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1960s and 1970s MUSIC ON CD - Volume 3 of 3
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"…It's So Hard To Say No
To Yourself…"
As we all know - Neil Young
has famously resisted the remastered reissue of his huge catalogue on CD
because of what he feels is the format's less than stellar representation of
analogue tapes' original sound as laid down by the artist - and almost a
full 20 years after 1989's first issue of his 2nd album on a dullard CD - it
looks like the guy is having the last laugh - because this meticulously
prepared tape transfer is GLORIOUS. It really is. I've bought all 4 of his new
NYA CD remasters and to my ears this is fact the best sounding of them all.
First to the details -
"Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere" by NEIL YOUNG was originally released on vinyl LP
in May 1969 on Reprise Records RS 6349 in the USA and RSLP 6349 in the UK (July
1969).
This August 2009 Reprise/NYA-OSR Remaster on Reprise 9362-49790-3 (Barcode 093624979036) is Disc 2 of 4 and
carries the HDCD code on the label and rear inlay (High Density Compact Disc).
NYA ORS is the Neil Young Archives - Original Release Series. As these are the first four albums in a long reissue campaign - to identify them from the old CDs - the upper part of the outer spine has his new NYA OSR logo at the top and an 'issue' number beneath - D1, D2, D3, D4...on upwards of course.
NYA ORS is the Neil Young Archives - Original Release Series. As these are the first four albums in a long reissue campaign - to identify them from the old CDs - the upper part of the outer spine has his new NYA OSR logo at the top and an 'issue' number beneath - D1, D2, D3, D4...on upwards of course.
“Everybody Knows This Is
Nowhere" (40:47 minutes):
1. Cinnamon Girl [Side 1]
2. Everybody Knows This Is
Nowhere
3. Round & Round (It
Won't Be Long)
4. Down By The River
5. The Losing End (When
You're On) [Side 2]
6. Running Dry (Requiem For
The Rockets)
7. Cowgirl In The Sand
Until now - 2004's
"Greatest Hits" set (which offered us three "Everybody..."
tracks remastered into HDCD sound quality) was the only real indication of just
how good the album could sound (this is the first time the entire
album has been given a sonic upgrade). The Audio Tape Restoration and
Analog-To-HDCD Digital Transfer of the Original Master Tapes was carried out by
JOHN NOWLAND (24-Bit 176 KHZ) with the Editing and Mastering done by TIM
MULLIGAN - and they've done a stunning job.
The inlay reproduces photos
of Danny Whitten (Guitar), Billy Talbot (Bass) with Ralph Molina (on Drums) and
David Briggs (Engineer and Producer) - but there are no lyrics. However, the
big and obvious disappointment is the complete lack of musical extras or any
new info in the booklet - and in the case of this album in particular the
omissions are going to be a sore point for fans who've waited decades for these
releases. While some rarities have turned up on the 2009 mega box set "The
Archives Vol.1 1963-1972" - some tracks are still missing. "Down By
The River" was edited for single release in the UK in August 1970 on RS
23462 with an alternate take of "Cinnamon Girl" on the B-side. To my
knowledge, neither is available in remastered sound anywhere. Also - "Oh
Lonesome Me" was extended for the US 7" and it's B-side, an alternate
mix of "I've Been Waiting For You" is again a no-show. All of them
would have made for ideal extras material and it's infuriating that they're not
on here.
Still - at mid price - this
remaster of "Everybody..." is still great value for money and with
this hugely upgraded sound - it makes you focus on the music as is and not
anything else. The sound is exceptional on the big rocking tracks "Down By
The River" and the near 10-minute "Cowgirl In The Sand" - while
the clarity is just beautiful on Richie Furay's "Round And Round (It Won't
Be Long)" - Robin Lane's duet vocals being particularly lovely. Bobby
Notkoff's violin on "Running Dry" is very clear - and as the band
loosely ramshackles its way into the song - it sounds like they're in your
living room - miked up and live - fabulous stuff.
The remaster is not
bombastically loud either, trebled up to the nines, but subtle - the music is
just THERE in your speakers to a point where everything seems new and up for
grabs again. Fans will love it and will feel like they're revisited long
cherished old friends while newcomers will now understand what all the 5-star
fuss is about.
The gold sticker on the jewel
case of each of these issues says "Because Sound Matters" - and I
think Rock's great curmudgeon was right to wait to get it right...
PS: I’ve also reviewed “Neil Young”, “After The Gold Rush”, “Harvest”
and “Official Release Series Discs 1-4”