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Greatest Hits

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (112 ratings)
Greatest Hits album cover
01
Down By The River
9:17
$1.29
02
Cowgirl In The Sand
10:06
03
Cinnamon Girl
3:00
$1.29
04
Helpless
3:38
$1.29
05
After The Gold Rush
3:47
$1.29
06
Only Love Can Break Your Heart
3:09
$1.29
07
Southern Man
5:31
$1.29
08
Ohio
3:00
$1.29
09
The Needle And The Damage Done
2:11
$1.29
10
Old Man
3:23
$1.29
11
Heart Of Gold
3:07
$1.29
12
Like A Hurricane
8:21
$1.29
13
Comes A Time
3:05
$1.29
14
Hey Hey, My My
5:14
$1.29
15
Rockin' In The Free World
4:42
$1.29
16
Harvest Moon
5:03
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 76:34

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Greatest Hits (Neil Young)

Mick619

At once fearless and aloof, Neil Young is an enigma. He'll pull you into his world with his lyrics, while simultaneously confounding you with their profundity. His loss is our gain. His experience is fodder for his listeners. He is weak-looking but fierce. His guitar solos are legendary but he has been closer to deaths-door more than my 95 year-old grandmother. Neil's voice is not melodic but is addictive and compelling, so are each gem captured here. As an overview, an introductory yes download everyone! However, please have the maturity, the savvy to explore this man's library and join the initiated!

user avatar

Neil Rules

EMUSIC-0295A119

Whoever cataloged this set did a great job of hitting all Neil's early hits and keeping true to the original Album Versions (except "Like a Hurricane), but a great version none the less. This is a definite MUST HAVE for anyone's collection!

user avatar

Neil Rules

EMUSIC-0295A119

Whoever cataloged this set did a great job of hitting all Neil's early hits and keeping true to the original Album Versions (except "Like a Hurricane), but a great version none the less. This is a definite MUST HAVE for anyone's collection!

user avatar

The essence of early Seventies

PhoenixLake

Turn it on and have a great time enjoying all the favorites from Neil Young. Look at the songs list, all the essentials you need this album. Cowgirl, Cinnamon Girl, Southern Man, what more could you want? It is all here on one album.

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They Say All Music Guide

It may be hard to believe, but 2004′s Greatest Hits is not only the first retrospective Neil Young has released since 1977′s Decade, it’s the first ever single-disc collection of his best-known songs. That’s a span of 27 years separating the two collections, which is an awful long time to resist a Greatest Hits disc — many of his peers succumbed, offering countless comps during those years — and such a resistance to a compilation may not be much a surprise from the legendarily prickly Young, but what is a surprise is that 11 of the 16 songs on Greatest Hits were also on Decade. Of the five songs that were not on Decade, only two date from after the ’70s — 1989′s “Rockin’ in the Free World” and 1992′s “Harvest Moon” — while one of the remaining three (1970′s “Only Love Can Break Your Heart”) comes from the time chronicled on Decade; the other two, 1978′s “Comes a Time” and 1979′s “Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black),” arrived in the two years of the ’70s not covered on the 1977 compilation. All this means is that Greatest Hits offers the basic canon, with no frills and none of Neil’s trademark idiosyncrasy. Some may miss that cantankerous spirit, pointing out that this contains nothing from his towering twin masterpieces of dark introspection — Tonight’s the Night and On the Beach — or that there’s nothing from Buffalo Springfield (which was covered on Decade) and that noteworthy songs like “Powderfinger,” “Cortez the Killer,” “Lotta Love,” and “Long May You Run” are missing. Ultimately, that doesn’t matter much, because Greatest Hits has all the songs that every Neil Young fan, from the devoted to the casual listener, agrees are his biggest and best: “Down by the River,” “Cinnamon Girl,” “Helpless,” “After the Gold Rush,” “Southern Man,” “Ohio,” “The Needle and the Damage Done,” “Old Man,” “Heart of Gold,” “Like a Hurricane.” And that’s why it works as an all-business introduction for the uninitiated and as a concise summary for those not willing to travel down all the long, winding roads Young has traveled over the years. In other words, it’s as good a compilation as it could have been. [Greatest Hits was released in several editions. In addition to the basic single CD, there was a limited edition containing a DVD video with the promo clips for "Rockin' in the Free World" and "Harvest Moon." There was another limited edition with a bonus 7" record. Finally, it was also released as a high-resolution DVD Audio disc.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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