eMusic Review 0
Harvest is famously Neil Young's only #1 album, with "Heart of Gold" his only #1 single. And in this case, the public was right. Young has better moments than Harvest, but none of them are nearly as palatable as this album's confident, soft-folk, and none of them (aside from maybe "Ohio" and "Southern Man") so closely read the Zeitgeist: Young's songs about the satiation of bucolic life corresponded directly with the counterculture's movement toward simplicity and earth. "Keeps me searching for a heart of gold/ And I'm getting old," he sings. Tune in and cash out is the clear implication.
A handful of other songs explore the same light folk of "Heart of Gold": "Old Man," the album's other big single (#31 on the charts), where he memorably sings, "Old man look at my life/ 24 and there's so much more"; "Out on the Weekend," a song about feeling alone in the midst of with-it people (a common Young refrain); the self-explanatory "Are You Ready for the Country" (the Band is clearly a big influence on that one); and of course "Harvest," maybe the album's greatest song, and arguably Young's most plaintive: "Did she wake you up to tell you that/… read more »