Harvest is the fourth album by singer-songwriter Neil Young and it was released on February 14th, 1972. It was Young's most successful album with two tracks on the Billboard charts 'Old Man', No. 31 & 'Heart of Gold' which reached number 1.
Neil Young's most popular album, Harvest benefited from the delay in its release (it took 18 months to complete due to Young's back injury), which whetted his audience's appetite, the disintegration of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (Young's three erstwhile partners sang on the album, along with Linda Ronsdandt and James Taylor, and most of all, a hit single.
'Heart of Gold', released a month before Harvest, was already in the Top 40 when the LP hit the stores, and it soon topped the charts. It's fair to say, too, that Young simply was all-pervasive by this time: 'Heart of Gold' was succeeded at number one by 'A Horse with No Name' by America, which was a Young soundalike record.
But successful as Harvest was (and it was the best-selling album of 1972), it has suffered critically from reviewers who see it as an uneven album on which Young repeats himself. Certainly it employs a number of jarringly different styles. Much of it is country-tinged, with Young backed by a new group dubbed the Stray Gattors who prominently feature steel guitarist Ben Keith, though there is also an acoustic track, a couple of electric guitar-drenched rock performances, and two songs on which Young is accompanied by the London Symphony Orchestra.
The album does have an overall mood and an overall lyric content, and they conflict with each other: The mood is melancholic, but the songs mostly describe the longing for and fulfilment of new love.
Unfortunately, like 'There's a World', the song is engulfed in a portentous orchestration. Over and over, Young sings of the need for love in such songs as Out on the Weekend', 'Heart of Gold'," and 'Old Man' (a Top 40 hit), and the songs are unusually melodic and accessible.
The rock numbers, 'Are You Ready for the Country'and 'Alabama',are in Young's familiar style and unremarkable, and 'There's a World' and 'Words (Between the Lines of Age)' are the most ponderous and overdone Young songs since 'The Last Trip to Tulsa'. But the love songs and the harrowing portrait of a friend's descent into heroin addiction, 'The Needle and the Damage Done'remain among Young's most affecting and memorable songs.
Tracklist:
1. Out on the Weekend
2. Harvest
3. A Man Needs A Maid
4. Heart Of Gold
5. Are You Ready For The Country
6. Old Man
7. There's A World
8. Alabama
9. The Needle & The Damage Done
10. Words (Between The Lines of Ages)