2008,
VINYL FORMAT. On 200g vinyl! 'The second
volume of Neil Young's long-promised,
suddenly thriving Archives series is
Live at Massey Hall, preserving a
1971 acoustic show at the Toronto venue.
Where the first volume captured a
portion of Neil's past that wasn't
particularly well documented on record -
namely, the rampaging original Crazy
Horse lineup in its 1970 prime - this
second installment may seem to cover
familiar ground, at least to the outside
observer who may assume that any solo
acoustic Young must sound the same.
That, of course, is not the case with an
artist as mercurial and willful as
Young, who was inarguably on a roll in
1971, coming off successes with Crazy
Horse, Crosby, Stills & Nash, and his
second solo record, 1970's After the
Gold Rush. The concert chronicled on
Live at Massey Hall finds Neil
dipping into these recent successes for
material, as he also airs material that
would shortly find a home on 1972's
Harvest in addition to playing
songs that wouldn't surface until later
in the decade - "Journey Through the
Past" and "Love in Mind" wound up on
1973's Time Fades Away, "See the
Sky About to Rain" showed up on 1974's
On the Beach - and then there's
two songs that never showed up on an
official Neil Young album: the stomping
hoedown "Dance Dance Dance," which he
gave to Crazy Horse, and "Bad Fog of
Loneliness," which gets its first
release here. This is a remarkably rich
set of songs, touching on nearly every
aspect of Young's personality, whether
it's his sweetness, his sensitivity, his
loneliness, or even his often-neglected
sense of fun. True, the latter only
appears on "Dance Dance Dance," but that
comes as a welcome contrast to the stark
sadness of "See the Sky About to Rain."
But even if "Down by the River" and
"Cowgirl in the Sand" retain their
intense sense of menace when stripped of
the winding guitar workouts of Crazy
Horse, this concert isn't dominated by
melancholy: it's a warm, giving affair,
built upon lovely readings of
"Helpless," "Tell Me Why," "Old Man,"
and an early incarnation of "A Man Needs
a Maid" (here played as a medley with
"Heart of Gold") that removes the
bombast of the Harvest arrangement,
revealing the fragile, sweet song that
lies underneath. While this concert
isn't as freewheeling and rich as
Young's studio albums of the early '70s
- each record had a distinctive
character different from its
predecessor, thanks in part to producer
David Briggs, arranger/pianist Jack
Nitzsche, and Young's supporting
musicians, including Crazy Horse or the
Stray Gators - it nevertheless captures
the essence of Neil Young the singer and
songwriter at his artistic peak. That's
the reason why this concert has been a
legendary bootleg for nearly four
decades and why its release thirty-six
years after its recording is so special:
it may not add an additional narrative
to Neil Young's history, but it adds
detail, color, and texture to a familiar
chapter of his career, rendering it
fresh once more. No wonder Briggs wanted
to release this concert as an album
between After the Gold Rush and
Harvest: it not only holds its
own against those classics, it enhances
them.' - All Music Guide
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | On the Way Home |
| 2 | Tell Me Why |
| 3 | Old Man |
| 4 | Journey Through the Past |
| 5 | Helpless |
| 6 | Love in Mind |
| 7 | Man Needs a Maid/Heart of Gold Suite |
| 8 | Cowgirl in the Sand |
| 9 | Don't Let It Bring You Down |
| 10 | There's a World |
| 11 | Bad Fog of Loneliness |
| 12 | Needle and the Damage Done |
| 13 | Ohio |
| 14 | See the Sky About to Rain |
| 15 | Down by the River |
| 16 | Dance, Dance, Dance |
| 17 | I Am a Child |
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