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  • Looking for Neil Young biography ? click here
  • Neil Young Album List
  • 1 A Dream That Can Last Lyrics
  • 2 Ain'T It The Truth Lyrics
  • 3 Amber Jean Lyrics
  • 4 American Dream Lyrics
  • 5 Around The World Lyrics
  • 6 Back To The Country Lyrics
  • 7 Be With You Lyrics
  • 8 Beautiful Bluebird Lyrics
  • 9 Big Green Country Lyrics
  • 10 Big Parade Lyrics
  • 11 Big Room Lyrics
  • 12 Big Time Lyrics
  • 13 Born To Run Lyrics
  • 14 Box Car Lyrics
  • 15 Bright Sunny Day Lyrics
  • 16 Campaigner Lyrics
  • 17 Change Your Mind Lyrics
  • 18 Changin' Highways Lyrics
  • 19 Citizen Kane Jr. Blues Lyrics
  • 20 Color By Numbers Lyrics
  • 21 Comes A Time Lyrics
  • 22 Country Girl (Medley) Lyrics
  • 23 Country Home Lyrics
  • 24 Cry, Cry, Cry Lyrics
  • 25 Dance, Dance, Dance Lyrics
  • 26 Day And Night We Walk These Aisles Lyrics
  • 27 Deep Forbidden Lake Lyrics
  • 28 Doghouse Lyrics
  • 29 Don'T Be Denied Lyrics
  • 30 Don'T Cry Lyrics
  • 31 Don'T Cry No Tears Lyrics
  • 32 Don'T Let It Bring You Down Lyrics
  • 33 Don'T Say You Win, Don'T Say You Lose Lyrics
  • 34 Don'T Spook The Horse Lyrics
  • 35 Don'T Take Your Love Away From Me Lyrics
  • 36 Down By The River Lyrics
  • 37 Down Down Down Lyrics
  • 38 Dream Machine Lyrics
  • 39 Drivin' Thunder Lyrics
  • 40 Everybody I Love You Lyrics
  • 41 Everybody'S Alone Lyrics
  • 42 Extra, Extra Lyrics
  • 43 Feel Your Love Lyrics
  • 44 Flying On The Ground (Is Wrong) Lyrics
  • 45 Fontainebleau Lyrics
  • 46 Fool For Your Love Lyrics
  • 47 Friend Of Mine Lyrics
  • 48 Gateway Of Love Lyrics
  • 49 Get Back On It Lyrics
  • 50 Give Me Strength Lyrics
  • 51 God'S Perfect Plan Lyrics
  • 52 Good Phone Lyrics
  • 53 Goodbye Dick Lyrics
  • 54 Grey Riders Lyrics
  • 55 Guilty Train Lyrics
  • 56 Hawaiian Sunrise Lyrics
  • 57 Hello Mr. Soul Lyrics
  • 58 Here We Are In The Years Lyrics
  • 59 Hey Hey Lyrics
  • 60 Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black) Lyrics
  • 61 High Heel Shoes Lyrics
  • 62 High School Graduation Lyrics
  • 63 Hold On To Your Love Lyrics
  • 64 I Ain'T Got The Blues Lyrics
  • 65 I Am A Child Lyrics
  • 66 I Believe In You Lyrics
  • 67 I'M Your Kind Of Guy Lyrics
  • 68 I'Ve Been Waiting For You Lyrics
  • 69 If I Could Have Her Tonight Lyrics
  • 70 If You Got Love Lyrics
  • 71 Interstate Lyrics
  • 72 It Might Have Been Lyrics
  • 73 It'S So Hard To Wait Lyrics
  • 74 Johnny Lyrics
  • 75 Kansas Lyrics
  • 76 Keep The Homefires Burning Lyrics
  • 77 L.A. Lyrics
  • 78 Lady Wingshot Lyrics
  • 79 Last Dance Lyrics
  • 80 Leavin' The Top 40 Behind Lyrics
  • 81 Let Your Fingers Do The Walking Lyrics
  • 82 Life In The City Lyrics
  • 83 Light Of Love Lyrics
  • 84 Live To Ride Lyrics
  • 85 Long Walk Home Lyrics
  • 86 Look Out For My Love Lyrics
  • 87 Looking Forward Lyrics
  • 88 Love And Only Love Lyrics
  • 89 Love Art Blues Lyrics
  • 90 Love Hotel Lyrics
  • 91 Love In Mind Lyrics
  • 92 Love Is A Rose Lyrics
  • 93 Love To Burn Lyrics
  • 94 Maui Mama Lyrics
  • 95 Midnight On The Bay Lyrics
  • 96 Mother Earth (Natural Anthem) Lyrics
  • 97 Mr. Soul Lyrics
  • 98 My Boy Lyrics
  • 99 My Heart Lyrics
  • 100 My My, Hey Hey (Out Of The Blue) Lyrics
  • 101 New Mama Lyrics
  • 102 No More Lyrics
  • 103 No One Seems To Know Lyrics
  • 104 Nothing Is Perfect Lyrics
  • 105 Nowadays Clancy Can'T Even Sing Lyrics
  • 106 Oh Mother Earth Lyrics
  • 107 Old Hillbilly Band Lyrics
  • 108 Old King Lyrics
  • 109 On The Way Home Lyrics
  • 110 Once An Angel Lyrics
  • 111 Once I Was In Love Lyrics
  • 112 One More Sign Lyrics
  • 113 One Of These Days Lyrics
  • 114 One Thing Lyrics
  • 115 Only Love Can Break Your Heart Lyrics
  • 116 Open Road Lyrics
  • 117 Out Of My Mind Lyrics
  • 118 Out Of The Blue Lyrics
  • 119 People On The Street Lyrics
  • 120 Philadelphia Lyrics
  • 121 Pushed It Over The End Lyrics
  • 122 Railroad Town Lyrics
  • 123 Red Sun Lyrics
  • 124 Rent Is Always Due Lyrics
  • 125 Road Of Plenty Lyrics
  • 126 Rock Rock Rock Lyrics
  • 127 Round And Round And Round Lyrics
  • 128 Sad Movies Lyrics
  • 129 Sea Of Madness Lyrics
  • 130 See The Sky About To Rain Lyrics
  • 131 Sell Out Lyrics
  • 132 Separate Ways Lyrics
  • 133 Sharpshooter Lyrics
  • 134 Slowpoke Lyrics
  • 135 Something More Tame Lyrics
  • 136 Song Of Love Lyrics
  • 137 Song X Lyrics
  • 138 Soul Of A Woman Lyrics
  • 139 Spud Blues Lyrics
  • 140 Sweet Joni Lyrics
  • 141 Tell Me Why Lyrics
  • 142 This Note'S For You Lyrics
  • 143 This Old House Lyrics
  • 144 This Town Lyrics
  • 145 Till The Morning Comes Lyrics
  • 146 Tonight'S The Night Lyrics
  • 147 Too Far Gone Lyrics
  • 148 Too Lonely Lyrics
  • 149 Touch The Night Lyrics
  • 150 Traces Lyrics
  • 151 Train Of Love Lyrics
  • 152 Turbine Lyrics
  • 153 Two Old Friends Lyrics
  • 154 Walk On Lyrics
  • 155 Walking After Midnight Lyrics
  • 156 War Of Man Lyrics
  • 157 War Song Lyrics
  • 158 We'Re Gonna Rock Forever Lyrics
  • 159 Welcome To The Big Room Lyrics
  • 160 What Did You Do To My Life? Lyrics
  • 161 Whatever Happened To Saturday Night Lyrics
  • 162 When I Hold You In My Arms Lyrics
  • 163 White Line Lyrics
  • 164 Will To Love Lyrics
  • 165 You And Me Lyrics
  • 166 You'Re My Girl Lyrics

  • IN the course of his thirty-year career as a recording artist, Neil Young has experienced as many extreme low points of critical and commercial success as he has high, but without a doubt, he is one of the most important rock composers and performers North America can claim. His signature raw nasal tone, shrill guitar playing, highly personal lyric-writing, and hippie-cowboy loner stance have helped shape rock and roll as it has advanced from adolescence into maturity. Through his experimentation with every genre, from folk to heavy metal to rockabilly to techno, Young has created a sound and feel uniquely his own.

    Born the son of Edna "Rassy" Young, a former quiz show panelist on Canadian Television, and Scott Young, a sportswriter for the Toronto Sun, Young's first musical inklings were encouraged when his father gave him a ukulele for Christmas in 1958. His parents split up not too long after that, and in 1960, Young moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba, with his mother. A rather apathetic student, he was far more interested in playing the banjo and guitar than turning his mind to his studies, and he eventually dropped out of high school to concentrate his attention on the band he had formed, Neil Young & the Squires.

    Mrs. Young supported her son's musical endeavors, and through her aggressive booking, helped the Squires gain a fair amount of regional notoriety. Drawing influence from Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the Ventures, and the Shadows, the band evolved from an instrumental group to a folk-rock band, and began performing in clubs around the area between 1963 and 1965.

    After the Squires disbanded in the summer of 1965, Young recorded some demos for Elektra Records, but failed to secure a contract. He spent the rest of the year playing the Toronto coffeehouse circuit, both as a solo artist and with the Mynah Birds, a group fronted by future soul-music star and "Super Freak," Rick James. On the circuit, Young met a number of folk artists, including Joni Mitchell, guitarist Richie Furay, and Stephen Stills, who was then playing with his own folk band, the Company.

    When the Mynah Birds disbanded after recording one album, Young and Mynah Birds bassist Bruce Palmer moved to the promised land of L.A., where they hooked up with Stills, Furay, and drummer Dewey Martin to form the seminal folk-rock band the Buffalo Springfield. Stills' counterculture anthem "For What It's Worth" earned the band nationwide fame, but it was Young who drew the most attention for his idiosyncratic style and high-energy guitar playing. In their two-year existence, the band recorded three successful albums and a retrospective (Buffalo Springfield, Buffalo Springfield Again, Last Time Around, and The Best of the Buffalo Springfield) for Atco before splintering in 1968.

    Following the demise of the band, Young signed a solo deal with Reprise Records, and released a poorly received eponymous debut in January of 1969. His second solo effort, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, recorded in his own studio setup at his Topanga, California, home with his new backing band Crazy Horse (the band's original lineup included lead guitarist Danny Whitten, bassist Billy Talbot, drummer Ralph Molina, and pianist-producer-arranger Jack Nitzsche), became a major hit and went platinum on the strength of songs like "Cinnamon Girl," "Cowgirl in the Sand," and "Down by the River." With the understanding that he could come and go as he pleased, Young elected to join David Crosby, Steven Stills, and Graham Nash's supergroup in the summer of 1969, just in time to appear at the historic Woodstock Festival.

    Young eventually recorded three albums as part of Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young: 1970's Deja Vu, 1971's live 4-Way Street, and 1988's American Dream. Hailed as "quite possibly the most important new poet since Bob Dylan," Young's notable songwriting contributions to the collective included "Helpless," "Country Girl," and "Ohio." In Young's estimation, the latter song, written in response to the tragic shooting deaths of four students at an anti-Vietnam rally at Kent State University in May of 1970, was his best C.S.N. & Y. cut.

    Young's solo career was simultaneously soaring, as 1970's After the Gold Rush and 1972's Harvest both became bestsellers and were immediately recognized as classics. Harvest, which was recorded in Nashville with the Stray Gators and crossover pop-rock stars Linda Ronstadt and James Taylor, was the biggest-selling album of 1972, and the cut "Heart of Gold" remains the most successful single of Young's career. Between 1972 and 1977, Young released a sequence of six introspective albums of impressive scope (Journey Through the Past, Time Fades Away, On the Beach, Tonight's the Night, Zuma, and American Stars 'n Bars); haunting loss permeated many of his songs during this prolific period, most obviously because of the devastating drug-related deaths of Crazy Horse guitarist Danny Whitten and roadie Bruce Berry.

    In 1977, the release of a double-album retrospective, Decade, attested to Young's importance in rock history. He closed the seventies on a peak with the lighthearted, philosophical Comes a Time, and a half-acoustic, half-electric album, Rust Never Sleeps, so titled at the suggestion of the members of the new-wave group Devo, who thought the Rustoleum slogan, "Rust never sleeps," made a catchy-sounding title. A rollicking live album, Live Rust, and the generally poorly received concert film Rust Never Sleeps resulted from the 1978 tour for the album.

    Depending on one's perspective, Young either lost focus in the early- to mid-eighties or deserves credit as an ambitious explorer. Jumping wildly between genres, he opened the decade with the country-tinged Hawks & Doves, moved into Kraftwerk-like electronic sounds with Trans and retro-rockabilly on Everybody's Rockin', but still tore it up with Crazy Horse on Re-act-or and on 1987's Life. The next year, Young headed in a horn-driven, soulful direction with a new band, the Bluenotes, on This Note's for You. The title track won MTV's Video of the Year award, despite the fact that the clip was banned by the network
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