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Album Description Prairie Wind is quintessential Neil Young, a masterpiece that completes the trilogy of his best-selling albums Harvest and Harvest Moon-direct yet poetic, country and folk yet rock. Recorded in Nashville, and with longtime collaborators, Prairie Wind is a moving series of songs reflecting Young's journey through life. |
Neil Young's 2005 release "Prairie Wind" is a strong album, and had it not been because the album loses some of its clarity towards the end I might have to have ranked it up among great works such as "After the Gold Rush" and "Harvest." There is as soft melodic country touch to many of the songs, and many actually have a similar sound to his classic 1970's albums. Lyrically, though, there has been a change and the themes of his songs are generally darker.
The opening song "The Painter" is a very beautiful composition that makes you look out for your guitar to figure out how it goes. This is surely a classic. "No Wonder" is great too, maybe more traditional in its structure, but with lyrics that give rise for reflection.
"Falling Off The Face Of The Earth" has a great verse line - reminds me a lot about Lou Reed. The falsetto part does not quite live up to the verse, but generally it's a great song too, with nice tasteful organ in the background.
"Far From Home" and "It's Dream" is both sad songs - the first a bluesy tune with both horns, harmonica and slide guitar, whereas the second is a slow waltzy song. There is also some nostalgia in the lyrics of the title-track "Prarie Wind" - one of the few blues-rockers on the album, the longest track, too. "Here For You" is a melodic ballad which in spite of steel guitar and strings has a naked honesty to it.
"This Old Guitar" is quite nice, but best remembered for the guest-appearance of Emmylou Harris. "He was the King" has a live unplugged feel to it, and the closing track "When God Made Me" is a gospel kind of tune. Without being weak are the last numbers of the album make to lose a little strength, and my favorites are among those first seven.
2010-03-23 Overrated but Decent
2005's Prairie Wind was widely praised by critics and received two Grammy nominations but immediately struck me and some other hard-cores as minor and overrated. Critics were undoubtedly glad that Young dropped the experimentation of his prior few albums for an ostensible return to his strengths but clearly let enthusiasm run wild. Prairie was touted as a country rock entry like Harvest and Harvest Moon but has little in common with them; its closest antecedent is the somewhat similar Comes a Time, but it is essentially unique. This is good in that it is in Young's lower midrange; he released many better albums before it and has since released more. Those not usually keen on him or who like only his more commercial side may find it worthwhile, but otherwise only hard-cores should bother.
It does resemble the Harvests in being acoustic; only "No Wonder" has electric guitar. However, it is only marginally country; the steel guitar that dominated them has a small role, and there is no banjo or other country trappings. Most songs have simple acoustic riffs, and there are quite a few keyboards plus a few horns. "No Wonder" aside, the songs have a very mellow, laid-back feel that is very calming. This is definitely easy listening and very far from Crazy Horse; it could even be pleasant background music. The real twist is newly prominent backing vocals, primarily by Young's wife Pegi. Young himself also tries out new vocal stylings, notably an increased falsetto.
The real problem is that Prairie takes the simplicity motif too far. It is refreshing and charming at first but soon grows thin; the songs simply lack substance, and a few are downright trite. There is a distinct lack of the solos that are always highlights of Young's music, and the simple melodies are not enough to carry the songs. Many long-time Young musicians - Ben Keith, Spooner Oldham, etc. - are here and play as well as ever, but he gives them very little. The vocals are also a downside. Young's signature emotion is here in full force, but his new falsetto is so bad as to be near-embarrassing; I say this as a major fan who has followed Young for years and owns many, many releases. He presumably uses it to achieve greater intimacy, but all it really does is annoy; he has thankfully not returned to it, perhaps belatedly realizing the error. His vocals are thankfully very strong otherwise; he has lost very little of his voice, especially compared to other singers his age, and his phrasing is as good as ever. This is reassuring but makes the falsetto all the more regrettable. Even worse are the backing vocals; a major part of nearly every song, they are extremely distracting and a major detraction. Young is known for having excellent backing vocals, but these are unprecedentedly bad; they clash greatly with his voice and are terrible in themselves. Pegi is unfortunately the main problem. Anyone who knows anything about Young knows how great their relationship is, and she is admirable in many ways besides being a frequent muse, but she simply cannot sing. He is apparently unable to see this, having used her prominently ever since - a truly disturbing development of which this is the first major instance. Most of the other singers are not much better.
Another major problem is the words. Young is one of the all-time great lyricists, but one would not know it from this; these are not only among his worst lyrics but would not be good for anyone. They are cliché-ridden, sentimental in the worst way, and simply trite; many seem like rough drafts. It is as if Young did not try to write good lyrics or dashed them off with little thought; he often does not even bother to rhyme. Worse yet, many songs are very repetitive, making already weak lyrics seem even worse. This is all the more sad in that the subject matter is greatly interesting. Young was diagnosed with a life-threatening aneurysm shortly before writing the songs, lost his father, and had his youngest daughter leave for college. All this turns up in the songs, which deal with both childhood and mortality and are laced with autobiographical references. Young is one of the most intensely personal of artists, and such material would presumably make a good album, but this simply fails to hold up. He may have been too close to the events to write of them meaningfully or judge the material objectively. No one can begrudge him turning anguish into art - he has practically made a career of it after all -, but it would have been better not to release work of such middling quality.
There are two major exceptions ("No Wonder" and "When God Made Me"), excellent songs with every mark of a Young classic. The former is the only uptempo cut, mixing electric power chords with energetic acoustic strumming. It also has some of Young's most interesting lyrics; written in his signature stream-of-consciousness style, it encompasses everything from his childhood to a 9/11 telethon to hunting ethics. At once personal, political, and surreal, it is a song only Young could write and all the better for it, though backing vocals undercut even it. On that note, "When" has Prairie's only effective backing vocals courtesy of the legendary Fisk University Jubilee Choir. A gospel song with a Young twist, it has beautiful piano, thought-provoking words that only he could pen, and a truly heartfelt vocal. Diehards will want the album just for these cuts, and everyone else should at least download them.
"This Old Guitar" is the next best - a slight but enjoyable song with characteristically quirky humor. Emmylou Harris' backing vocals will not convince her detractors, but they are better than nearly all others on the album. "It's a Dream" has potential; the piano is beautiful and the vocal highly touching, but is just goes on too long; there is too much repetition and generally not enough substance to justify being over six and a half minutes. It could perhaps have been good if cut in half. "He Was the King" is somewhat funny and even quite fun but also far too long; it could have been an enjoyable minor cut if half its length or less. Young at least understood this with the decent "Far From Home," which does not try to be more than it is. The same unfortunately cannot be said of the seven and a half plus minute title cut, which has interesting words and music but the worst backing vocals of all - so bad they would ruin an otherwise great song, much less this one. Repetition then kills what little potential it might have still had. The other three songs - including "The Painter," which was inexplicably the track most touted in advertising and also Grammy-nominated - are among Young's worst. Musically uninteresting and lyrically asinine, they are best forgotten and indeed forgettable.
Nearly everything Young has released in the 2000s has been hotly debated by fans, but Prairie is in my view one of the weakest among them. Some may disagree, but it is certainly not the instant classic so many critics claimed. Though not without moments, one should have several dozen Young albums before even considering it.
2007-12-12 He's not just older, he's better
This is a wonderful album. I find myself singing the songs in my head long after listening. His writing has matured along with us and the song topics just fit our generation. MUsic is beautiful and haunting.
2007-11-17 Looking back through the prairie wind
The breezy, mellow feel to the opening song on this CD, "The Painter," perfectly sets the pace and tone of "Prairie Wind." "The Painter" quietly offers up laid-back but nostalgic lyrics sung in a wary, classic Neil Young voice; a beautiful slide guitar intersperses the gentle guitar plucking; light drums and a dependable bass lend weight to the composition. Undoubtedly, "Prairie Wind" was an ideal title for this album. The following tune, "No Wonder," contains a darker sound, but the song's lyrics uphold the naturistic feel of the CD, and convey a sense of one's own mortality.
The down-home instrumentation and vocals make it seem as if these tunes could be played on the rustic porch of a windswept prairie in the middle of nowhere. "Falling Off the Face of the Earth" is an example of Young's amazing ability to mesmerize simplistically, without bells and whistles. Whether he's rocking out electrically with his Crazy Horse band or playing lighter fare, as on "Falling," many of Young's songs have a way of sneakily sucking you in in a catchy, repetitive manner that's lulling, both vocally and musically. On some of Young's tunes, seven minutes have passed by before you realize it; but somehow, the composition doesn't drag.
Not all of "Prairie Wind" is soothing Western ballads played on the Badlands. "Far From Home" has a good-time, old-fashioned vibe that's endearing like an enjoyable family reunion; the title track dares to flex its acoustic muscle with hardened but longing lyrics and great backing vocals by a slew of talented female musicians; "He Was the King," a tune about Elvis in all his incarnations, is pure rock and roll fun, while "When God Made Me" is a piano-soaked gospel relic that questions just as much as it faithfully believes.
As poignant as all these songs are, perhaps none are more so than the sublime "This Old Guitar," sung and played plaintively by Young, but somehow stirring up emotion by the truckload. The song is indicative of this entire heartwarming album, which thrives on simplicity, feeling and easy hooks.
2007-11-06 It's Better Than "Silver and Gold"
First off, I'm no Neil Young expert. I'm simply someone who was introduced to Neil Young's music by a friend, some 15 years ago. I don't own every Neil album- not even close. But Young fascinates me, and when he releases the kind of album that I think I'll like, I buy it.
This doesn't strike me as the 3rd piece to a Harvest trilogy. Neither did "Silver and Gold". But this album comes closer to ranking with the 2 'Harvest' classics. There's a lot more depth and added instrumentation to this album.
Some of the best: "No Wonder" is a powerful 911 song that even quotes Chris Rock, of all people. "Falling Off the Face of the Earth" is classic Neil, with brooding verses, and high intricate melodies that only Neil could reach in the chorus. "This Old Guitar" is the best track on the album, and would've fit right in on "Harvest Moon". It's in the "Hank to Hendrix" vein, and also features Emmylou Harris on harmony (oh, sweet Emmy). The somber "When God Made Me" closes the album and includes a gospel chorus.
Two tracks, the title cut and "Far From Home", kind of threw me for a loop because they included horns. At first, it seemed blasphemous. Neil Young? With horns? But after a few listens, you realize it works, particularly on the bluesy, bouncy, title track.
The only thing I really don't like about the album is "He Was the King". Do we really need to hear another song about Elvis? It's carefree, fun, and actually not that bad. It's just a personal pet peeve. He wanted to throw something on here that wasn't so serious, but it just doesn't feel like it belongs.
All in all, a solid album that I won't hesitate to play. Especially in October and November, when I get in my 'Neil' moods.:)