A Treasure
Click here to listen to Neil Young and the International Harvesters’ A Treasure
Neil Young changed guises at a furious pace in the early Eighties. In 1982, he was making vocoder-slathered New Wave; the following year, he staged a rockabilly revival. Then, in 1984, Young shifted gears toward classic country. Touring with the International Harvesters, an eight-piece group of Nashville pros, Young performed both countryfied versions of his classics and cuts from his 1985 album Old Ways. He also debuted five brand-new tracks that had been shelved until this live album, which cherry-picks from the Harvesters’ gigs. “Amber Jean” is a lovely tribute to his newborn daughter, while “Grey Riders” is a lost epic that suggests Crazy Horse with a twang infusion. The oldies shine too: “Flying on the Ground Is Wrong” sounds as if it originated with the Flying Burrito Brothers instead of Buffalo Springfield.
The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time: Neil Young