Current:Home > NewsMusic Review: Neil Young caught in his 1970s prime with yet another ‘lost’ album, ‘Chrome Dreams’ -AssetPath
Music Review: Neil Young caught in his 1970s prime with yet another ‘lost’ album, ‘Chrome Dreams’
View
Date:2025-04-13 15:38:58
“Chrome Dreams,” Neil Young (Reprise Records)
Neil Young is captured in his mid-1970s prime with “Chrome Dreams,” yet another “lost” — or “unreleased” — album officially seeing the light of day as Young originally envisioned nearly half a century ago.
Young, 77, has been delving into his vast archive in recent years to release live albums and studio recordings that were previously slated for release, but for one reason or another never got out.
The long-bootlegged collection of 12 songs, all recorded between 1974 and 1976 and first compiled for a release in 1977, gained legendary status as it sat in the vault. Young even managed to release a titular sequel, “Chrome Dreams II” in 2007, before he got around to putting out the original.
It’s impossible 46 years later to know how “Chrome Dreams” would have altered the Neil Young career narrative had it been released when planned. Certainly, “Chrome Dreams” is a stunning collection, highlighted by beloved Young songs “Powderfinger,”“Pocahontas” and “Like a Hurricane.”
In fact, all of the songs on the album have already been released in one version or another, just not in this 1977 sequence.
There are variations here being heard for the first time, but for diehard fans hoping to hear radically different versions of the songs they’ve long been familiar with, “Chrome Dreams” doesn’t offer much.
“Pocahontas” is the same version that was released in 1979 on “Rust Never Sleeps,” just minus the overdubs. “Like a Hurricane” is the same version released in 1977 on “American Stars ’n Bars.” The version of “Powderfinger” on “Chrome Dreams” is the original, which was previously released in 2017. Young first released another version of the song in 1979 on “Rust Never Sleeps.”
Two other tracks, “Sedan Delivery” and “Hold Back the Tears,” have lyrics not included in the later released versions.
While there’s not a lot that’s new, “Chrome Dreams” succeeds in bringing together yet another tantalizing lost “what if” release from Young’s vast catalog.
___
For more AP music reviews, go to: https://apnews.com/hub/music-reviews
veryGood! (87)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Charles M. Blow on reversing the Great Migration
- March 2023 in photos: USA TODAY's most memorable images
- Horoscopes Today, December 17, 2023
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Congo’s elections face enormous logistical problems sparking concerns about the vote’s credibility
- Arkansas sheriff facing obstruction, concealment charges ordered to give up law enforcement duties
- Alex Jones proposes $55 million legal debt settlement to Sandy Hook families
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- If a picture is worth a thousand words, these are worth a few extra: 2023's best photos
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- More than 300 rescued from floodwaters in northeast Australia
- Giving gifts boosts happiness, research shows. So why do we feel frazzled?
- Congo’s elections face enormous logistical problems sparking concerns about the vote’s credibility
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Love it or hate it, self-checkout is here to stay. But it’s going through a reckoning
- A 4-year-old went fishing on Lake Michigan and found an 152-year-old shipwreck
- 3 injured, suspect dead in shooting on Austin's crowded downtown 6th Street
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Fantasy football winners, losers from Week 15: WRs Terry McLaurin, Josh Palmer bounce back
Cowboys, Eagles clinch NFL playoff spots in Week 15 thanks to help from others
Russian opposition leader Navalny fails to appear in court as allies search for him in prison system
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
December 2023 in photos: USA TODAY's most memorable images
$15M settlement reached with families of 3 killed in Michigan State shooting
People are leaving some neighborhoods because of floods, a new study finds