



Everyday intimacies like this trip off Holter's tongue throughout Wilderness, and are made to feel all the more apparent thanks to the record's widescreen sonic sensibilities. Later, there's a nod to a dynamic that anyone who's ever been in a relationship will recognize: I'll hand him his coat/ it's exactly where he left it long ago. It leaps out from the page, so to speak, partly because it appeals directly to the senses-jiggling a memory of the taste of alcohol-based scents mixed with gas fumes hitting the back of the throat-but also because it's a surprisingly contemporary evocation for an artist who has long dredged the distant past for literary artifacts to weave stories around. You can pick up classic Neil Young albums on vinyl in the BV shop.There's a line on Julia Holter's new album, Have You In My Wilderness, that goes all these perfumes in the parking lot (from lead single "Feel You").

Meanwhile, Neil Young & Crazy Horse's new album, Barn, is out next week, and back in October he released Carnegie Hall 1970, which is the first in his Bootleg series. Watch Neil play "The Last of His Kind" at Farm Aid '87 below. "Research is still being done to completely verify the recording history," Neil says in conclusion. "It is a beautiful listen, created over a short period of time, that influenced 4 albums," Neil writes. will appear on the third volume of his NYA box set series, but may see the light of day before that as their own Archive album. Young notes that these originals - which ended up in their final master versions on the albums Freedom, American Dream, Psychedelic Pill and Harvest Moon. Several completely new and unheard verses are found in the songs of this collection." We cannot completely be sure of the engineer who was recording these and I don't remember the sessions at all! Every song in the collection was with acoustic guitar or piano and simple added embellishments - sketches of arrangements we made to preserve the initial ideas."Īccording to Neil, the versions of "The Last of His Kind," "For the Love of Man," "American Dream," "Name of Love," "Someday," "One of These Days," "Hangin' on a Limb" and "Wrecking Ball" feature lyrics that are "significantly different from their subsequent master album releases in many cases. Neil goes on to say: "This group of songs had just been written and put down in the studio at Broken Arrow (as far as we can figure).
