| "Sugar Mountain" | |
|---|---|
Side B of the "Cinnamon Girl" Canadian single | |
| Song byNeil Young | |
| from the albumDecade | |
| A-side | "The Loner" (1969) "Cinnamon Girl" (1970) "When You Dance I Can Really Love" (1971) "Heart of Gold" (1971) "Lookin' for a Love" (1975) |
| B-side | "The Needle and the Damage Done" (1977)[1] |
| Released | October 28, 1977 (1977-10-28) (Decade) |
| Recorded | November 10, 1968 |
| Venue | Canterbury House, Ann Arbor |
| Genre | Folk rock |
| Length | 5:45 |
| Label | Reprise |
| Songwriter | Neil Young |
| Producer | Neil Young |
| Audio | |
| "Sugar Mountain" (live, 1968) by Neil Young onYouTube | |
"Sugar Mountain" is a song byCanadianfolk rock singer and composerNeil Young. Young composed the song on November 12, 1964—his 19th birthday—at the Victoria Hotel inFort William, Ontario (nowThunder Bay), where he had been touring with hisWinnipeg bandthe Squires.[2] Its lyrics are reminiscences about his youth inWinnipeg, Manitoba.
The first known recording of the song was made on December 15, 1965, for a demo record at Elektra Records in New York City; this version appears on the "Early Years" disc onThe Archives Vol. 1 1963–1972. The first formal release was a recording of the song made on November 10, 1968, as part of a live performance at Canterbury House inAnn Arbor, Michigan. This recording was released as the B-side of Young's 1969 single "The Loner" (and again as the B-side of the "Cinnamon Girl" the following year), but was not collected on an album until the 3-LP compilationDecade was released in 1977. A CD/DVD release of recordings from the Canterbury House performance,Sugar Mountain - Live at Canterbury House 1968, was released November 25, 2008 as part of Young's ongoingArchives Performance Series; this release includes the first-everstereo mix of "Sugar Mountain" itself.
Young recorded the song again in February 1969, as part of a series of live shows at the Riverboat inToronto; this version is included in the 2009Archives Performance Series releaseLive at the Riverboat 1969. Still another live rendition is included as the first track of Young's 1979 albumLive Rust. The most recent live version is on the 2022 first release of his "Official Bootleg Series" Royce Hall recorded January 30, 1971.
In a concert at the Albert Hall in London on October 29, 1970,[3]Joni Mitchell, who was already friends with Young by the time he wrote this song, introduced her song "The Circle Game" with this speech:
In February 1971 at theDorothy Chandler Pavilion inLos Angeles, Young spoke at length about the lyrics. (The concert was released years later on archival album "1971 Journey Through the Past Solo Tour"[5].) He says that when he first wrote the song, he wrote 126 verses to it.
He then continues with the "worst verse", about being "underneath the stairs... And [...] giving' back some glares, To the people that you met, And it's your first cigarette".[5]