After the Gold Rush
In his time, Neil Young has played the visionary poet, the starry-eyed romantic, the maniacal garage rocker and more. On 1970\'s *After the Gold Rush*, he combines these personas into a compelling whole. Supported by the rough-hewn prowess of Crazy Horse, Young fills these tracks with wistful melancholy and moral outrage. His lyrics embrace sci-fi scenarios (\"After the Gold Rush\"), narrate cryptic nightmares (\"Don\'t Let It Bring You Down\"), and confront smoldering injustices (\"Southern Man\") with equal conviction. Beyond the big statements are intimately bittersweet moments like \"Only Love Can Break Your Heart\" and \"I Believe in You.\" Young\'s volatile lead guitar and fragile-to-ferocious vocals are caught in peak form. Whether the tune is folk-rooted (\"Tell Me Why\") or rock-fueled (\"When You Dance I Can Really Love\"), Young delivers convincingly. *After the Gold Rush* ranks among his richest and most rewarding works.
Neil Young's first four albums, remastered and gathered together in a pricey (but impressive) box set.
In the 15 months between the release of Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere and After the Gold Rush, Neil Young issued a series of recordings in different styles that could have prepared his listeners for the differences between the two LPs.
For people who can't stand Neil Young, who find his voice grating, his guitar screechy and disjointed, After the Gold Rush is the album they should most definitely avoid.