Neil Young

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 35:58

eMusic Review

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Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

01.11.10
Young achieves a ragged glory on his solo debut
2009 | Label: Reprise

The spirit of the debut album has changed enormously over the past 40 years. Now we expect a fully-formed creative mission statement on Day 1 — anything less must be dismissed — whereas in the '60s, the debut album was an amalgamation of filler, traditional covers that bands also played live, and maybe two or three originals with modest hit single aspirations. That's certainly the case with Neil Young's self-titled debut, the only non-essential record from the first decade of his career.

In 1967 Young was coming off of Buffalo Springfield Again, an album that lacked a big hit but included three of Young's best early songs — "Expecting to Fly," "Broken Arrow" and "Mr. Soul" — as well as the first collaborations between Young, Stephen Stills and David Crosby. Neil Young doesn't follow the melancholy rock epic template that Young had built with those three songs, and much of it is a bit dull as a result. The playing is strong — Ry Cooder plays guitar and Jack Nitzsche piano — and there are a couple of standouts, including "Here We Are in the Years," one of his best deep cuts. Better to grab the records that followed it.

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Milestone

driftways

I agree - this is essential music. An edgier part of Neil Young's music, and a surprise when it was released. Who was expecting 'The Old Laughing Lady' after Buffalo Springfield? The music got a little lost when 'Everybody Knows This is Nowhere' came out, since that was so much more accessible. But this was the creation of a set of characters that have recurred in Neil's music across the years, and still stands out as a significant milestone. Non-essential? Only if you don't care about beginnings.

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Definitely essential

belanger

The reviews on this are wrong--it's one of his best albums on balance with several of his best songs, especially a great arrangement of The Old Laughing Lady, What Did you Do to My Life, The Loner, and Emperor of Wyoming. And The Last Trip to Tulsa is a bit long but its funny--I would trade it for all of Harvest.

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This is actually essential

tkdcoach

I tend to disagree with the offhandedness of the reviews of this record. No, it's not a masterpiece, but neither are some of the latter day Young records (Ragged Glory et al) that critics go so far to praise. What we have here are some essential tracks--the sublime "The Emperor of Wyoming" is a standout instrumental that has been a key track for me throughout my days and travels.

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Nice but not crucial for none fans

tofias

However, "The Last Trip To Tulsa" is awesome. A must download. Will be in heavy rotation.

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Don't overlook this gem

AstralGlamBoy

Most will bypass this record for his more famous '70s work. That would be a shame. This is truly a great record that still sounds current. He shows early on that he was a risk taker and a great pop song writer. This is one of my favorite albums.

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They Say All Media Guide

On his songs for Buffalo Springfield, Neil Young had demonstrated an eclecticism that ranged from the rock of “Mr. Soul” to the complicated, multi-part arrangement of “Broken Arrow.” On his debut solo album, he continued to work with composer/arranger Jack Nitzsche, with whom he had made “Expecting to Fly” on the Buffalo Springfield Again album, and together the two recorded a restrained effort on which the folk-rock instrumentation, most of which was by Young, overdubbing himself, was augmented by discreet string parts. The country & western elements that had tinged the Springfield’s sound were also present, notably on the leadoff track, “The Emperor of Wyoming,” an instrumental that recalled the Springfield song “A Child’s Claim to Fame.” Still unsure of his voice, Young sang in a becalmed high tenor that could be haunting as often as it was listless and whining. He was at his least appealing on the nine-and-a-half-minute closing track, “The Last Trip to Tulsa,” on which he accompanied himself with acoustic guitar, singing an impressionistic set of lyrics seemingly derived from Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited. But double-tracking and the addition of a female backup chorus improved the singing elsewhere, and on “The Loner,” the album’s most memorable track, Young displayed some of the noisy electric guitar work that would characterize his recordings with Crazy Horse and reminded listeners of his ability to turn a phrase. Still, Neil Young made for an uneven, low-key introduction to Young’s solo career, and when released it was a commercial flop, his only album not to make the charts. (Several months after the album’s release, Young remixed it to bring out his vocals more and added some overdubs. This second version replaced the first in the U.S. from then on, though the original mix remained available overseas.) – William Ruhlmann

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