eMusic Review
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.