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Songs from the Man Cave!

Lol there's a couple that spring to mind
🙂 OK, not the only, but still the first! (Maybe). I have seen Badly Drawn Boy at Glastonbury but don't remember this song. And Neil still beats the other one by a year...

Moving on to a different album, the full band Crazy Horse version of 'Ride My Llama', recorded around 1975 during the Zuma sessions but not released in this form until recently:

 
I have Harvest,sorry Neil great album if commercial,on CD and Harvest Moon, but will check out more of his 70s catalogue less known
Yes, Harvest is great and I like it too. Same (but a bit less) for Harvest Moon. But they are by no means his best work. I am working on the principle that you can appreciate all styles of music, not just Country Rock.

Recommended albums from the 1970's in chronological order:
After the Goldrush (pre Harvest, young Neil at his best)
On the Beach (difficult and sad/melancholy but also beautiful)
Zuma (the new version of Crazy Horse, the band is back together!)
Rust Never Sleeps (lots of things, but including Neil addressing the emergence of punk in the late 70's)

If you want to go back to the 1960's then 'Everybody Knows This is Nowhere' (1969) is on the same level as the records mentioned above, and features the original Crazy Horse including Danny Whitten on guitar whose death was the reason behind 'The Needle and the Damage Done' off of Harvest.

1975's 'Tonight's the Night' is in some ways the best Neil Young album but is very difficult and raw. It is more or less a live (in the rehearsal space) recording of a wake for his dead friends who overdosed on heroin.

Cortez the Killer (from Zuma)

 
OK, OK, OK. Ill chime in.

 
Hi all,
There's a lesson in how deliver vocal for today's music "stars"
That is musical greatness.

Lead vocal by Levi Stubbs (made to sing at the top of his vocal range), song written, arranged and produced by <"Holland, Dozier, Holland">* and with the Funk Brothers <"Standing in the Shadows of Motown - Wikipedia"> as the session musicians, it doesn't come much better than that.
...... The Funk Brothers produced more hits than the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Beach Boys and Elvis Presley combined.

*Lamont Dozier, who gets a few mentions is this thread <"Songs from the Man Cave!">.

cheers Darrel
 
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