Rust Never Sleeps

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (223 ratings)
Rust Never Sleeps album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 38:27

Write a Review 8 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

audio quality report

tn-rudeboy

Encoder [LAME3.98r] Encoder Options [--preset extreme -b32] Average Bitrate [242 kbps vbr]

user avatar

GET LIVE RUST

BEAMER326

I have the doubble disk LIVE RUST. JUST CRANK IT!

user avatar

Best yet

earljwagadorn

The last album he made before his songs all started sounding the same.This album is best played at high volume levels.

user avatar

Stunning

madformusic

One of his best. I was living in London at the time and I wore out a few cassettes (remember them!) of Rust. Still holds up 30 years later. One of the few Neil albums I can play all the way through.

user avatar

Good bye 70's

thermocaster

One acoustic side, one electric side. Every song is enjoyable. This probably isn't the best introduction to Neil Young, but it's essential for anyone who thinks they're a Neil Young fan.

user avatar

One of the best

Unenclosed

ever albums, in any genre. Period.

user avatar

Awesome!

rickstervc

Neil Young's albums can often be frustrating-some good tracks and some that should have stayed in the can, with style jumps that can be jarring. This album, though has great songs that stand well by themselves, and also together as a whole. When you get this, make sure to pick up "Live Rust" as well. It's all excellent!

user avatar

Give it a 6th star

ynth

Powderfinger alone is worth 9 credits...get 'em all

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Who Are…Milagres

By Leonard Pierce, eMusic Contributor

With a sound as big as the sky and a lyrical approach as densely packed as any metropolis, Milagres, a Brooklyn five-piece freshly signed to Kill Rock Stars after a major personnel shake-up, doesn't need a compelling origin story for Glowing Mouth, its sophomore album. Still, as origin stories go, it's hard to beat Kyle Wilson's: "Our first album [2008's Seven Summits] was more of a calculated concept album, where I used mountaineering as a… more »

0

eMusic Selects: Strand of Oaks

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

[eMusic Selects is a program designed by eMusic to give exposure to unsigned or undersigned bands. This month's selections are Strand of Oaks and Family Band] In 2003, Tim Showalter's house burned down, his fiancĂ©e broke up with him, and he resorted to writing songs on an acoustic guitar while living on park benches in suburban Philadelphia. Those events informed the entirety of his arresting debut, Leave Ruin, an album about loss and brokenness and lack… more »

0

Bobby Charles: The In-A-While Crocodile

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

Robert Charles Guidry was leaving a diner in his native Louisiana when he heard the words that would forever make him Bobby Charles. "See you later, alligator," the 17-year-old jive-talked to a friend, only to hear, like a gospel call-and-response, "In a while, crocodile" from a neighboring patron. He had been playing teen soirees with a combo called the Cardinals (no relation to the r&b vocal group of the same name) in the small town of… more »

0

Six Degrees of The Lonely Surfer

By Andy Beta, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Rust Never Sleeps, its aphoristic title drawn from an intended advertising slogan, was an album of new songs, some of them recorded on Neil Young’s 1978 concert tour. His strongest collection since Tonight’s the Night, its obvious antecedent was Bob Dylan’s Bringing It All Back Home, and, as Dylan did, Young divided his record into acoustic and electric sides while filling his songs with wildly imaginative imagery. The leadoff track, “My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue)” (repeated in an electric version at album’s end as “Hey Hey, My My [Into the Black]” with slightly altered lyrics), is the most concise and knowing description of the entertainment industry ever written; it was followed by “Thrasher,” which describes Young’s parallel artistic quest in an extended metaphor that also reflected the album’s overall theme — the inevitability of deterioration and the challenge of overcoming it. Young then spent the rest of the album demonstrating that his chief weapons against rusting were his imagination and his daring, creating an archetypal album that encapsulated his many styles on a single disc with great songs — in particular the remarkable “Powderfinger” — unlike any he had written before. – William Ruhlmann

more »

Activity

  • 12.28.09 Working on my trains with Z!
  • 12.27.09 One of heard had a calf this evening. Doc and I deliver it. I am getting to old for this!