Mostly, the album is just a voice and an electric guitar, something that is rarely done. Sure, you can go unplugged with an acoustic and strum away, it'll sound beautiful and delicate, but to plug in and let it roar while you warble echoey, sometimes impenetrable lyrics? That's a new one on me. Oftentimes throughout the album, all you can hear is the lack of anything else, as much as the repeating riffs or the vocals. They're not songs so much as exercises, sonic events. They don't welcome you in.
Sometimes it's vague, sometimes it's heartbreaking. Sometimes he does switch down to the acoustic (as on "Love & War," a self-reflexive meditation on his own songwriting and "Peaceful Valley Boulevard," a largely conventional folk tune about social change and the environment.) Fittingly, some songs like "Hitchhiker" and the unnaturally-moving "Someone's Gonna Rescue You" preach about needing others. Coupled with the rumbling, half-empty sound of the album, underscores how lonely life can seem.
An album like this doesn't need to be loved -- I'm not sure I do, for its difficulty and rawness -- but it does command respect. Unlike a lot of music, but like a lot of art, it doesn't need to be "good" to justify its existence. It's enough that someone, particularly Neil Young, would go and make an album this way, because for whatever reason people forget how multifaceted his music is. In this case, it's as much about the message as how it's being communicated. He's never grown too comfortable with letting people think what a "Neil Young record" should sound like.
Buy this album from iTunes now!
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