Sleeps With Angels stands apart from the majority of records Neil Young has made with Crazy Horse. As a rule, when the two parties get together, guitar pyrotechnics such as those unleashed on landmark albums including Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969) and Ragged Glory (1990) tend to ensue. However, Sleeps With Angels was a considerably darker, more downbeat and sombre beast: a record which Ultimate Classic Rock later observed “has more to do with the atmospheric After The Gold Rush than the distorted joys of Rust Never Sleeps”.
Listen to ‘Sleeps With Angels’ here.
At least some of the darkness cloaking the Sleeps With Angels songs was cast by the then recent death of Nirvana’s iconic frontman, Kurt Cobain. Like Pearl Jam (with whom Young would soon collaborate on the album Mirror Ball), Cobain was a long-term Young fan, but the fact that he quoted lyrics from the Rust Never Sleeps song Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black) in his suicide note shook Young to the core. Indeed, as he later relayed in his memoir Waging Heavy Peace, Young had felt especially concerned for Cobain’s well-being prior to his death, in April 1994.
“I, coincidentally, had been trying to reach him,” Young wrote. “I wanted to talk to him. Tell him only to play when he felt like it. When he died and left that note, it struck a deep chord inside of me. It fucked with me. I wrote some music for that feeling.”
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The music Young wrote fuelled Sleeps With Angels’ title track: an earnest requiem for a life prematurely ended which became the final song Young and Crazy Horse laid down for the album. Musically, its dense, rumbling backdrop broke new ground for the band, but then Young – who the music press had begun referring to as the “Godfather Of Grunge”, following his early 90s guitar fests Ragged Glory and spin-off live album Weld – had decided Sleeps With Angels would deviate from Crazy Horse’s norm even before Cobain’s tragic passing.