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Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Year of the Horse (2 CD) [HDCD]

Posted By: Toxxy
Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Year of the Horse (2 CD) [HDCD]

Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Year of the Horse (2 CD) [HDCD]
Year: 1997 Reprise Records | CD#: 9362-46652-2 | File-host: RS.com
FLAC-images + Mp3 @320 CBR | Complete Artwork (600dpi) | WinRAR Recovery 5%
Rock | Disc 1, 42:00 min. - Disc 2, 42:22 | 544 MB (FLAC) | 194 MB (Mp3)
***
EAC Secure-rip + LOG + CUE | Source: my CD-collection

Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Year of the Horse (2 CD) [HDCD]


Year of the Horse is also a live album by Neil Young & Crazy Horse, released in 1997.

This live album, in many ways could be seen as an epitaph for longtime Neil Young producer David Briggs, who died in 1995 from lung cancer. This is reflected by the song choices which (outside of recent album cuts like "Scattered" and "Big Time") were among Brigg's favorites.


From the mouth of the Horse…

No one has kept the eternal flame of psychedelic rock alive with more sincerity, or longer than Neil Young. Perhaps the artist says it best himself on 'Big Time': "I'm still living the dream we had… for me it's not over". Even if you snicker a bit at the concept, it's obvious that Young still believes in love, peace and understanding, and it's certainly a noble ralling cry to cling to. Those who have abandoned the concept have frequently aspired to much less.

'Year of the Horse' is an underrated live set from Young, panned as lacking enthusiasm (those not familiar with Young may not realize that not every song he writes was intended as an 'ace-in-the-hole' for American Idol), or for retreading old territory by asking, "Do we really need another live version of 'When You Dance', 'Mr. Soul', 'Pocahontas', or 'Sedan Delivery'"? To even modestly addicted Neil fans, the immediate and immutable response is, "YES!". Consider that popular among the more rabid of us are web sites that attempt, with some precision, to detail every song ever performed at every concert by Young (check out the Sugar Mountain web site). Now, that's rabid. The appeal of alternate takes on any Young song becomes especially pertinent since Neil, like his chosen mentors Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix, so frequently reinvents his compositions. On this disc, 'Mr. Soul' is a case in point. Here we have a mid-60's souped up, fuel injected hot rod from Buffalo Springfield that has morphed into an acoustic blues romp, with Neil's 6 strings sounding loose enough to be falling off the guitar with each strum. Young's ode to Hendrix appears at the end of a high octane 'Prisoners Of Rock n' Roll', as he breaks into a psychedelic 'Star Spangled Banner'.

The set list for 'Horse' is remarkably diverse as Neil highlights such gems as 'When You Dance' from 'After the Goldrush', to 'Human Highway' from 'Comes A Time', to 'Sedan Delivery' from 'Rust Never Sleeps', to 'Big Time' and 'Slip Away' from 'Broken Arrow'. In nearly every way Young is "a little bit here and a little bit there", as he sings on 'Scattered'. He wears as many artistic hats as he does real hats these days. In giving Neil a double-disc, Time-Warner invited Young to surely make it seem like four, offering 12 songs from 8 different venues, with textures ranging from the haunting echos of 'When Your Lonely Heart Breaks' to the relentless jackhammer that is 'Sedan Delivery'.

Yet the best number on tap here is the seemingly innocuous 'Barstool Blues' from 1975's 'Zuma' album. This song sits innocently in the setlist until Neil uses it to ambush us like a Viet Cong guerilla, pulling the trigger with ferocity on 'Old Black'. Young has never been a finesse guitarist in the mold of Eric Clapton, or even Stephen Stills (making comparisons between the two rather meaningless). Instead, Neil sculpts sound from his instrument, and he's chiselin' up a storm on 'Barstool Blues'.

The only song I could have lived without is another selection from 'Zuma', 'Dangerbird'. I don't mind the song being heavy, but it's about as deep into depression as Neil goes (which is DEEP), and it's a few fathoms below my own tolerance. But everything else works, and works well, and should be pleasing to Neil fans ranging all the way from novice to completist. In fact, since Neil and the Horse are more consumable coming from the stage than the studio, a specially priced double-disc such as this is a nice way to get a representative sampling of Young's remarkable career.

I suppose if most Young fans had their pick of songs performed on the 1996 US tour, they might want to supplant the retreads with even more diverse selections, such as 'Long May You Run', 'Bite the Bullet', or 'Don't Cry No Tears', but I'm content with leaving Neil in charge and trusting his deejaying. Over the years, he's certainly earned that trust and respect.

[Amazon user review]




The band:

* Neil Young: guitar, piano, harmonica, vocal
* Poncho Sampedro: guitar, keyboards, vocal
* Billy Talbot: bass, vocal
* Ralph Molina: drums, percussion, vocal




Underrated…and I wish I knew why!

I respect the opinions of those Neil fans who give this live album low marks–-but I respectfully disagree. I listen to this one more often than "Weld," "Rust," etc. (and I love those albums.) It's a world away from the studio recordings, for sure, but hasn't Neil always been about expanding on, and transcending, the past? This is Neil and the Horse in the late '90s. A fine, fitting portrait. I rushed out and got this after seeing Jim Jarmusch's (criminally underrated) documentary about the band. Abstract and gritty, it's also one of THE best and most honest cinematic rock portraits ever, and I've seen 'em ALL. The album doesn't duplicate the film, music-wise, but complements it. I don't mind that "Year" doesn't cover all his hits–-I've GOT those. I love hearing the obscure stuff. What I also love is the mesmerising jamming of a seasoned band of totally hard-core, down-to-earth veteran musicians/survivors who have lived through a lot together. Jarmusch's film makes this all quite clear, and maybe my seeing it first helped me appreciate this album as much as I do. Some say the songs are endless, meandering, whatever–-I say this is hypnotic trance music that's as good as it gets in American rock (though comparisons to great Allman Bros. and Dead live jams are apt). "Slow" doesn't mean ponderous, and "lenghty" doesn't mean boring. An acquired taste? Maybe it is. But I'm writing a book just now, and I put this album on while I write, along with Coltrane, Eno, Bach, Beethoven, the Velvets, early Dead, and precious few others who who can free my mind and inspire my soul at the same time. That's damn good company, in my book. Neil fans who've avoided this based on bad reviews should up and take the plunge.

[Amazon user review]




Tracks:

Disc 1:

1. "When You Dance" – 6:20
2. "Barstool Blues" – 9:02
3. "When Your Lonely Heart Breaks" – 5:04
4. "Mr. Soul" – 5:05
5. "Big Time" – 7:28
6. "Pocahontas" – 4:50
7. "Human Highway" – 4:07

Disc 2:

1. "Slip Away" – 10:52
2. "Scattered" – 4:00
3. "Danger Bird" – 13:34
4. "Prisoners" – 6:40
5. "Sedan Delivery" – 7:16



FLAC-images:

Disc 1:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3

Disc 2:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3


MP3 @320 CBR:

Disc 1:
Download

Disc 2:
Download


Complete scanned artwork (600dpi):
Download


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