GAMES: GameSpot: Best of 2008 | GameFAQs | SportsGamer MUSIC: Last.fm | MP3.com MOVIES: Metacritic | Movietome TV: TV.com
Blood on the Tracks
Users Say
31 ratings
Album Reviews: 2
Album: Blood on the Tracks
Artist: Bob Dylan
Release Date: 1/17/1975
Genre: Rock/Pop
Following on the heels of an album where he repudiated his past with his greatest backing band, {^Blood on the Tracks} finds {$Bob Dylan}, in a way, retreating to the past, recording a largely quiet, acoustic-based album. But this is hardly nostalgia -- this is the sound of an artist returning to his strengths, what feels most familiar, as he accepts a traumatic situation, namely the breakdown of his marriage. This is an album alternately bitter, sorrowful, regretful, and peaceful, easily the closest he ever came to wearing his emotions on his sleeve. That's not to say that it's an explicitly confessional record, since many songs are riddles or allegories, yet the warmth of the music makes it feel that way. The original version of the album was even quieter -- first takes of {&"Idiot Wind"} and {&"Tangled Up in Blue,"} available on {^The Bootleg Series, Vols. 1-3}, are hushed and quiet (excised verses are quoted in the liner notes, but not heard on the record) -- but {^Blood on the Tracks} remains an intimate, revealing affair since these harsher takes let his anger surface the way his sadness does elsewhere. As such, it's an affecting, unbearably poignant record, not because it's a glimpse into his soul, but because the songs are remarkably clear-eyed and sentimental, lovely and melancholy at once. And, in a way, it's best that he was backed with studio musicians here, since the professional, understated backing lets the songs and emotion stand at the forefront. {$Dylan} made albums more influential than this, but he never made one better. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Modern Times Modern Times
Artist: Al Stewart

Surely the title is a bit of an allusion to the Past, Present and Future of its predecessor, but Modern Times also brought Al Stewart into the present, establishing his classic sound of folky narratives and Lennonesque melodies, all wrapped up in a lush, layered production from Alan Parsons. Hearing this production makes it clear that this is... Read More

Tonight's the Night Tonight's the Night
Artist: Neil Young
Community Score: 8.56

Written and recorded in 1973 shortly after the death of roadie Bruce Berry, Neil Young's second close associate to die of a heroin overdose in six months (the first was Crazy Horse guitarist Danny Whitten), Tonight's the Night was Young's musical expression of grief, combined with his rejection of the stardom he had achieved in the late '60s and... Read More

Zuma Zuma
Artist: Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Community Score: 9.82

Having apparently exorcised his demons by releasing the cathartic Tonight's the Night, Neil Young returned to his commercial strengths with Zuma (named after Zuma Beach in Los Angeles, where he now owned a house). Seven of the album's nine songs were recorded with the reunited Crazy Horse, in which rhythm guitarist Frank Sampedro had replaced... Read More

Decade Decade
Artist: Neil Young
Community Score: 7.75

Given the quirkiness of Neil Young's recording career, with its frequent cancellations of releases and last-minute rearrangements of material, it is a relief to report that this two-disc compilation is so conventional and so satisfying. A 35-track selection of the best of Young's work between 1966 and 1976, it includes songs performed by Buffalo... Read More

Live Rust Live Rust
Artist: Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Community Score: 6.50

All the kudos Neil Young earned for Rust Never Sleeps he lost for Live Rust, the double-LP live album released four months later. Live Rust was the soundtrack to Young's concert film Rust Never Sleeps (he had wanted to give it that title, but Reprise vetoed the idea, fearing confusion with the earlier album), and likewise was recorded October... Read More

Rust Never Sleeps Rust Never Sleeps
Artist: Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Community Score: 8.61

Rust Never Sleeps, its aphoristic title drawn from an intended advertising slogan, was an album of new songs, some of them recorded on Neil Young's 1978 concert tour. His strongest collection since Tonight's the Night, its obvious antecedent was Bob Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home, and, as Dylan did, Young divided his record into acoustic and... Read More

Harvest/After the Gold Rush
Artist: Neil Young
Data Warehouse Clear Gif