eMusic Review 0
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 »