| | Crazy Horse / Neil Young Greendale DVD Audio Crazy Horse / Neil Young Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
This DVD-Audio, playable on all DVD-A and DVD-Video players features 176 kHa/24-bit Advanced Resolution Stereo for DVD-Audio players and 48kHz/24-bit LPCM version for playback on any DVD-Video player. Greendale is Young's mid-2003 release in 5.1 surround mix.
Includes a bonus DVD entitled LIVE AT VICAR STREET, which features a solo acoustic concert recording of the GREENDALE album. Personnel: Neil Young (vocals, guitar, harmonica, organ); Billy Talbot (vocals, bass); Ralph Molina (vocals, drums). The Mountainettes: Pegi Young, Nancy Hall, Twink Brewer, Sue Hall. Includes liner notes by Neil Young. GREENDALE 2ND EDITION includes a different DVD and different artwork from the original GREENDALE. This release includes a bonus DVD entitled INSIDE GREENDALE, which contains behind-the-scenes footage of the GREENDALE recording session. Personnel: Neil Young (vocals, guitar, harmonica, organ); Billy Talbot (vocals, bass); Ralph Molina (vocals, drums). The Mountainettes: Pegi Young, Nancy Hall, Twink Brewer, Sue Hall. Includes liner notes by Neil Young. This is a DVD-Audio disc. The DVD-Audio content can only be read by a DVD-Audio player. The Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS audio tracks provided on this disc will play on a standard DVD player. Prior to its release, Greendale received more attention than any Neil Young album in years, but it wasn't positive. Young hauled out his concept album -- about an extended family in a small town called Greendale, and how they're torn apart by a murder -- to unsuspecting audiences, who by and large were not happy about spending anywhere from 55 to 85 dollars to hear a dense convoluted song cycle, complete with rambling narrative from Young, for the first hour of the show and not hearing many hits in the remainder of the set. Early in the summer of 2003, there was a brief blast of stories about this quasi-scandal, setting the stage for the late-summer release of the album: it got Young some needed press, and announced that unlike his last several albums, Young was actually trying this time around. Frankly, he needed a change. Ever since 1994's Sleeps With Angels -- or, if you're less charitable, 1990's Ragged Glory -- he had been drifting, playing with different groups, never quite mustering up enough energy to assemble a consistent set of songs whenever he headed into the studio. Here, the story and the setting give Young a hook for the record, a common theme that he can rally around, and the album benefits so much from that focus that it doesn't really matter that the story is convoluted beyond comprehension; the plot matters so much that it winds up not mattering at all. Close attention and repeated listens offer few rewards to the careful listener, because Young doesn't really say much of anything here, no matter how elaborately he says it. Learning more about the narrative -- whether it's through the simultaneously released DVD of the Young-directed film Greendale, hearing his rambling on-stage between-song narratives, or reading apparent transcriptions of these ramblings in the liner notes -- illuminates the story slightly, even as declarations like "When I was writing this I had no idea what I was doing, so I was just as surprised as you are" emphasize the suspicion that there's not much meaning in the whole enterprise. All this doesn't really matter because Greendale works as a record -- it ebbs and flows and it holds together, playing as a unified whole on a level he hasn't approached since Ragged Glory. As Young says in the liner notes, these are things "you can't tell by listening to the songs, you have to listen to the instrumentals to get this," and while that is meant to apply to one of the many Crazy Horse-fueled meandering improvs, it really applies to the album as a whole since Greendale connects in its overall picture, not the details. Sometimes, such as the quietly eerie and affecting "Bandit," the songs stand apart from the concept, but usually theRolling Stone (12/25/03, p.111) - Included in Rolling Stone's "50 Best Albums of 2003" Rolling Stone (9/4/03, p.142) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...GREENDALE has a tattered, buzzing, demolike sound, rude as any Young has put out..." Rolling Stone (12/25/03, p.111) - Included in Rolling Stone's "50 Best Albums of 2003" Rolling Stone (9/4/03, p.142) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...GREENDALE has a tattered, buzzing, demolike sound, rude as any Young has put out..." Uncut (01/04, pp.84-7) - Ranked #36 in Uncut's "Albums Of The Year 2003" Uncut (9/03, p.116) - 3 stars out of 5 - "...Young has found himself a different kind of voice and some fresh inspiration..." Uncut (01/04, pp.84-7) - Ranked #36 in Uncut's "Albums Of The Year 2003" Uncut (9/03, p.116) - 3 stars out of 5 - "...Young has found himself a different kind of voice and some fresh inspiration..." The Wire (p.49) - "GREENDALE is theatrical protest music, its urgency echoing that of original folk dissidents Woody Guthrie and Phil Ochs." Greendale Music | List Price | $18.98 (You save $2.83) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, DVD Audio, Singer/Songwriter, Country Rock, Rock | | Label | Rhino | | Orig Year | 2003 | | All Time Sales Rank | 20771  | | CD Universe Part number | 6308769 | | Catalog number | 48533 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Mar 16, 2004 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Personnel | Neil Young, Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot, Pegi Young, Nancy Hall, Twink Brewer |
Crazy Horse / Neil Young Greendale Songs | | Greendale CD NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE - GREENDALE: |
| 1. | Falling From Above |
| 2. | Double E |
| 3. | Leave the Driving |
| 4. | Bandit |
| 5. | Carmichael |
| 6. | Devil's Sidewalk |
| 7. | Grandpa's Interview |
| 8. | Bringin' Down Dinner |
| 9. | Sun Green |
| 10. | Be the Rain |
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Personnel: Robert Cray (vocals, guitar, sitar); Jerry Martini (tenor saxophone, tambourine); Cynthia Robinson (trumpet); Jim Pugh (keyboards); Karl Sevareid (acoustic & electric basses); Kevin Hayes (drums); Luis Conte (percussion); Turtle Island String Quartet. Recorded at Studio 880, Oakland, California. Even diehard Robert Cray fans admit that over the course of the last decade, the singer/guitarist/songwriter has crafted albums that are practically interchangeable. Although Cray has created his own niche with a slick but powerful Memphis-styled R&B/soul/blues stew, his sound become repetitious; even though the songs' quality remained way above average. Since leaving Ryko (after two albums), he and keyboardist Jim Pugh -- an increasingly pivotal player in Cray's work -- produced this 13th disc between labels. That provided them the freedom to experiment without corporate intervention. While his "if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it" ethic allowed multiple Grammy wins, Cray clearly wanted to step outside the box he built, resulting in a slightly different direction this time around. Those who enjoy the comfy fit of his previous work have little to fear; there is plenty of the love-lost/found R&B that he's known for. In particular "Lotta Lovin'" is a pleasant ballad that is about as novel as its pedestrian title. "Spare Some Love" likewise treads familiar musical ground although lyrics about finding love before getting old and frail ("I can only hang so long/ if I go another week/ I might have just passed on") show Cray may be feeling his mortality. But the slightly off-kilter Sly & the Family Stone horns from Cynthia Robinson and Jerry Martini ...
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