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Live At Massey Hall 1971 (Deluxe Version)

Neil Young

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Album Review

The second volume of Neil Young's long-promised, suddenly thriving Archives series is Live at Massey Hall, preserving a 1971 acoustic show at the Toronto venue. Where the first volume captured a portion of Neil's past that wasn't particularly well documented on record — namely, the rampaging original Crazy Horse lineup in its 1970 prime — this second installment may seem to cover familiar ground, at least to the outside observer who may assume that any solo acoustic Young must sound the same. That, of course, is not the case with an artist as mercurial and willful as Young, who inarguably on a roll in 1971, coming off successes with Crazy Horse, Crosby, Stills & Nash, and his own solo debut, 1970's After the Gold Rush. The concert chronicled on Live at Massey Hall finds Neil dipping into these recent successes for material, as he also airs material that would shortly find a home on 1972's Harvest in addition to playing songs that wouldn't surface until later in the decade — "Journey Through the Past" and "Love in Mind" wound up on 1973's Time Fades Away, "See the Sky About to Rain" showed up on 1974's On the Beach — and then there's two songs that never showed up on an official Neil Young album: the stomping hoedown "Dance Dance Dance," which he gave to Crazy Horse, and "Bad Fog of Loneliness," which gets its first release here. This is a remarkably rich set of songs, touching on nearly every aspect of Young's personality, whether it's his sweetness, his sensitivity, his loneliness, or even his often-neglected sense of fun. True, the latter only appears on "Dance Dance Dance," but that comes as a welcome contrast to the stark sadness of "See the Sky About to Rain." But even if "Down by the River" and "Cowgirl in the Sand" retain their intense sense of menace when stripped of the winding guitar workouts of Crazy Horse, this concert isn't dominated by melancholy: it's a warm, giving affair, built upon lovely readings of "Helpless," "Tell Me Why," "Old Man," and an early incarnation of "A Man Needs a Maid" (here played as a medley with "Heart of Gold") that removes the bombast of the Harvest arrangement, revealing the fragile, sweet song that lies underneath. While this concert isn't as freewheeling and rich as Young's studio albums of the early '70s — each record had a distinctive character different from its predecessor, thanks in part to producer David Briggs, arranger/pianist Jack Nitzsche, and Young's supporting musicians, including Crazy Horse or the Stray Gators — it nevertheless captures the essence of Neil Young the singer and songwriter at his artistic peak. That's the reason why this concert has been a legendary bootleg for nearly four decades and why its release 36 years after its recording is so special: it may not add an additional narrative to Neil Young's history, but it adds detail, color, and texture to a familiar chapter of his career, rendering it fresh once more. No wonder Briggs wanted to release this concert as an album between After the Gold Rush and Harvest: it not only holds its own against those classics, it enhances them. [Live at Massey Hall was also released as a two-disc set that contained a CD of the show and a DVD containing the same concert in high fidelity audio.]

Customer Reviews

"Live At Massey Hall"

"Live At Massey Hall" is such a good album. Some of the best Neil Young songs are played on this album, and they are played really well. His humble voice is somewhat haunting, but beautiful. It has a different sound from Neil's other Live albums, but I dig that sound. Good for any Neil Young fan.

If only they awarded 6 stars!

Phenomenal! I went to see Neil Young one winter evening in 1971. What I witnessed was seared into my memory for all time. Neil Young sat alone on the stage, surrounded by his guitar and a piano and mesmerized the crowd with a sprinkling of old songs but, more impressively, he played new songs that would become the album, Harvest. It was stunning to hear those new songs for the first time and instantly love them. When Harvest came out, it was like an old friend returning. This recording catches Neil Young totally on his game. The audio is immediate and crystal clear. You must get your hands on the this album if you are a Neil Young fan.

This is a gotta' have!

Neil Young is my all-time favourite folk-rock singer/musician. This album is a real gem. I'm 56 and listening to Neil just brings tears to an "old man's" eyes. Where did all of the years go if this music is just as fresh and relevant now as it was 35 years ago? The great thing about this package is the fact that there are all of the extras, the videos, and the booklet. You know, I'm not sure what the point was when a fairly well noted artist recently criticised iTunes for requiring her to produce "excusive" content in order to get on the iTunes front page. Sorry about that, the Apple strategy works for me. Without the exclusives, it would probably have taken me weeks to find this gem. I am not naive enough to believe that Apple produces such exclusive content purely out of the goodness of their hearts (the exclusive content sets iTunes apart from its competitors and consequently draws buyers) but, without invited exclusives we would be subjected to a market based approach dictated by those who made the highest bid to get on the front page. Keep it up Apple - bringing such fabulous content right up front to users attention is what it should be all about.

Biography

Born: November 12, 1945 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

After Neil Young left the California folk-rock band Buffalo Springfield in 1968, he slowly established himself as one of the most influential and idiosyncratic singer/songwriters of his generation. Young's body of work ranks second only to Bob Dylan in terms of depth, and he was able to sustain his critical reputation, as well as record sales, for a longer period of time than Dylan, partially because of his willfully perverse work ethic. From the beginning of his solo career in the late '60s through...
Full bio

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