Classic Rock

Neil Young

Harvest (50th Anniversar­y Edition) REPRISE

- Everett True

If you’re a Neil Young fan, you’ll want this.

The 50thannive­rsary reissue of Young’s classic fourth studio album, 1972’s Harvest – magical, mystical, tremulous, mythbuildi­ng – comes complete with the oft-bootlegged BBC In Concert recording from February 1972, plus three Harvest outtakes and two DVDs: the In Concert plus a never-beforeseen two-hour documentar­y on the making of Harvest.

It’s a helluva way to repackage an album that was originally slated for being too derivative of Young’s previous studio album,

After The Gold Rush – too middleof-the-road, too populist.

Harvest was America’s bestsellin­g album of 1972, but it was viewed (not least by Young himself) as too ‘safe’. Perhaps it was because, following the dissolutio­n of CSN&Y, Young had put together a band of country session musicians (the Stray ‘Gators) to help record it.

Listening now, the quality and clarity of the songs shines through as they have shone through these past decades; the chilling simplicity of The Needle And The Damage Done, the farreachin­g future nostalgia of Old Man, even the sweetness of the London Symphony Orchestra on the oft reviled A Man Needs A Maid and There’s A World. Even the South-baiting Alabama, which inspired the monster Lynyrd Skynyrd answer song

Sweet Home Alabama.

Anyone who’s grown up listening to Neil Young can’t help be moved to tears, by his quaver on Out On The Weekend and

Harvest, the questionin­g, yearning guitar on Words… the chart-topping Heart Of Gold, for Christ sake! The whole album is near miraculous­ly flawlessly imperfect, from beginning to end.

Is Harvest Neil Young’s greatest album? One of them, most certainly.

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