• Home >
  • Buy >
  • CDs >
  • Live At Massey Hall 1971 [Remaster] by Neil Young (CD, Mar-2007, Reprise)

redtagmarket(797,472)99.3%
Brand New
$8.84
+$3.00
Save 36%*
soundcitybeaches(420,820)99.8%
Brand New
$8.95
+$2.99
Save 35%*
terratim(4,790)99.9%
Like New
$9.00
+$2.87
Save 35%*
*Learn more
Live At Massey Hall 1971 [Remaster] by Neil Young (CD, Mar-2007, Reprise) 
Live At Massey Hall 1971 [Remaster] by Neil Young (CD, Mar-2007, Reprise)

 
Live At Massey Hall 1971 [Remaster] by Neil Young (CD, Mar-2007, Reprise)

Artist: Neil Young
Release Date: Mar 2007
Format: CD
Record Label: Reprise
Genre: Rock & Pop, Singer/Songwriter
UPC: 093624332824
Product ID: EPID57965455
Description: Composer: Neil Young. Personnel: Neil Young (guitar). Audio Remasterer: Tim Mulligan. Recording information: Massey Hall, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (01/19/1971). Bob Dylan once famously remarked about hearing Neil Young's "Heart of Gold" ...
Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2009 Muze Inc. All rights reserved.
Preferences
Distance
Please enter valid zipcode.
Please select a valid popular city.
Please enter valid zipcode or select a valid popular city.
Within miles of ZIP
27 results|Group by condition
View as 
Sort by: 
Shipping to USA
Items per page:24 | 48 | 96 | 192
Page 1 of 2
PreviousPrevious1|2NextNext
Go to page
Track Listing
1. On the Way Home
2. Tell Me Why
3. Old Man
4. Journey Through the Past
5. Helpless
6. Love in Mind
7. Man Needs a Maid/Heart of Gold Suite, A
8. Cowgirl in the Sand
9. Don't Let It Bring You Down
10. There's a World
11. Bad Fog of Loneliness
12. Needle and the Damage Done, The
13. Ohio
14. See the Sky About to Rain
15. Down by the River
16. Dance Dance Dance
17. I Am a Child

Details
Playing Time:67 min.
Producer:David Briggs, Neil Young
Distributor:WEA (Distributor)
Recording Type:Live
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:n/a

Album Notes
Composer: Neil Young.
Personnel: Neil Young (guitar).
Audio Remasterer: Tim Mulligan.
Recording information: Massey Hall, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (01/19/1971).
Bob Dylan once famously remarked about hearing Neil Young's "Heart of Gold" on the radio that he knew his days as the man of the hour were numbered. Fact is, Young is the only guy who can even reasonably compete with Dylan for the title of rock's greatest songwriter, and while "Dylan in the '60s" has long been a cliched assessment of an undeniable rock hot streak, so too has become "Neil Young in the '70s." While Dylan has long culled material from his archive, Young has been reluctant to do the same. He's now joining the fray full force with LIVE AT MASSEY HALL 1971--the second live release in an ongoing series from Young's legendarily deep vaults.
The performance comes between the release of AFTER THE GOLDRUSH and HARVEST and hot on the heels of DEJA VU, basically the last time Young's eminently enthralling man-child persona of "I Am A Child" and "Helpless" held sway over the obstinate, electric crank of TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT and RUST NEVER SLEEPS. The set is pure magic. Young still seems humble and shy, a guy who stumbled across an incredible gift for melody but possessed the worldliness to let his awkward talent breathe and warble as it was meant to.
Familiar songs have drastically different readings: the subdued "A Man Needs A Maid" comes off here as more of a cry for help than the potentially chauvinistic enigma on HARVEST and seeps perfectly into "Heart of Gold;" while the normally heavy "Cowgirl in the Sand" and "Ohio" are remade as acoustic dirges. The true treasures, however, are the never-released gems "Bad Fog of Loneliness" and "Dance Dance Dance," a song--with its lyrics of love and rainbows--that foregrounds Young's latent whimsy and sets up "I Am A Child" as the perfect closer for this disc. A must for fans of Young, '70s singer-songwriters, and rock in general, LIVE AT MASSEY HALL 1971 perfectly captures the moment just before Dylan's prophecy came true and Young took over pop music.

Editorial Reviews
The brief but pointed renditions of 'Cowgirl In The Sand' and 'Down By The River' included here have more emotional heft than the amped up, anthemic renditions on the Fillmore set.
No Depression

[Some tracks] benefit from the simplicity of the setting: 'A Man Needs a Maid', for one, comes to life without all of the studio version's orchestral gloop.
Entertainment Weekly

4 stars out of 5 -- [T]here is a striking vigor to Young's high, eccentric singing -- and a surprising nostalgia in the fond references to his homeland in 'Helpless'...
Rolling Stone

See an error? Submit a change request

    About eBay | Announcements | Security Center | Resolution Center | eBay Toolbar | Policies | Government Relations | Site Map | Help
    Copyright © 1995-2009 eBay Inc. All Rights Reserved. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of the eBay User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
    eBay official time

    Error
    We're sorry, but there's been an error.
    Please try again.