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Prairie Wind [Bonus DVD]
Prairie Wind [Bonus DVD]
Neil Young / CD / 2005
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Artist
Neil Young
Format
CD
Genre
Rock
Label Name
Reprise
Producer
Neil Young, Ben Keith
Release Date
2004
Song List
1: The Painter (4:36)
2: No Wonder (5:45)
3: Fallin' Off the Face of the Earth (3:35)
4: Far from Home (3:47)
5: It's a Dream (6:31)
6: Prairie Wind (7:34)
7: Here for You (4:32)
8: This Old Guitar (5:32)
9: He Was the King (6:08)
10: When God Made Me (4:05)
Style.Categories
Soft Rock, Singer/Songwriter, Country-Rock
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Since
Prairie Wind
is a return to the soft, lush
country-rock
sound of
Harvest
; since
Neil Young
suffered a brain aneurysm during its recording; since it finds the singer/songwriter reflecting on life and family in the wake of his father's death; and since it's his most cohesive album in a decade, it would seem that all these factors add up to a latter-day masterpiece for
Young
, but that's not quite the case.
Prairie Wind
manages to be less than the sum of its parts and the problem isn't a lack of good songs (although it does have a few more clunkers than it should) or a botched concept.
Young
's decision to revive the
country-rock
that brought him his greatest popularity never feels like a cynical move -- the music is too warm, comfortable, and friendly to feel like anything but
Neil
playing to his strengths. However, since he cut this in Nashville with a bunch of studio pros including legendary keyboardist
Spooner Oldham
, it feels just a tad slicker than perhaps it should, since the smooth sound inadvertently highlights the sentimentality of the project. It's hard to begrudge
Young
if he wants to indulge in rose-colored memories -- a brush with death coupled with a loss of a parent tends to bring out sentimentality -- but such backward-gazing songs as
"Far from Home"
feel just a hair too close to trite, and the easy-rolling nature of the record doesn't lend them much gravity. There a few other songs that tend toward too close to the simplistic, whether it's the specific invocations of 9/11 and
Chris Rock
on
"No Wonder"
or the supremely silly
Elvis
salute
"He Was the King,"
which are just enough to undermine the flow of the album, even if they fit into the general autumnal, reflective mood of the record. But since they do fit the overall feel of the album, and since they're better, even with their flaws, than the best songs on, say,
Silver & Gold
or
Broken Arrow
or
Are You Passionate?
, they help elevate the whole of
Prairie Wind
, particularly because there are some genuinely strong
Young
songs here: the moody opener
"The Painter,"
the gently sighing
"Fallin' off the Face of the Earth,"
the ethereal
"It's a Dream,"
the sweet, laid-back
"Here for Your,"
the understated
"This Old Guitar"
(there's also the sweeping
"When God Made Me,"
recorded complete with a
gospel
chorus, one that will either strike a listener as moving or maudlin -- a latter-day
"A Man Needs a Maid,"
only not as strong). This set of songs does indeed make
Prairie Wind
a better album than anything
Young
has released in the past decade, which means that it's easy to overrate it. For despite all of its strengths, neither the recording nor the songs are as memorable or as fully realized as his late-'80s/early-'90s comeback records --
Freedom
,
Ragged Glory
, and
Harvest Moon
-- let alone his classic '70s work. Nevertheless, it's the closest
Young
has come to making a record that could hold its own with those albums in well over a decade, which means it's worthwhile even if it's never quite as great as it seems like it could have been. [
Prairie Wind
was also released in an edition with a bonus DVD, which not only contains the entire album in high-resolution audio, but has a film featuring each song being recorded in the studio. As each song plays, the video cuts back and forth between different shots of the musicians laying down their tracks, or there are several images onscreen at once (which means that
Neil
can at times be seen twice, once playing acoustic and singing, the other singing backup harmonies or playing electric guitars. As bonus DVD features go, this is one of the more intriguing ones to come along in a while.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
$19.29
List Price:
$24.98
Save: $5.69 (23%)
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