A Treasure Neil Young & The International Harvesters

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CD

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  • Release Date: 06/14/2011
  • Sales Rank: 4,703
  • Label: Reprise / Wea
  • UPC: 093624957935
Other Formats 
CD - Includes Blu-ray$30.18
Vinyl LP$52.24
Vinyl LP$47.49

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Treasure

Track List
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A Treasure

1LISTENAmber Jean 3:17
2LISTENAre You Ready For the Country? 3:38
3LISTENIt Might Have Been 2:43
4LISTENBound For Glory 5:58
5LISTENLet Your Fingers Do The Walking 3:03
6LISTENFlying on the Ground is Wrong 4:47
7LISTENMotor City 3:22
8LISTENSoul of a Woman 4:27
9LISTENGet Back to the Country 2:31
10LISTENSouthern Pacific 7:52
11LISTENNothing is Perfect 5:01
12LISTENGrey Riders 5:58

Editorial Reviews

Volume 9 of Neil Young's long-delayed, suddenly prodigious Archives series, A Treasure chronicles Neil's 1984-1985 tour with the International Harvesters, a crackerjack assemblage of country pros featuring guitarist Ben Keith, pianist Hargus 'Pig' Robbins, fiddler Rufus Thibodeaux, and Spooner Oldham. This is one of Young's famous left turns, as he abandoned the tightly wound electro of Trans and the hipster rockabilly of Everybody's Rockin' for a trip back to the country, cutting Old Ways then hitting the road with the International Harvesters. Old Ways was a little stilted but the same can't be said of A Treasure: this is vivid and alive, pulsating with a palpable joy. Their energy boosts the Old Ways material, giving it welcome blood and muscle, but A Treasure runs far broader than that one album. Young overhauls two cuts from Re*Ac*Tor, turning 'Motor City' and 'Southern Pacific' into a honky tonk stomp and a chugging country ballad, respectively, reworks Buffalo Springfield's 'Flying on the Ground Is Wrong,' covers Joe London's country chestnut 'It Might Have Been' and, most significantly for the hardcore, there are five unreleased Young originals here: a sweetly rambling ode to his daughter 'Amber Jean,' an excellent slice of Texan honky tonk with 'Let Your Fingers Do the Walking,' the rowdy barroom blues of 'Soul of a Woman,' the working man protest of 'Nothing Is Perfect,' and Crazy Horse stomp 'Grey Riders.' The unheard tunes are all first-rate, but what's really notable about A Treasure is that it offers a compelling document of how good the International Harvesters were and, in turn, makes sense of a somewhat murky period for Neil Young. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

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