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1993 – Neil Young Unplugged; 1994 – Neil Young & Crazy Horse: The Complex Sessions (directed by Jonathan Demme) 1997 – Year of the Horse (documentary by Jim Jarmusch) 2000 – Neil Young: Silver and Gold; 2000 – Neil Young: Red Rocks Live; 2001 – America: A Tribute to Heroes ("Imagine") 2003 – Live at Vicar Street (concert film by ...
Sleeps with Angels is the 22nd studio album by Canadian-American musician Neil Young, released on August 16, 1994, on Reprise as a double LP and as a single CD. Young's seventh album with Crazy Horse, it was co-produced by long-time collaborator David Briggs who died the following year.
Neil Young is the debut studio album by Canadian/American musician Neil Young following his departure from Buffalo Springfield in 1968, issued on Reprise Records, catalogue number RS 6317. The album was first released on November 12, 1968, in the so-called 'CSG mix'.
The final track is a live version of a Jimmy Reed song that was recorded on an audience microphone at one such small "secret" gig in California, giving it a bootleg feel. [4] [5] The first three songs are in the form of long, structured jams. In Shakey, Young describes the album as "vulnerable and unfinished. I wanted to get one under my belt ...
It should only contain pages that are Neil Young songs or lists of Neil Young songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Neil Young songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Young Neil Young and Crazy Horse 8:20 American Stars 'n Bars, 1977 13. "Comes a Time" Young Neil Young 3:04 Comes a Time, 1978 14. "Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)" Young Neil Young and Crazy Horse 4:59 Rust Never Sleeps, 1979 15. "Rockin' in the Free World" Young Neil Young 4:41 Freedom, 1989 16. "Harvest Moon" Young Neil Young with The Stray ...
Year of the Horse is a live album by Neil Young and Crazy Horse, following the band on their 1996 tour. It accompanies the film of the same name, but has a different track listing from the film. It peaked at number 57 on the Billboard 200 chart, [5] as well as number 36 on the UK Albums Chart. [6]
The songs on Freedom were written over the span of more than a decade. "Too Far Gone" dates to the Zuma era, and would be performed regularly in concert in 1976. "The Ways of Love" was written in the mid-1970s, attempted for Comes a Time, and first performed live during the May 1978 Boarding House concerts for Rust Never Sleeps. [1] "