Colorado
Young’s fourth album of the century with his most famous band is simple and heartfelt, gritty and tender.
He's been banging on about climate change for more than three decades and – well – maybe we should have listened to Neil Young
On their first record in seven years, Neil Young and Crazy Horse make the kind of cranky downhome grunge we've come to expect and love.
In his 73rd year, Young proves he has lost none of his outrage and passion, while Meredith’s genre defiance is a source of constant surprise and intrigue
At a time when chaos and unpredictability hold sway in so much of the world, it's hard to fault anyone for wishing for something stable and familiar, even from someone as chronically unpredictable as Neil Young.
In 1979, Neil Young gave us two options: Burn out or fade away. Fast forward 40 years and we're learning there was a third option: Get the o...
The irrepressible Neil Young adds to his ever-growing catalog of albums with "Colorado." Recorded with Crazy Horse (Nils Lofgren subs in for the retired Frank Sampedro), it's their first trip out of the barn since 2012's "Psychedelic Pill."
‘Colorado’ is Neil Young’s 39th album. Let’s just let that sink in for a moment. He’s reached that point in his career where
The album’s direst moments are still refreshing because they find Young doing whatever the hell he wants to.
Deeply personal ballads and the incredible potency of his band elevate Young’s 39th album above his painfully on-the-nose political messaging
Some might say I’m an old white guy,” Neil Young drawls over a grungy guitar riff.
Some of the veteran musician’s old crew reunite for songs with real emotional power