Pegi Young, musician and co-founder of Bridge School with ex-husband Neil Young, dies at 66
Singer, songwriter and activist Pegi Young, who co-founded the Bridge School in Northern California for severely disabled students and their families with her ex-husband, rock musician Neil Young, and went on to help create the annual fundraising concerts that became one of pop musicâs most respected benefit shows, died Tuesday after a year-long fight with cancer. She was 66.
Her death was announced Wednesday on her official Facebook page.
For most of their 36-year marriage, Young devoted much of her time and energy to raising their two children, Ben and Amber Jean. After Ben was diagnosed with severe cerebral palsy, she could not find a school that could provide the kind of services they wanted for their son, which led her to co-found the Bridge School.
To help fund and sustain it, Neil Young headlined annual Bridge School benefit shows that attracted a whoâs who of rock, pop, country, folk, R&B and hip-hop artists year in and year out.
In recent years, however, Young, who had sometimes sung backup for her husband, began devoting more attention to her own musical endeavors. In 2007, at age 55, she released her debut album, âPegi Young.â
Her fifth album, âRaw,â was issued in 2017, and it largely tracked the brutal emotions she experienced with the breakup of her marriage after Neil Young filed for divorce in 2014. He had telegraphed their troubled relationship on his 2010 album, âLe Noise,â in the song âLove and Warâ: âThe saddest thing in the whole wide world is to break the heart of your lover/I made a mistake and I did it again and we struggle to recover.â
He started a new relationship with actress and activist Daryl Hannah, whom he married last year. Pegi Young kept the Northern California ranch theyâd shared since the late 1970s, and Neil Young moved back to Southern California. In the wake of their split, the Bridge School benefit concerts went on hiatus.
âAt the time I wrote [âRawâ], my life had been turned upside down,â she told The Times when the album was released. âI didn't want to mince wordsâŚ. âRollercoasterâ would be the operative word.
âIn the immediate aftermath of the separation I just wrote and wrote and wrote,â Young said. âAnd wrote and wrote and wrote. Thank God I had that as an outlet."
Other song titles carried the theme through: âA Thousand Tears,â âTrying to Live My Life Without Youâ and âToo Little, Too Late.â
She teamed with some of Neil Youngâs longtime collaborators, including steel guitarist Ben Keith, who died in 2010, and bassist Rick Rosas, who died in 2014.
During a show she played in Los Angeles a few months after the divorce filing, Young told an audience at the Mint, âWhat do you do when you get dumped after 36 years? You just start over.â
In fact, with other players including esteemed Muscle Shoals, Ala., keyboardist Spooner Oldham, Young named her band the Survivors and continued recording and touring periodically.
Although she was not a formally schooled singer or instrumentalist, Young prized authentic emotion in her music.
âBe authentic, be true, sing whatâs in your heart,â she said after âRawâ was released. âItâs not about making it perfect, itâs about letting it be real, sometimes raw and flawed, as long as itâs true.â
The split was an unexpected turn of events for the California native, who met Neil Young in the mid 1970s and became his second wife in 1978. Heâd previously been married to restaurant owner Susan Acevedo from 1968 to 1970, and then had a longer relationship with actress Carrie Snodgress from 1970 to 1975, with whom he had a son, Zeke, who also has cerebral palsy.
âOne woman captivated Neil Young like no other,â biographer Jimmy McDonough wrote in his 2002 book âShakey.â
âPegi is the inspiration for some of Youngâs most intense ballads,â McDonough wrote, citing âSuch a Woman,â âOnce an Angelâ and âUnknown Legend,â âwhich is perhaps the most empathetic portrait of a woman heâs ever created.â
Neil Young lauded her to McDonough during their interviews for the book, saying âI got a great wife. Sheâs just a beautiful, beautiful woman.â
In a memoriam on its web page, the Bridge School praised Young for her vision and dedication.
âThe Bridge School family is saddened by the loss of our friend and co-founder, Pegi Young. Her vision has changed the lives of children worldwide and we will do our best to continue her mission. Please keep us and her family in your thoughts and prayers as we keep the dream alive.â
Young is survived by her two children and a grandson, Ronan. Her daughter, Amber Jean, periodically shared photos of her son with her mother and father on her Instagram page.
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