Album Reviews

Neil Young: Songs For Judy

Neil Young
Songs For Judy
(Shakey Pictures Records/Reprise)
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

The seemingly bottomless vault of Neil Youngโ€™s music gets raided again for this solo/acoustic compilation from his November 1976 tour. Assembled by Cameron Crowe and photographer/guitar tech Joel Bernstein, both there recording every show on cassette, these 22 tunes cherry-picked from a variety of cities capture Youngโ€™s raw, visceral and often humorous nature as he unspooled new and old music.

The concerts began with Young unaccompanied for an hour, after which he was joined by Crazy Horse. Only the first half is presented here, in audio so pristine itโ€™s unbelievable it was recorded on a lowly cassette. The varied batch of originals shows how long Young hangs onto his compositions before recording them. โ€œWhite Lineโ€ doesnโ€™t appear on an album until 1990โ€™s Ragged Glory, โ€œHuman Highwayโ€ (played on banjo) and โ€œGive Me Strengthโ€ ended up on 2017โ€™s Hitchhiker, and the reflective, bittersweet piano ballad โ€œNo One Seems to Knowโ€ has never made it to an official release before now.

Young digs into his back pages for the obscure โ€œHere We Are In The Yearsโ€ and โ€œThe Old Laughing Ladyโ€ โ€” both from 1969โ€™s debut โ€” and excavates โ€œThe Losing Endโ€ from his sophomore effort.ย  The set closes with a sweet 6-minute version of the introspective โ€œSugar Mountain.โ€ The only Buffalo Springfield inclusion is โ€œMr. Soul,โ€ not a song that naturally translates to the unplugged format.

The albumโ€™s odd title refers to impromptu patter that opens the first three minutes of this disc, as Young tells a strange story about Judy Garland, who he imagined was looking up at him from the pit. Heโ€™s in fine voice throughout, and even if these performances arenโ€™t always iconic, theyโ€™re personal and often touching, even in front of some rowdy crowds. According to press notes, the compilers spent days sifting through dozens of takes to find the best, most inspired moments, which makes this a compelling listen and historically significant.