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Neil Young – Neil Young Archives Vol.1 (1963-1972) (2009) {Box Set, HDCD}
EAC Rip | 8xCD | FLAC Image + Cue + Log | Full Scans @300 dpi, JPG, Included
Total Size: 2.64 GB | 3% RAR Recovery
Label: Silver Bow / Reprise | Cat#: 2-175292 | Genre: Folk Rock
EAC Rip | 8xCD | FLAC Image + Cue + Log | Full Scans @300 dpi, JPG, Included
Total Size: 2.64 GB | 3% RAR Recovery
Label: Silver Bow / Reprise | Cat#: 2-175292 | Genre: Folk Rock
Any project in the works for two decades is bound to generate its fair share of myths and so it is with Neil Young’s Archives, a series of a multi-disc box sets chronicling Young’s history. Originally envisioned in the late ’80s as a Decade II, the project quickly mutated into a monster covering every little corner of Neil’s career. With its escalation came delays, so many that it sometimes seemed that the project never really existed; it was just a shared fantasy between Neil and his faithful. During that long, long wait, fans held tight to the idea that Archives was a clearinghouse of rarities similar to Bob Dylan’s The Bootleg Series, a treasure trove of unreleased songs and epochal live performances that would trump whatever bootleggers had to offer. While rare and unheard music is certainly a key part of Archives, particularly on the first disc covering the pre-history of 1963-1965, viewing this project as merely a CD box set is wildly misleading. Neil Young has designed Archives as nothing less than an immersive multimedia autobiography, an interactive experience where the music, text, video, and pictures feed off each other, creating a virtual journey through Neil’s past.
Because this is a biography, Archives, Vol. 1 winds up relying very heavily on previously released recordings, containing almost all of Neil Young, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, After the Gold Rush, and Harvest, key Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young cuts, and the previously released archival live albums Live at the Fillmore East 1970 and Live at Massey Hall 1971. Such a large chunk of familiar material is bound to disappoint any listener expecting Archives to be a rarities-only set, forgetting that its origin was as a sequel to Decade, the triple-LP set that mixed up hits with unreleased tunes. Archives follows a similar blueprint, excavating many rare gems — some, like “Bad Fog of Loneliness” quite familiar to bootleggers; some, like an extraordinary “Dance Dance Dance” cut with Graham Nash, not — and placing them neatly alongside his well-known jewels, so the end effect isn’t a rush of discovery but ongoing quiet revelation, an impression underpinned by the set’s leisurely pace.
The entire Archives is designed to trace Neil’s evolution, to explain how his dead ends were really detours and how his mood swings weren’t all that wild; it preserves Young’s history as he perceived it. To that end, the DVD and especially BluRay editions of the set are essential to understanding both the project and Neil himself, so much so that the CD edition feels almost like an afterthought, a skimming of the surface of a deep lake. Often, Young delayed Archives due to the limits of technology, a claim that seemed no more than an excuse to keep the project incomplete, but Archives in its BluRay incarnation lives up to all of Neil’s promises over the years, coming close to collecting everything — lyrics, press, artwork, TV performances, doodles, scraps of every sort — in one place, letting users linger for as long as they’d like in a specific era. Surely, the sound quality on BluRay is extraordinary — the music leaps out of the speakers yet never sounds overly clean, digital, or modern — but it’s the interactive nature of the set that impresses most. While the DVD set also is complexly interactive, BluRay is designed to be continually updated via the Internet, so Young can add songs and videos whenever he wants, placing the new material as a virtual pushpin on each disc’s time line. Acting as a supplement to the text biographies on each disc — the biography only covering the years on the disc — the time line places Young’s evolution on a broader scale and is illuminated by this extra material, such as a downright thrilling CSNY performance of “Down by the River” on ABC-TV, but this is merely a teaser for the main event: the virtual filing cabinet, where every song on the set has its own folder bulging with handwritten lyrics, press clips, photos, snippets of in-concert introductions, alternate takes — the list is almost endless and it’s always different, so it’s easy to flip back to a song and discover a bunch of information you missed the first time around. Add to this, there are an untold number of Easter eggs, sometimes housing the best stuff here, such as videos of Young combing through the archives and reminiscing in 1997, or a 15-minute film clip of Young discovering a CSNY bootleg while record shopping in the early ’70s and then taking it from the store.
This level of detail may suggest the one serious flaw in Archives: it cannot be taken casually. It demands complete, undivided attention, requiring users to dig as deep as they’d like, and it’s no stretch to say that it could take a week or two to discover everything here. Also, the set comes so tantalizingly close to being complete, it’s a major irritation to have one song lopped off of each the albums; surely, the extra storage space on DVD and BluRay could have allowed for complete runs of Everybody, Gold Rush, and Harvest. But really, these complaints feel churlish when faced with a box that is an embarrassment of riches, offering so much more than anybody could have imagined during that long, long wait. Not only was the wait worth it, Archives feels like it was 20 years in the making. It’s an extraordinary work that redefines what an autobiography can be.
Reviewed by Allmusic
Additional Info:
• Recorded Date: 1963-1972
• Released Date: June 2, 2009
• Recorded Date: 1963-1972
• Released Date: June 2, 2009
Disc 1 – Early Years, 1963-1968
01. Neil Young / Aurora – 02:10
02. The Sultan – 02:35
03. I Wonder – 02:24
04. Mustang – 02:26
05. I’ll Love You Forever – 03:25
06. (I’m a Man and) I Can’t Cry – 02:35
07. Hello Lonely Woman – 04:00
08. Casting Me Away From You – 02:16
09. There Goes My Babe – 02:27
10. Sugar Mountain – 02:43
11. Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing – 03:06
12. Runaround Babe – 02:39
13. The Ballad of Peggy Grover – 02:48
14. The Rent Is Always Due – 02:55
15. Extra, Extra – 02:44
16. Flying On The Ground Is Wrong – 03:12
17. Burned – 02:19
18. Out of My Mind – 03:09
19. Down, Down, Down – 02:15
20. Kahuna Sunset – 02:55
21. Mr. Soul – 02:47
22. Sell Out – 01:44
23. Down To The Wire – 02:32
24. Expecting To Fly – 03:48
25. Slowly Burning – 03:02
26. One More Sign – 02:05
27. Broken Arrow – 06:18
28. I Am A Child – 02:19
01. Neil Young / Aurora – 02:10
02. The Sultan – 02:35
03. I Wonder – 02:24
04. Mustang – 02:26
05. I’ll Love You Forever – 03:25
06. (I’m a Man and) I Can’t Cry – 02:35
07. Hello Lonely Woman – 04:00
08. Casting Me Away From You – 02:16
09. There Goes My Babe – 02:27
10. Sugar Mountain – 02:43
11. Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing – 03:06
12. Runaround Babe – 02:39
13. The Ballad of Peggy Grover – 02:48
14. The Rent Is Always Due – 02:55
15. Extra, Extra – 02:44
16. Flying On The Ground Is Wrong – 03:12
17. Burned – 02:19
18. Out of My Mind – 03:09
19. Down, Down, Down – 02:15
20. Kahuna Sunset – 02:55
21. Mr. Soul – 02:47
22. Sell Out – 01:44
23. Down To The Wire – 02:32
24. Expecting To Fly – 03:48
25. Slowly Burning – 03:02
26. One More Sign – 02:05
27. Broken Arrow – 06:18
28. I Am A Child – 02:19
Disc 2 – Topanga 1, 1968-1969
01. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 02:19
02. The Loner – 03:54
03. Birds – 02:19
04. What Did You Do To My Life? – 01:57
05. The Last Trip to Tulsa – 09:29
06. Here We Are In The Years – 03:21
07. I’ve Been Waiting For You – 02:32
08. The Old Laughing Lady – 06:04
09. I’ve Loved Her So long – 02:49
10. Sugar Mountain – 06:16
11. Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing – 05:25
12. Down By The River – 09:20
13. Cowgirl In The Sand – 10:08
14. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 02:29
01. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 02:19
02. The Loner – 03:54
03. Birds – 02:19
04. What Did You Do To My Life? – 01:57
05. The Last Trip to Tulsa – 09:29
06. Here We Are In The Years – 03:21
07. I’ve Been Waiting For You – 02:32
08. The Old Laughing Lady – 06:04
09. I’ve Loved Her So long – 02:49
10. Sugar Mountain – 06:16
11. Nowadays Clancy Can’t Even Sing – 05:25
12. Down By The River – 09:20
13. Cowgirl In The Sand – 10:08
14. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 02:29
Disc 3 – Live at the Riverboat, 1969
01. Intro – Entry – Circle Game – 01:19
02. Sugar Mountain – 05:34
03. Incredible Doctor – 03:11
04. The Old Laughing Lady – 05:14
05. Audience – Dope Song – Band Names – 03:00
06. Flying on the Ground Is Wrong – 03:59
07. Leaving Friends – 00:25
08. On the Way Home – 02:42
09. Entry Tuning – Mics – Last Night – 01:20
10. I’ve Loved Her So Long – 02:15
11. Important Song – D minor Pipe – Alan A Dale – 02:20
12. I Am a Child – 02:27
13. Bad Pod – 1956 Bubblegum Disaster – 02:04
14. The Last Trip to Tulsa – 07:02
15. Blues Band – Groovy Words – 02:14
16. Broken Arrow – 04:40
17. Entry – Disclaimer – False Start Lights – 00:53
18. Whiskey Boot Hill – 02:22
19. Uptight – Anything? – Tuning – 00:55
20. Expecting to Fly – 02:56
01. Intro – Entry – Circle Game – 01:19
02. Sugar Mountain – 05:34
03. Incredible Doctor – 03:11
04. The Old Laughing Lady – 05:14
05. Audience – Dope Song – Band Names – 03:00
06. Flying on the Ground Is Wrong – 03:59
07. Leaving Friends – 00:25
08. On the Way Home – 02:42
09. Entry Tuning – Mics – Last Night – 01:20
10. I’ve Loved Her So Long – 02:15
11. Important Song – D minor Pipe – Alan A Dale – 02:20
12. I Am a Child – 02:27
13. Bad Pod – 1956 Bubblegum Disaster – 02:04
14. The Last Trip to Tulsa – 07:02
15. Blues Band – Groovy Words – 02:14
16. Broken Arrow – 04:40
17. Entry – Disclaimer – False Start Lights – 00:53
18. Whiskey Boot Hill – 02:22
19. Uptight – Anything? – Tuning – 00:55
20. Expecting to Fly – 02:56
Disc 4 – Topanga 2, 1969-1970
01. Cinnamon Girl – 03:02
02. Running Dry (Requiem For The Rockets) – 05:37
03. Round And Round (It Won’t Be Long) – 05:57
04. Oh Lonesome Me – 04:03
05. Birds – 01:39
06. Everybody’s Alone – 02:34
07. I Believe In You – 03:30
08. Sea Of Madness – 03:19
09. Dance Dance Dance – 02:27
10. Country Girl – 05:13
11. Helpless – 03:51
12. It Might Have Been – 04:18
01. Cinnamon Girl – 03:02
02. Running Dry (Requiem For The Rockets) – 05:37
03. Round And Round (It Won’t Be Long) – 05:57
04. Oh Lonesome Me – 04:03
05. Birds – 01:39
06. Everybody’s Alone – 02:34
07. I Believe In You – 03:30
08. Sea Of Madness – 03:19
09. Dance Dance Dance – 02:27
10. Country Girl – 05:13
11. Helpless – 03:51
12. It Might Have Been – 04:18
Disc 5 – Live at the Fillmore East, 1970
01. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 03:37
02. Winterlong – 03:40
03. Down by the River – 12:25
04. Wonderin’ – 03:36
05. Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown – 03:52
06. Cowgirl in the Sand – 16:09
01. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – 03:37
02. Winterlong – 03:40
03. Down by the River – 12:25
04. Wonderin’ – 03:36
05. Come On Baby Let’s Go Downtown – 03:52
06. Cowgirl in the Sand – 16:09
Disc 6 – Topanga 3, 1970
01. Tell Me Why – 03:01
02. After The Gold Rush – 03:49
03. Only Love Can Break Your Heart – 03:11
04. Wonderin’ – 02:13
05. Don’t Let It Bring You Down – 03:00
06. Cripple Creek Ferry – 01:36
07. Southern Man – 05:34
08. Till The Morning Comes – 01:19
09. Neil Young with Crazy Horse / When You Dance I Can Really Love – 03:48
10. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young / Ohio – 03:02
11. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young / Only Love Can Break Your Heart – 04:17
12. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young / Tell Me Why – 05:44
13. David Crosby, Graham Nash & Neil Young / Music Is Love – 03:23
14. See The Sky About To Rain – 03:56
01. Tell Me Why – 03:01
02. After The Gold Rush – 03:49
03. Only Love Can Break Your Heart – 03:11
04. Wonderin’ – 02:13
05. Don’t Let It Bring You Down – 03:00
06. Cripple Creek Ferry – 01:36
07. Southern Man – 05:34
08. Till The Morning Comes – 01:19
09. Neil Young with Crazy Horse / When You Dance I Can Really Love – 03:48
10. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young / Ohio – 03:02
11. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young / Only Love Can Break Your Heart – 04:17
12. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young / Tell Me Why – 05:44
13. David Crosby, Graham Nash & Neil Young / Music Is Love – 03:23
14. See The Sky About To Rain – 03:56
Disc 7 – Live at Massey Hall, 1971
01. On The Way Home – 03:43
02. Tell Me Why – 02:29
03. Old Man – 04:57
04. Journey Through The Past – 04:16
05. Helpless – 04:16
06. Love In Mind – 02:48
07. A Man Needs A Maid/Heart Of Gold – 06:39
08. Cowgirl In The Sand – 03:46
09. Don’t Let It Bring You Down – 02:46
10. There’s A World – 03:34
11. Bad Fog Of Loneliness – 03:27
12. The Needle And The Damage Done – 03:55
13. Ohio – 03:40
14. See The Sky About To Rain – 04:05
15. Down By The River – 04:09
16. Dance Dance Dance – 05:49
17. I Am A Child – 03:19
01. On The Way Home – 03:43
02. Tell Me Why – 02:29
03. Old Man – 04:57
04. Journey Through The Past – 04:16
05. Helpless – 04:16
06. Love In Mind – 02:48
07. A Man Needs A Maid/Heart Of Gold
08. Cowgirl In The Sand – 03:46
09. Don’t Let It Bring You Down – 02:46
10. There’s A World – 03:34
11. Bad Fog Of Loneliness – 03:27
12. The Needle And The Damage Done – 03:55
13. Ohio – 03:40
14. See The Sky About To Rain – 04:05
15. Down By The River – 04:09
16. Dance Dance Dance – 05:49
17. I Am A Child – 03:19
Disc 8 – North Country, 1971-1972
01. Heart Of Gold – 03:51
02. The Needle And The Damage Done – 02:13
03. Bad Fog Of Loneliness – 01:58
04. Old Man – 03:25
05. Heart Of Gold – 03:11
06. Dance Dance Dance – 02:17
07. A Man Needs A Maid – 04:13
08. Harvest – 03:12
09. Journey Through The Past – 02:24
10. Are You Ready For The Country? – 03:25
11. Alabama – 04:06
12. Words (Between The Lines Of Age) – 15:56
13. Soldier – 03:25
14. War Song – 03:29
01. Heart Of Gold – 03:51
02. The Needle And The Damage Done – 02:13
03. Bad Fog Of Loneliness – 01:58
04. Old Man – 03:25
05. Heart Of Gold – 03:11
06. Dance Dance Dance – 02:17
07. A Man Needs A Maid – 04:13
08. Harvest – 03:12
09. Journey Through The Past – 02:24
10. Are You Ready For The Country? – 03:25
11. Alabama – 04:06
12. Words (Between The Lines Of Age) – 15:56
13. Soldier – 03:25
14. War Song – 03:29
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Biography
Neil Young, one of the most influential and controversial rock music figures of all times, was born on November 12, 1945, in Toronto. Along with Bob Dylan, he is credited with laying down the foundation for almost each of currently existent rock genres. Before finishing the school, Neil sank into guitar music playing with a lot of local bands and showing up at many clubs of his city late at night. At the dawn of his music life, Young was focused on performing blues and rockabilly as the most prominent group of his was the California-based Buffalo Springfield. The members of this formation did get along with each other very well, which prompted Neil soon to start recording his own stuff on his own in 1968.
A brilliant instrumentalist himself, Young recruited a group of very talented musicians from California that would be accompanying him throughout his entire career as the Crazy Horse band. The artist’s debut self-titled album, released in 1968, did not bring him the expected results, yet it only made him work harder. The second effort, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969), featured the songs bearing the traces of the music that would soon be called hard-rock. Through with this work, Young joined a supreme band of his old time friends, Crosby, Stills & Nash, which made them add his name to the title. With the renewed lineup, the group launched a massive American tour. The musicians had too different music preferences and ideas to stick together constantly and went through numerous breakups. On irregular basis, they would reunite to perform live up to the present days.
In 1972, Young came back to the solo career and recorded a calm country-rock oriented album, Harvest, to become of the specimen of the genre. Although the artist strived to stay away from mainstream and remain a not-like-them figure, he grew extremely surprised when this record climbed to the top of the US pop-music charts. Right after that, Neil made a swift turn to a much darker and noisier sound. The pessimistic mood of those records was predetermined by Neil’s loss of several people dear to him and his only son’s incurable illness. After a streak of albums of low interest, he finally prepared a very strong long player that was Tonight’s the Night (1975).
Young spent the second half of the seventies in constant and fruitful collaboration with Crazy Horse. They made an accent on loud guitar sounding that in the years to come formed the basis for punk and grunge rock. As the new decade arrived, the artist decided to open a period of experimentations that upset many of his supporters. Their disenchantment reached the peak in 1982 when he released Trans, an electronic album with his voice processed through the synthesizers. Young returned to the path of classic rock in 1989 with the smashing album Freedom. The same year, the market offered a compilation of his songs performed by other rock musicians. As the era of grunge opened the beginning of the nineties, many of new rock stars shared the desire to cooperate with their main inspirer, Neil Young. Pearl Jam succeeded most of them all as they played several concerts with the famed artists and then helped him record a very powerful album that was called Mirror Ball (1995). Later, Young recorded the music for the classic art-house movie Dead Man released in 1996. Recapitulating the highlights of the twenties century, the influential magazine Rolling Stone rated Neil Young as thirty forth in the list of the rock-n-roll most prominent persons. In the new millennium, the famed artist made his song strongly political. His 2006 studio effort Living with War featured the song Let’s Impeach the President patently condemning the US policy in Iraq. Early in 2009, he delighted his fans with the new album, Fork in the Road, and in 2010 they got another Neil’s creation. He worked with a producer Daniel Lanois and his name became the link to the album’s title - Le Noise. That Young’s studio attempt was critically acclaimed and was really enjoyed by the listeners. There is no doubt that the artist’s experience and desire to create music became the main elements of his success.
Studio Albums
Fork in the Road
Neil Young's new album Fork In The Road, an ode to the road and cars, offers ten songs each of which touches upon a certain aspect of a driver's life often making the listener think of the important life questions
![Young Young](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125699266/669537507.jpg)
Chrome Dreams II
This year Neil Young decided to please his fans two times. At first he released a record of his legendary concert of 1971 at Massey Hall and than he came back with his new studio album Chrome Dreams II
Living With War
White-hot on the heels of Bruce Springsteen's savvy invocation of vintage folk and gospel music to stir the pot of political protest, Neil Young looks no further into the past than his morning newspaper for source material on his new album
30
Compilation albums
3
Lives
A Treasure
Neil Young's new live album, A Treasure, is a collection of the artist's most memorable and cherished episodes from his collaboration with the brilliant band International Harvesters
Live at Massey Hall 1971
Live At Massey Hall 1971 is a previously unreleased record of Neil Young's concert, which continues his Archive Series. Switching from acoustic guitar to piano he presents public with versions of his new songs, which later will become rock hits
10