eMusic Review 0
After the Gold Rush is the first in Neil Young's Sad Record Quintet (it goes Gold Rush, Harvest, On the Beach, Tonight's the Night and Zuma), and also one of his finest albums. Though "Southern Man" — Young's longest-lasting hit — comes from After the Gold Rush, within the context of the album it feels like a throwaway. The emotional intensity of "I Believe In You" and the incredible self-pitying of "Oh, Lonesome Me" are far more resonant.
The title track is among Young's best. "Well I dreamed I saw the knights in armor come/ Saying something about a queen," it begins, painting something out of Camelot before transporting to "lying in a burned-out basement with a full moon in my eye." Then this cutting thought: "Thinking about what a friend had said/ I was hoping it was a lie" that always makes me wonder politics or love? But of course at the time it was both. Always both.
The opening lyric of the album always stops me cold: "Sailing hardships through/ Broken harbors out on the waves in the night." Neil Young was 24 years old when he wrote and recorded After the Gold Rush. There are lyrics on that record… read more »