It marks just the third time Young has played the song with a band in over 50 years

Neil Young has performed a rare cut, ‘Ambulance Blues’ in the Netherlands – check it out below.

Just days after he headlined the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury 2025 on Saturday (June 28), Young and the Chrome Hearts performed at Summerstage in the Netherlands, where they performed ‘Ambulance Blues’.

The performance marked the first time that Young has played the song live with the Chrome Hearts, and his overall third time ever performing the song with a band in 51 years.

Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025, photo by Derek Bremner
Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

Though he has played the song a number of times as a solo act, he’s only played ‘Ambulance Blues’ with a band three times – the first was with R.E.M. at a benefit concert in 1998, the second was with Promise of the Real at a private gig in 2016.

Before launching into the song – which kicked off the Summerstage set – Young said to the audience: “I haven’t played this in like 100 years. We’ll see what happens.”

Watch fan-shot footage of the rare performance below.

The performance came just days after his Glastonbury 2025 performance – which in the lead-up to the gig saw the folk icon at loggerheads with the festival for a brief stint over its partnership with the BBC.

Around the end of last year, Young made headlines when he shared a statement with fans, confirming that he was set to perform at Glastonbury as a headliner (before the official line-up was announced) –  but had pulled out due to creative differences, calling it a “corporate turn-off”.

Just days later, he would go back on this decision and describe it as a misunderstanding. “Due to an error in the information received, I had decided to not play the Glastonbury festival, which I always have loved,” he said. “Happily, the festival is now back on our itinerary and we look forward to playing! Hope to see you there!”

Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025, photo by Derek Bremner
Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

When the BBC rolled out its coverage plans, Young’s headline set was excluding from livestreams on iPlayer, with Glasto boss Emily Eavis adding that she “didn’t believe” that his set would be shown. The BBC later said that Young’s absence from their coverage plan was a decision made “at the artist’s request”.

However, on the morning of June 28, the BBC shared that it was “delighted” to confirm Young’s set would be live-streamed after all.

His no-frills headline set scored him a four-star review, with Patrick Clarke writing for NME: “It is, in short, the definition of no frills. It’s testament to the power of Young’s songwriting, then, just how brilliantly it all works, how little the momentum drops… Here, then, is a headline set that proves that sometimes, there’s still power to be found in an old-school approach.”

Madonna revealed that she saw her late mother "on the other side" while she was in a medically induced coma in 2023.

In a conversation on the On Purpose with Jay Shetty podcast on Monday, the Queen of Pop explained that she was treated in intensive care and remained in a coma for two days after doctors discovered a "serious bacterial infection" that developed after a mild fever.

Thinking back to the health scare, Madonna shared that she experienced a vision of her mother, also named Madonna Ciccone, who lost her life to breast cancer in December 1963.

"I was almost there on the other side, and I had a conscious moment," she said. "My mother appeared to me, and she said, 'Do you want to come with me?' And I said, 'No.'"

She added that her assistant was present in the room and heard her say the word, "No."

"And then, when I did eventually wake up, I realised that the 'no' was about me needing to forgive and make good with people that I still held grudges against," the 67-year-old explained.

One of the long-standing conflicts she chose to release was her troubled relationship with her brother Christopher Ciccone.

The artist passed away from pancreatic cancer at 63 in October 2024.

"For my brother, I didn't speak to him for, you know, for years, years, and years. And it was him being ill (and) reaching out to me and saying, 'I need your help.' And me having that moment like, 'Am I going to help my enemy?' You know, that's how it felt. And I just did," the Ray of Light singer said. "And I ended up (helping) and I felt so relieved. And it was such a load off my back, such a weight that was removed, baggage that I could put down to finally be able to be in a room with him and holding his hand, even if he was dying and saying, 'I love you and I forgive you.' That was really important."

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