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Neil Young & Crazy Horse: Neil Young, Poncho Sampedro (vocals, guitar); Billy Talbot (vocals, bass); Ralph Molina (vocals, drums, percussion). All tracks have been digitally mastered using HDCD technology.
The first thing you hear on this two-disc live album is Young's voice wryly asserting that "It all sounds the same...It's all one song." While this self-effacing assessment of the Young/Crazy Horse oeuvre echoes the feeling of many critics, on YEAR OF THE HORSE, recorded in several cities during the band's 1996 world tour, nothing could be further from the truth. Young's caveman-on-acid guitar solos and the primal fury of Crazy Horse can still topple mountains. And Young's choice of material leans more toward obscure gems like "When Your Lonely Heart Breaks" from the under-rated LIFE than played-out hits like "Cinnamon Girl." While they never sound like anything other than Crazy Horse, the band switches easily from an acoustic, bluesy "Mr. Soul" to the loping lament of "Big Time" from 1996's BROKEN ARROW. Within the ostensibly narrow confines of the Crazy Horse palette there exists an entire universe of colors, and on YEAR OF THE HORSE, Young and company explore every shade with all the spirit and energy of a band in their prime. notes, cduniverse
disc one
1. When You Dance You Can Really Love
2. Barstool Blues
3. When Your Lonely Heart Breaks
4. Mr. Soul
5. Big Time
6. Pocahontas
7. Human Highway
disc two
1. Slip Away
2. Scattered (Let's Think About Livin')
3. Danger Bird
4. Prisoners
5. Sedan Delivery
As Neil Young's second double live album of the '90s, Year of the Horse could seem a little redundant to anyone who isn't a die-hard fan. After all, Weld was useful since it appeared ten years after the release of Live Rust, Young & Crazy Horse's first double live album, and it captured them at their peak. Year of the Horse, however, appeared merely five years after Weld, and in between those two records, Young had only released two albums' worth of material that suited these high-voltage, improvised performances. These factors didn't matter since Young decided to allow Jim Jarmusch to make a film documentary about his 1996 tour, and Year of the Horse is the album that was released to coincide with the movie. (It's not really a soundtrack, since these performances don't appear in the film.)