The Needle and the Damage Done

The Needle and the Damage Done

Infobox Song
Name = The Needle and the Damage Done


Type = Song
Artist = Neil Young
Album = Harvest
Released = February 1, 1972
track_no = 9
Recorded = January-September, 1971
Genre = Country rock, Folk rock
Length = 2:03
Writer = Neil Young
Label = Reprise
Producer = Neil Young Elliot Mazer Henry Lewy Jack Nitzsche
prev = "Alabama"
prev_no = 8
next = "Words (between the lines of age)"
next_no = 10

"The Needle and the Damage Done" is a song by Neil Young that chronicles the descent of musicians he knew into heroin addiction. It was written about the heroin use of his Crazy Horse guitarist Danny Whitten (before Whitten died of an overdose), and previews the theme of "Tonight's the Night", a song that addresses the heroin overdose and death of Bruce Berry, a roadie for Young and his band Crazy Horse.

"The Needle and the Damage Done" first appeared on the "Harvest" album in 1972. The song was recorded live rather than in the studio. It appears on the compilation albums "Decade" and "Greatest Hits". On the handwritten liner notes included in "Decade", Young had this to say about the song: "I am not a preacher, but drugs killed a lot of great men."

A recording of the song from 1971 was part of the 2007 album "Live at Massey Hall 1971". The album captured Young's introduction of his song thus:

Ever since I left Canada, about five years ago or so... and moved down south... found out a lot of things that I didn't know when I left. Some of 'em are good, and some of 'em are bad. Got to see a lot of great musicians before they happened... before they became famous... y'know, when they were just gigging. Five and six sets a night... things like that. And I got to see a lot of, um, great musicians who nobody ever got to see. For one reason or another. But... strangely enough, the real good ones... that you never got to see was... 'cause of, ahhm, heroin. An' that started happening over an' over. Then it happened to someone that everyone knew about. So I just wrote a little song.

Cover versions

Bands that covered this song on studio albums include Our Lady Peace, Green River, Duran Duran, Lior, Simple Minds, and The Pretenders; the Pretenders lost members to drug-related deaths. Punk rock band The Bronx recorded a cover which can be found as a b-side on the "False Alarm" single.

Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist John Frusciante has covered it while on tour in Japan. Alternative metal band Seether covered it during a performance on "Last Call with Carson Daly".
Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea has covered it while on tour in 1993 for the left of john frusciante from the band .
Cross Canadian Ragweed's Cody Canada performed the song acoustically on their 2006 release "Back to Tulsa - Live and Loud at Cain's Ballroom".

English folk singer Laura Marling covered it twice on her August 2008 tour of Australia.

References in popular culture

* The song was the inspiration for The Sisters of Mercy's first 7" single, "The Damage Done" (1980).
* The title was also used as the album title for the second installment of the "Nirvana: Outcesticide" bootleg series (1995).
* In the ninth episode of the second season of "News Radio" Jimmy remarks to Dave the he's "...seen the coffee and the damage done." A reference to Dave's coffee addiction.
* "Rolling Stone"'s cover story on Alice in Chains frontman Layne Staley, a known heroin addict, bears the title (Issue 727).
* A reference to its title can be found in the song "Understanding in a Car Crash" on the album "Full Collapse" (2001) by Thursday.
* A fourth season episode of concerning the fallout from a drug war was titled "The Damage Done".
* Episode seven of the fifth season of "Will & Grace" was titled "The Needle & Omelet's Done" (2002). In the episode, Will gets botox for the first time (hence the needle). Grace goes to brunch with her boyfriend, during which she unwittingly meets his parents (hence the omelet).
* "Song to Say Goodbye" from the Placebo album "Meds" (2006) includes the lyrical reference "your needle and your damage done".
* In 1994, several prison guards in Idaho were accused of playing this song to taunt death row inmates during a scheduled lethal injection. [ [http://www.newsoftheweird.com/cgi-bin/search/newsweird.cgi?query=Idaho&num=2 NEWS of the WEIRD - Your kind of Weird News ] ]

References


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