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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Phil Mongredien

Neil Young and Crazy Horse: Colorado review – echoes of Ragged Glory

Neil Young performing at Hyde Park, London, July 2019.
Neil Young performing at Hyde Park, London, July 2019. Photograph: Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

Colorado is Neil Young’s first album with Crazy Horse since the underwhelming pair of recordings released in 2012, the covers set Americana and Psychedelic Pill. The latter would have benefited from some judicious pruning, with three of its songs each clocking in at 16 minutes or more, and there is certainly greater focus this time around: only the eco-aware She Showed Me Love breaks six minutes, and it revels in the space it’s afforded, unhurriedly making the case against “old white guys trying to kill Mother Nature” (and, yes, Young does include himself in their number).

Elsewhere, there are echoes of Ragged Glory – and Monster-era REM – heaviness on the crunching Help Me Lose My Mind and Shut It Down. The gorgeous Milky Way, meanwhile, is more stripped-back and intimate, and the deliriously cheerful Eternity – surely about Daryl Hannah, whom Young married last year – is domestic bliss you can sing along to (“I hope we’re living in a house of love for eternity”). There’s one misstep: the LGBT-friendly Rainbow of Colors, though well intentioned, is lyrically cloying. But on the 50th anniversary of Young’s first record with Crazy Horse, this makes for a timely reunion.

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