Neil Young & Crazy Horse (2021)
Director: DHLovelife
Producer: Gary Ward
Animation: @patriclekid – Micah Nelson
Production Company: Lost Planet
In the last decade or two, you generally know whatâs coming when you hit play on a new Neil Young record. You know there will be a few sweet love-struck hymns that sound as if theyâre being played in dusty Old West saloons or around campfires. You anticipate the songs that wax nostalgic about his childhood, and the ones that rage against the destructiveness and stupidity of mankind and the impact on the planet. You await those moments when he turns the volume knob up and makes his guitar sound like itâs sandblasting paint off an old shed
All those elements are in play in Barn, but the crucial difference is the presence of a reconstituted version of Crazy Horse, with recurring Young sideman Nils Lofgren replacing the retired Frank âPonchoâ Sampedro. Young first reconvened his on-again, dismissed-again band for 2010âs underwhelming Colorado, but maybe they all just needed time to warm up. On Barn, cut in just a few days at a log-cabin structure in Colorado, the thunderous and ornery side of Young and the Horse revs up again, and sonically, at least, itâs akin to running into an old friend you havenât seen face to face since the pre-pandemic days.
Read the remainder of the Rolling Stone article written by David Browne here: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/neil-young-and-crazy-horse-more-barn-1266713/