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"Harvest" is a slow country dance tune. [1] [2] It has a slow tempo, and Uncut magazine contributor Graeme Thomson describes it as having a "calm, strangely hypnotic quality."[3] Young is backed on the song by the Stray Gators, with the addition of John Harris on piano.
Harvest is the fourth studio album by Canadian-American musician Neil Young, released on February 1, 1972, by Reprise Records, catalogue number MS 2032. It featured the London Symphony Orchestra on two tracks and vocals by guests David Crosby , Graham Nash , Linda Ronstadt , Stephen Stills , and James Taylor .
Harvest was a Christian band founded in Bloomington, Indiana, by Jerry Williams in 1977. [1] The vision of Harvest was to see 100 million people come to know Jesus Christ personally through the band's music ministry .
The British critic Sam Inglis wrote that if Harvest Moon had been released in 1973, Young would have been accused of artistic stagnation as the song sounded too similar to the songs on his album Harvest, but in 1992 the song was celebrated as the "end of a great musical journey", a refreshing return to Young's musical style of the early 1970s. [8]
[8] Good Harvest was a fake factory. [3] The director, Tom Kingsley explained, "Our intention wasn't to create a hoax – it was just that we felt the satire would be more powerful if it caught people by surprise." [4] It provoked alarmed reactions on social media, notably Twitter, by viewers that had taken the programme to be real.
"We Plough the Fields and Scatter" is a hymn of German origin commonly associated with harvest festival. Written by poet Matthias Claudius, "Wir pflügen und wir streuen" was published in 1782 and set to music in 1800 attributed to Johann A. P. Schulz. [1] It was translated into English by Jane Montgomery Campbell in 1861.
Editor’s choice: The best 5 recipes to try from Quick & Cozy. Along with my beautiful at-home testers, my husband and my 14-month-old, we tested a handful of recipes from “Half-Baked Harvest ...
Alford was a moderate who attempted to keep good relations between non-conformists and the High Church Anglicans in the Church of England: "Come, Ye Thankful People, Come" is commonly found in evangelical hymn books, as are Alford's "Forward be our watchword" and "Ten thousand times ten thousand". [4]