Long May You Run (Remastered) Neil Young

Album info

Album-Release:
1976

HRA-Release:
21.06.2019

Label: Reprise

Genre: Folk

Subgenre: Folk Rock

Artist: Neil Young

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Long May You Run03:55
  • 2Make Love to You05:10
  • 3Midnight on the Bay04:00
  • 4Black Coral04:41
  • 5Ocean Girl03:16
  • 6Let It Shine04:44
  • 712/8 Blues (All the Same)03:41
  • 8Fontainebleau03:58
  • 9Guardian Angel05:41
  • Total Runtime39:06

Info for Long May You Run (Remastered)



Remastered from the original Analog recordings. Long May You Run is not a Neil Young solo album. It is credited to "The Stills-Young Band," which is to say, Stephen Stills and his band with Young added, and the two divide up the songwriting and lead vocals, five for Young, four for Stills. The pairing, though it proved short-lived and had, in fact, ended before this album was released, must have seemed commercially logical. Like Young, Stills had seen his record sales decline after a successful period following the 1970 breakup of CSNY. So had erstwhile partners David Crosby and Graham Nash, but they had returned to Top Ten, gold-selling status in the fall of 1975 with their Wind on the Water duo album.

Why couldn't Stills and Young do the same thing? Maybe they could have (and, actually, this was the first gold album for either in two years) if they had made a better record together. Young's songs were pleasant newly written throwaways with the exception of the title track, a trunk song he had written as a tribute to an old car, it’s a brilliant performance and would have fit any of his solo albums at the time. “Fontainebleau” is just a cut below and features some creative guitar work and an odd beat. His other three songs are okay which is faint praise. “Let It Shine” is amusing if nothing else, “Midnight On The Bay” does have some nice guitar work from Stephen Stills. In the other hand, Stills' compositions seemed more seriously intended, but still were not substantial. The playing, largely handled by the professional sessionman types in Stills' band, was far smoother than what one was accustomed to in a Young album.

Neil Young, guitars, piano, harmonica, string synthesizer, vocals
Stephen Stills, guitars, pianos, vocals
Joe Lala, percussion, background vocals
Jerry Aiello, organ, piano
George "Chocolate" Perry, bass, background vocals

Digitally remastered

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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