Harvest Moon

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Harvest Moon album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Neil Young (See All Albums by Neil Young)
  • Date Released: Oct 23, 1992

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Reprise

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 51:55

eMusic Review 0

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Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

01.11.10
Young survives into the '90s, baying soft country-rock nothings to unknown legends
1992 | Label: Reprise

Neil Young made it through the '80s, but barely. There were the debacles that were Trans, Everybody's Rockin', Old Ways and This Note's For You. Rock had moved past him, and he wavered on whether he wanted to keep up. By the time of Harvest Moon in 1992, Young had regained focus.

Harvest Moon is an extremely simple record — maybe the simplest since his debut. The title track — layered by streams of acoustic guitars — almost bounces as Neil plainly beckons, "Come a little bit closer/ And hear what I have to say." It's a lot of saccharine, but the tune is so beautiful and the sentiment so comforting that it's hard to resist.

The album is entirely folk-rock, and the arrangements have a crisp (and now dated) sound and country tinge that suits them. It's a good record, but far from Young's best. By 1992, we had begun grading on a curve. Never before would we have celebrated the chilled-out old man rock of "From Hank to Hendrix," that's part Jimmy Buffet, part late-'80s Grateful Dead. And it packs the cringing line: "Now we're headed to the Big Divorce/ California style."

But it definitely has its moments. As TV on… read more »

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Good Stuff

ganjangles

This definately is a great album from Mr. Young. The first 4 songs alone are awesome - probably the better known from the album but don't be fooled the rest of the album is just as good. Natural Beauty is an awesome closer

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Not a live album

BrianJF

Not sure why this is in this section, but this is a great studio record from Neil. Oddly enough, there is a live album of the Harvest Moon record that just came out, although this isn't it.

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They Say All Music Guide

The year of the 20th anniversary of the release of his most popular album, Harvest, Neil Young released a new album that harked back to that recording, employing many of the same musicians, again dubbed the Stray Gators, as well as arranger Jack Nitzsche and background singers Linda Ronstadt and James Taylor. He also used a similar folk-country acoustic style and sang songs that often had a personal, confessional tone. But the similarities were more of form than of content because, while Harvest was the statement of a confused, if earnest, 26 year old, Harvest Moon embodied the ruminations of a somewhat regretful 46 year old. Indeed, the greatest comparison to be made between the two records was that Young tried to use the passage of time as a confirmation of continuity. In the first several songs, he seemed to be trying to reconcile with his wife and revive their love, though he was uncertain that was possible. In “One of These Days,” he regretted the loss of friendships over the years. “War of Man” and the long and ponderous “Natural Beauty” concerned environmental preservation, and even the rollicking banjo tune “Old King” was a lament for the death of a faithful dog. “I never tried to burn any bridges,” sang an artist whose contradictory instincts to move on and to return found him, by the time of his 27th solo album, trying to get back to the feel of his fourth. If the attempt was not completely successful, nevertheless it was well and honestly made, and Young wasn’t alone in his desire. As Hollywood has long since learned, sequels have a built-in audience, and Harvest Moon became Young’s best-selling album in 13 years. – William Ruhlmann

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