Here is classic Neil Young song named Like A Hurricane in the peak of the hurricane season.
I hope you enjoy this song which has motivated me in many storms in my own life.
"Like A Hurricane"
Lyrics
Once I thought I saw you
in a crowded hazy bar,
Dancing on the light
from star to star.
Far across the moonbeam
I know that's who you are,
I saw your brown eyes
turning once to fire.
You are like a hurricane
There's calm in your eye.
And I'm gettin' blown away
To somewhere safer
where the feeling stays.
I want to love you but
I'm getting blown away.
I am just a dreamer,
but you are just a dream,
You could have been
anyone to me.
Before that moment
you touched my lips
That perfect feeling
when time just slips
Away between us
on our foggy trip.
You are like a hurricane
There's calm in your eye.
And I'm gettin' blown away
To somewhere safer
where the feeling stays.
I want to love you but
I'm getting blown away.
You are just a dreamer,
and I am just a dream.
You could have been
anyone to me.
Before that moment
you touched my lips
That perfect feeling
when time just slips
Away between us
on our foggy trip.
You are like a hurricane
There's calm in your eye.
And I'm gettin' blown away
To somewhere safer
where the feeling stays.
I want to love you but
I'm getting blown away.
Background on the song from song facts.
"This song of intense desire has become one of Young's classics, and one he almost always plays at his shows. Rock critic Dave Marsh described the song as "an eight-minute tour de force of electric guitar feedback and extended metaphor (Smokey Robinson meets Jimi Hendrix on Bob Dylan's old block)." >>
Young did write this tale of longing about a specific girl, but it wasn't nearly as serious as it sounds - he had already broken up with actress Carrie Snodgress and had yet to meet his wife Pegi Morton. The woman in question was a girl he came across in a bar.
In Neil Young's biography Shakey by Jimmy McDonough, it's revealed that during the summer of 1975, Young was recovering from surgery on his vocal cords and couldn't talk. This didn't stop him from going out and having a good time with his friends, including his neighbor Taylor Phelps, who said: "Neil, Jim Russell, David Cline and I went to Venturi's in La Honda. We were really f--ked up. Neil had this amazing intense attraction to this particular woman named Gail - it didn't happen, he didn't go home with her. We go back to the ranch and Neil started playing. Young was completely possessed, pacing around the room, hunched over a Stringman keyboard pounding out the song."
Young took the song to his band Crazy Horse with just two lines written on an envelope: "You are like a hurricane, there's calm in yer eye." The band struggled with it for 10 days on Young's ranch before a breakthrough. Crazy Horse guitarist Poncho Sampedro said: "We kept playing it two guitars, bass, drums, but it wasn't in the pocket. Neil didn't have enough room to solo. He didn't like the rhythm I was playing on guitar. One day we were done recording and the Stringman was sitting there. I started diddling with it, just playing the chords simply, and Neil said, 'Y'know, maybe that's the way to do it - let's try it.' If you listen to the take on the record, there's no beginning, no count-off, it just goes woom! They just turned on the machines when they heard us playing again, 'cause we were done for the day. Neil goes, 'Yeah, I think that's how it goes. Just like that.' And that was the take. That's the only time we ever played it that way."
Referring to his vocal performance, Young explained: "It was a sketch. I went in and I sang both harmony parts, the low one and the high one - and that's the way the record is. It's all me singing."
According to Young, there are similarities between this song and Del Shannon's "Runaway." Young explained in Shakey: "When 'Runaway' goes to 'I'm a walkin' in the rain,' those are the same chords in the bridge of 'Hurricane' - 'You are...' It opens up. So it's a minor descending thing that opens up - that's what they have in common. It's like 'Runaway' with the organ solo going on for 10 minutes."
It took almost two years from Young coming up with the idea for this song to it appearing on an album. American Stars 'N Bars was released in June 1977; an edited version of this song was released as a single that September and failed to chart. Like "Layla," the edited version didn't get much traction but the album version became a classic - that's the version radio stations almost always play and is most widely available on compilation albums.
Young recorded a popular acoustic version for his 1993 MTV Unplugged appearance. His album from the show did very well, charting at #4 in the UK and #23 in the US, while helping introduce Young's classic songs to the MTV generation.
Since Young couldn't sing due to throat injuries at the time, he whistled his part in early takes. In an Uncut Magazine interview, he explained: "I wrote it when I couldn't sing. I was on voice rest. It was nuts - I was whistling it. I wrote a lot of songs when I couldn't talk."
Young recalled in his autobiography Waging Heavy Peace that he penned this song's lyrics "on a piece of newspaper in the back of (his friend) Taylor Phelps's 1950 DeSoto Suburban, a huge car that we all used to go to bars in."
He added: "As was our habit between bars, we had stopped at Skeggs Point Scenic lookout on Skyline Boulevard up on the mountain to do a few lines of coke; I wrote Hurricane right there in the back of that giant old car. Then when I got home, I played the chords on this old Univox Stringman mounted in an old ornate pump-organ body set up in the living room."
"I played that damn thing through the night," he concluded. "I finished the melody in five minutes, but I was so jacked I couldn't stop playing."
FYI
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