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    • 3 min
    • Alison Weinflash,Angie Martoccio,Andy Greene,David Browne,Jon Dolan,Kory Grow,Will Hermes,David Marchese,Nick Murray,Rob Sheffield,Rob Tannenbaum,Simon Vozick-Levinson,Douglas Wolk
    • ‘Homegrown’ The title track of a country-rock LP Young recorded in the mid-Seventies but legendarily shelved — finally releasing it in 2020 — this ode to DIY hemp cultivation doubles as an ode to self-made creative work of all sorts.
    • ‘Walk Like a Giant’ “Me and some of my friends, we were gonna save the world,” Young sings two minutes into this 16-minute jam. But this is no sentimental Sixties lament.
    • ‘He Was the King’ “When I was a little kid, I thought Elvis was pretty hot,” Young said. This tribute offers images from throughout the King’s life — Young even throws in a “thankyuhverymuch.”
    • ‘When God Made Me’ The first nine songs on Prairie Wind were finished in the days before Young underwent brain surgery. The 10th, “When God Made Me,” came later, after one of his incisions reopened and he again lost consciousness.
    • “Down By the River” (Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, 1969) The centerpiece of his solo career-establishing second album Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, the nine minutes of grinding delirium that constitute “Down By the River” pointed to a trailblazing future for Young beyond his stilted self-titled debut and Buffalo Springfield tenure.
    • “Hey Hey, My My (Out of the Blue)” (Rust Never Sleeps, 1979) Few songs can claim to provide as much of the connective tissue for rock n’ roll history as Neil Young’s crunching Rust Never Sleeps closer, reaching across the decades between early rock and punk and grunge and ensuring timeline continuity, for better and for worse.
    • “Heart of Gold” (Harvest, 1972) While Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and his breakthrough After the Gold Rush album established Young as a major talent at the top of the ’70s, his Billboard 200 topper Harvest and its Hot 100 No. 1 “Heart of Gold” made the reedy-voiced, lanky Canadian one of the decade’s unlikeliest stars.
    • “Southern Man” (After the Gold Rush, 1970) The tracklist of After the Gold Rush is mostly reserved for lilting ballads and folky interludes, but there’s one big clear out toward the end of side one for five and a half minutes of Neil Young’s most righteous raging in the form of “Southern Man.”
  1. Neil Young Greatest Hits playlist. A new music service with official albums, singles, videos, remixes, live performances and more for Android, iOS and desktop.

  2. Feb 1, 2012 · Hi, this is Neil. Link to the NYA info-card for this song with press, documents, manuscripts, photos, videos. Look around NYA for fun and listening! ALL my m...

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    • neilyoungchannel
  3. music.youtube.com › channel › UC6JhadLTf6g6f-ZdeEaAqBQNeil Young - YouTube Music

    Neil Young is a Canadian rock singer-songwriter. In 1960 he began performing as a solo artist in Canada, before moving to California in 1966, where he co-founded the band Buffalo Springfield along with Stephen Stills and Richie Furay, and later joined Crosby, Stills & Nash as a fourth member in 1969. After the breakup of Buffalo Springfield, he continued as a solo artist in 1968 and debuted ...

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