre twist, Neil’s brother Bob remembered being in the car with his mother Rassy as they drove to the airport and saw Scott with the other woman.
Rassy ended up giving the other woman a ride back to Toronto—but that’s where her civility ended.
8. His Parents Were Finished
The year that followed held a lot of big feelings, breakups, and make-ups that didn’t stick. After 19 tempestuous years together, Neil’s parents split. Rassy’s sense of humor vanished immediately, and she started to drink heavily. “Anybody that didn’t meet her until after her divorce never really met Rassy,” Neil’s brother Bob remembered. “She was never the same. It just broke her heart”.
As the family disintegrated, Neil’s obsession with music intensified.
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9. He Had To Start Somewhere
Music became a refuge for Neil Young. It helped him block out a home life that felt increasingly unsettled. At 13, his parents gave him a cheap plastic ukulele for Christmas. Neil “would close the door to his room at the top of the stairs,” his father recalled, “and we would hear plunk, pause while he moved his fingers to the next chord, plunk, pause while he moved again”.
It didn’t sound like a legend in the making, but that’s exactly what it was.
Warner/Reprise, Wikimedia Commons
10. He Was On A Mission
When Rassy and 14-year-old Neil moved to Winnipeg, music stopped being his pastime and became an obsession. While his mother earned $70 a week as a panelist on a local TV quiz show, Neil locked himself away, practicing for up to eight hours at a stretch. “Neil was so determined,” Rassy said, “you knew it was a matter of time and not long either”.
She was right—within a few years, his life would take a mind-bending turn.
11. He Had No Idea What Was Coming
If most people experienced the next chapter of his life, they would go to the grave satisfied. For Neil Young, though, it was barely a blip in a drama-packed trajectory. Just 20, he was already touring Canada’s coffeehouses as a solo act when fate stepped in. The year was 1966, and all he was doing was innocently walking down the street in Toronto…
12. He Took A Walk On The Wild Side
The 60s were loose enough that seeing a dude hauling an amp down the street could change your life. That’s exactly how Bruce Palmer invited Young to join a rock and roll band called the Mynah Birds. Young only played acoustic guitar? No problem. Even crazier? The band’s frontman was none other than Ricky James Matthews III, later known as Rick James.
It was the beginning of something electrifying—and completely unhinged.
Leach Entertainment Features, Wikimedia Commons
13. He Was Swept Up
The Mynah Birds’ crackled with chemistry—and Young fit right in. During the show, he would drop his guitar and start a raging harmonica solo. Halfway through, he’d toss it in the air, and Rick James would catch it and continue without missing a beat. Offstage, the two even shared a Toronto apartment, surviving as broke musicians while James kept them fed by swiping bakery deliveries before dawn.
Unfortunately, James also kept Young supplied with something far more dangerous…
14. He Entered The Fast Lane
It’s safe to say some of the band’s chemistry came from the amphetamines James introduced to Young. “We used to pop amyl nitrates,” Young later admitted. “Kept me up. I loved everybody”. And in a surreal twist of its own, the band found another kind of supplier: John Craig Eaton, of the Canadian department store dynasty, who bankrolled their gear.
With some pep in his step and a new electric guitar in hand, Neil Young and the Mynah Birds were suddenly on the brink of something much bigger.
15. He Hit A Roadblock
The Mynah Birds knew they were living the dream when they scored a record deal with Motown Records. But just as they started recording, disaster struck: authorities barged into the studio and busted Rick James for being AWOL from the US Navy. The band splintered, and Neil Young, with bassist Bruce Palmer, pawned their gear and bought a hearse.
As they barreled toward Los Angeles, the adventure was only beginning…
Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images
16. He Starts California Dreamin’
The hearse finally rolled into Los Angeles, carrying Young and Bruce Palmer into the dizzying promise of all the sunshine, music, and free love that California had to offer in 1966. Before long, another chance encounter—this time with Stephen Stills—led to the formation of folk-rock powerhouse Buffalo Springfield.
He’d bounced back from the Mynah Birds debacle with surprising ease. Too bad something else was about to knock him down—hard.
Atlantic Records, Wikimedia Commons
17. He’s Pushed To The Edge
Destiny seemed to toy with Neil Young like a cat. Just as Buffalo Springfield was gaining momentum, disaster struck—Young started collapsing without warning. At one Buffalo Springfield gig, he bolted offstage mid-song. Bandmate Stephen Stills chased him, and the crowd followed, swarming toward the exit doors.
When they got to the parking lot, what they saw was terrifying.
18. His Life Turns Upside Down
It wasn’t nerves—Young was gravely ill. Outside, he lay across the hood of a Corvette, thrashing uncontrollably. A nurse stepped out from the crowd and thrust her fingers into his mouth to stop him from swallowing his tongue. He was later diagnosed with epilepsy. It was a condition he kept private until a 1975 Rolling Stone interview.
Young’s brushes with danger weren’t over. A far darker force was about to pull him in.
19. He Meets A Monster In The Making
Not only were Neil Young and pre-slaying-spree Charles Manson birthday twins, but they were also pals. Introduced by Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson in 1968, Young found Manson’s raw, unpredictable creativity fascinating. At the time, Manson was just another musician, but within months, he would become the infamous Helter Skelter cult leader responsible for committing horrors that would shock the world.
State of California, San Quentin Prison, Wikimedia Commons
20. He Had A Mind-Boggling Bromance
It seems too crazy to be true—Neil Young and Charles Manson striking up a friendship in the heart of the dizzying late-60s LA scene. They hung out at Beach Boy Dennis Wilson’s Sunset Boulevard house, where Manson made up songs on the spot as Young played along. Young even gifted him a motorcycle and tried to get him a record deal, telling Warner Brothers, “This guy is unbelievable”.
Young was right about that, but not in the way he thought.
21. He Could Sense The Danger
Young noticed something deeply unsettling when Manson was around. His girls, including Squeaky Fromme and Linda Kasabian, ignored everyone except Manson—even though both Young and Wilson were actual music stars. “He seemed a little uptight, a little too intense,” Young later said. “Glad he didn’t get around to me when he was punishing people for the fact he didn’t make it in the music biz”.
Young had brushed shoulders with one of history’s most notorious figures—and walked away untouched.
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Wikimedia Commons
22. He Fell Hard
Never one to follow the crowd, Neil Young went and tied the knot in 1968, just as the free love era was burning hot. Friends described his first wife, Susan Acevedo, as tough, brilliant, strong-willed, and overpowering. She was also 12 years his senior. Young’s manager compared her to Young’s mother, Rassy, and mused about how “Neil was always dominated by women”.
Speaking of Rassy, Acevedo had some strong feelings in that department….
23. His Wife Took Charge
Young’s new bride, Acevedo, was a restaurant owner who also ran a tight ship at home. She made sure Young had nothing to worry about and even put him on a healthy diet to help manage his epilepsy. But her most controversial rule? She would not allow Young’s formidable mother, Rassy, to visit.
As Neil later put it, “Something about me caused my first wife to say that she hated my mother”. Things did not bode well.
Stoned59, Photographer: F. Antolín Hernandez, Wikimedia Commons
24. He Traded Buffalo For A Horse
After the legendary Buffalo Springfield split in 1968, Neil Young didn’t pause—he started Crazy Horse. In 1969, they recorded Everybody Knows This is Nowhere in just two weeks. Even more astounding, Young wrote “Cinnamon Girl,” “Cowgirl in the Sand,” and “Down by the River” while bedridden and burning up with a 39C (102F) fever.
The fever would pass, but something far more consuming was on the horizon.
25. His Success Came At A Cost
Young’s career took off with Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, Deja Vu (with Crosby, Stills, and Nash), and his solo After the Gold Rush, but it put a strain on his marriage to Acevedo. “Success was hard to handle,” Young later said. “Both of us had a hard time handling it…all these chicks around and everything”.
The marriage lasted just two years, but 24-year-old Young didn’t stay single for long.
Richard E. Aaron, Getty Images
26. He Was Not Afraid To Take A Stand
Neil Young was never a people pleaser, and he certainly didn’t shy away from hot takes. In 1970, after seeing shocking images from Kent State, where the National Guard opened fire on student protestors, Young retreated to the woods with his guitar. Just an hour later, he emerged with “Ohio,” one of music’s most enduring protest anthems.
It was the first sign that activism would become part of Young’s DNA. But even as his convictions were sharpening, his personal life was heating up.
Richard E. Aaron, Getty Images
27. He Was Smitten At First Sight
Most mere mortals don’t see a face on the big screen and think, “I’ve got to have them”—but Young did. After watching the 1970 flick Diary of a Mad Housewife, Young fell hard for Carrie Snodgress, the titular housewife. When he found out she was appearing in a play in LA, he got one of his roadies to drop off a note backstage that said “Call Neil Young”.
The funny part? Snodgress later said, “I didn’t know Neil Young from Neil Diamond”. Her roommate set her straight—and put her on the road to true love.
28. His Courtship Was Chaotic
Young and Snodgress’s first date was…unconventional. The Hollywood star likely felt at home arriving at the Chateau Marmont, but when she got to Young’s room, she found him stranded in bed with crippling back pain. Instead of dinner, he handed her some weed that was so strong she got lost on the way home.
She didn’t care about red flags…and there were plenty more to come.
Universal Pictures, Getty Images
29. He Was In Rough Shape
The very next day, Neil Young was in the hospital—but Snodgress didn’t run. She showed up to visit, and the two planned another date. It didn’t matter that Young was wearing an old-fashioned lace-up brace with metal bars digging into his hips, which looked “gruesome”. “My choice was being an actress or nurse, so Neil was right up my alley,” Snodgress said. “I fell in love with Neil’s pain”.
Luckily for her, there’d be no shortage of that.
30. He Was On The Brink
Remember Young’s “gruesome” back brace? It came from an accident he’d had while renovating his new ranch—and it left him barely able to move. Total bummer, right? Not exactly. Unable to stand up and shred his guitar, Young had no choice but to slow down. At first, what looked like a major setback soon became a creative pivot that would launch him into a whole new stratosphere.
Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images
31. He Was Caught Off Guard
The back injury had stripped 26-year-old Neil Young of all his strength and swagger. However, from that fragile state came Harvest in 1972. “There’s a reason Harvest is such a mellow album,” he later confessed. “I couldn’t physically play an electric guitar”. In an ironic twist, Harvest became a chart-topping smash and remains his best-selling album.
Too bad the success ended up deeply unsettling him. He wrote that Harvest “put me in the middle of the road. Traveling there soon became a bore, so I headed for the ditch”. It was a path he would choose over and over again.
Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images
32. He Learned The Price Of Fame
Neil Young had plenty to thank Carrie Snodgress for. Several songs on Harvest—including the iconic “Heart of Gold” and the puzzling “A Man Needs a Maid”—were inspired by their new love. That same year, the couple welcomed a son, Zeke, born with cerebral palsy.
Unfortunately, while Young stood at the peak of superstardom, much of the strain at home fell to Snodgress—and the cracks were already beginning to show.
33. His Hand Was Forced
Fresh off Harvest, Neil Young planned a massive tour with the Stray Gators, now joined by Crazy Horse guitarist Danny Whitten. But at rehearsals, Whitten’s addiction made one thing clear: he could barely function. Young sent him back to Los Angeles. “It’s not happening, man. You’re not together enough”.
Whitten’s final words hung in the air: “I’ve got nowhere else to go, man”.
34. He Answered A Call That Changed Everything
That same night, the coroner called Young from Los Angeles. Danny Whitten had overdosed, and Young was shattered by the news. “I loved Danny,” he said. “I felt responsible”. There was no time to grieve. Almost immediately, the newly crowned superstar was thrust onto a massive arena tour—still carrying the weight of what had just happened.
Young tried to outrun the guilt…the only way many rock stars knew how.
35. His Tour Was Chaotic
The arena tour was a blur of booze, substances, and bad decisions. Neil Young was feeling raw and restless—and he was far from faithful. The writing was on the wall in the form of “Motion Pictures,” a breakup song he had penned about ending it. The twist? He had written it before finding out about Snodgress’s affairs.
Life was about to imitate art. Unsurprisingly, this dark period spawned what fans would later call the “Ditch Trilogy”.
36. He Walked
The 70s were the era of stadium rock, and when Young reunited with Crosby, Stills, and Nash in 1974, their tour was a juggernaut. He followed that with an album alongside Stephen Stills, but during the supporting tour, Young was unraveling. Midway through, he quit, sending Stills a cryptic telegram: “Funny how some things that start spontaneously end that way. Eat a peach”.
Young was out of control, and soon one of the world’s greatest directors would capture it perfectly on the big screen.
37. He Was Reckless
Neil Young had come a long way from the small “town in north Ontario”. In 1976, he was sharing the stage with Van Morrison, Bob Dylan, and Joni Mitchell in the Martin Scorsese-directed concert film The Last Waltz, about the Band. And many suspect that, Young, as unpredictable as ever, may have snuck in a quick snort before hitting the stage to perform his song “Helpless”.
What Scorsese caught on film was nothing short of eye-popping.
San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers, Getty Images
38. His Nose Gave Him Away
There, right in the middle of Young’s face, captured on 35mm, dangled a massive chunk of white powder. Young’s manager freaked out and demanded Scorsese remove it in post-production. Scorsese, who later admitted to being on copious amounts of the same stuff at the time, refused, insisting it was pure rock and roll.
Eventually, he relented, and they created a special effect to hover over Young’s face. Best part of all? They called it the “traveling booger matte”.
San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers, Getty Images
39. He Settled Down (Kinda)
Now it was Young’s turn to ignore red flags. In 1974, he met Pegi, a waitress living in a tent with her dog. By 1978, they had two kids: Ben, with cerebral palsy, and Amber Jean, who has epilepsy, like her father. Rather than retreating, they founded the Bridge School for children with verbal and physical disabilities and funded it with yearly star-studded benefit concerts.
It was the beginning of a long union, but it wouldn’t last forever.
40. He Refused To Stay In One Lane
By the early 80s, Neil Young wasn’t just changing directions—he was flooring the gas and making U-turns all over the place. He blindsided fans with Trans, a synth-heavy album packed with robotic vocals and electronic beats. It was partly inspired by efforts to communicate with his nonverbal son, but anyone expecting folk-rock didn’t know what hit them.
Before fans could catch their breath, he veered again…
41. His Next Move Was Wild
Just a few months later, Young traded the electronics for a stripped-down 25-minute-long rockabilly album. Wait, what? Geffen Records was livid and actually sued Young for making music “unrepresentative” of himself. Most artists would have played it safe after that. Young doubled down.
Paul Bowman, Wikimedia Commons
42. He Pushed Some Big Buttons
Neil Young, clearly in his musical chameleon era, showed no signs of slowing down. Case in point? He followed the rockabilly phase with country music—and opinions to match. He shocked fans when he suddenly started criticizing the welfare system and making deeply controversial remarks about AIDS.
The statement that really lit the fuse? “Reagan, so what if he’s a trigger-happy cowboy? He hasn’t pulled the trigger”. For the man who once wrote “Ohio,” the shift was pretty darn jarring.
43. He Changed His Tune (Again)
The fans weren’t the only ones getting whiplash from Young’s ever-changing state of mind. After opening up to journalist Jimmy McDonough during an interview, Young agreed to an authorized biography. McDonough spent the next decade conducting hundreds of interviews. Then, out of nowhere, Young abruptly tried to block publication of the 900-page book, which prompted McDonough to sue him for $1.8 million.
Young eventually backed down, and Random House unleashed Shakey: Neil Young’s Biography on the world.
44. He Was The Godfather Of Grunge
Neil Young had been flooding speakers with distortion, feedback, and raw emotion long before Seattle made grunge famous. Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain admired Young so much that he quoted one of Young’s lyrics in his farewell note before ending his life: “It’s better to burn out than to fade away”. Tragically, Young had been trying to contact Cobain just a few days beforehand, and the loss hit him hard.
A haunted Young poured his grief into music, blissfully unaware that his own brush with fate lay on the horizon.
Screenshot from MTV Unplugged in New York, MTV Networks / DGC Records (1993)
45. He Had His Closest Call
Neil Young had already survived polio, epilepsy, and a wrecked spine, but this one nearly took him out for good. After feeling something like broken glass in his eye, doctors delivered the shocking news: he had a brain aneurysm that been sitting there quietly for years. They needed to operate immediately to remove the bulging vessel.
At 59, Young thought he’d got off easy…He hadn’t.
Andrea Barsanti, Wikimedia Commons
46. He Had A Wake-Up Call
Just two days after the procedure, doctors cleared Young for a walk. Half a block into the streets of New York, his body betrayed him. The artery that surgeons had used suddenly burst. Before collapsing, Young noticed one thing: his shoe was filling with blood. Things were dicey, but he survived—and the message landed.
He knew he had to slow down, but his heart clearly didn’t get the memo.
Per Ole Hagen, Wikimedia Commons
47. He Called It Quits
For decades, Neil and Pegi Young seemed unshakeable. They weathered fame, illness, activism, and parenthood together, all while helping others by creating the Bridge School for kids with special needs. So when Young filed for divorce in 2014, after 36 years of marriage, it sent shockwaves through the music world.
Few expected what came next.
48. He Found Love At 68
Almost immediately, Young turned heads when he started dating actress and activist Daryl Hannah, 53. Old friends weren’t impressed. David Crosby called her a “purely poisonous predator,” but the couple bonded over activism and the environment. They quietly married in 2018, with Hannah bravely trading Malibu for a rustic cottage near Young’s childhood home in Omemee. Then, in 2019, Pegi passed on after a battle with cancer.
Neil, as always, kept moving forward.
=Flick user RavenU, Wikimedia Commons
49. He Was David To Big Tech’s Goliath
It’s no surprise that the guy who wrote “Keep On Rockin’ in the Free World” was not afraid to take on Big Tech while in his 70s. Neil Young pulled his music from Spotify over pandemic misinformation, and then from Amazon Music because of Jeff Bezos’s ties to the US government. In the song “Let’s Roll Again,” Young slammed Tesla while praising Chinese EVs.
While others chased streams, Young stuck to his principles—even though it cost him millions.
Billyshiverstick, Wikimedia Commons
50. He Keeps On Rockin’
You have to admire someone who follows their gut no matter where it leads. Whether it’s protest songs that shook a generation, 35-minute feedback and noise odysseys, romantic yearnings that hit like a gut punch, or just nine minutes of Neil Young chanting “Got mashed potatoes / Ain’t got no T-bone”—he never plays it safe.
As one wise fan put it: “It’s Neil. It’s a groove. Don’t overthink it”.
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