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Freedom (Neil Young album)

Freedom is the 17th studio album by Canadian-American musician Neil Young, released on October 2, 1989. Freedom relaunched Young's career after a largely unsuccessful decade. After many arguments and a lawsuit, Young left Geffen Records in 1988 and returned to his original label, Reprise, with This Note's for You. Freedom brought about a new, critical and commercially successful album. It was released as an LP record, cassette tape, and CD.

Freedom
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 2, 1989 (October 2, 1989)
RecordedJuly 25, 1988 (1988-07-25)–July 10, 1989 (1989-07-10)
StudioThe Barn-Redwood Digital, Arrow Ranch, Woodside, California; Jones Beach, New York (track 1); The Hit Factory, New York City (tracks 3 5 8)
GenreHeartland rock, hard rock
Length61:11
LabelReprise
ProducerNeil Young, Niko Bolas
Neil Young chronology
This Note's for You
(1988)
Freedom
(1989)
Ragged Glory
(1990)
Singles from Freedom
  1. "Rockin' in the Free World"
    Released: November 14, 1989

Writing Edit

The songs on Freedom were written over the span of more than a decade. "Too Far Gone" dates to the Zuma era, and would be performed regularly in concert in 1976. "The Ways of Love" was written in the mid-1970s, attempted for Comes a Time, and first performed live during the May 1978 Boarding House concerts for Rust Never Sleeps.[1] "El Dorado" would first appear as "Road of Plenty" in concert in 1986. Young would rehearse the song with Buffalo Springfield during a brief attempt at a reunion that year. "Someday", "Wrecking Ball" and "Hangin' on a Limb" appear on Summer Songs, a 1987 collection of solo performances of eight new songs that Young would release on his website on Christmas Day, 2021[2]

"Crime in the City" would first be performed and recorded with twelve verses as "Sixty to Zero".[3] He wrote the song in 1988 while sailing in the Pacific: "I was in the middle of the ocean. I was sailboat sailing to Hawaii. I'd been out at sea almost 10 days - about halfway over there. I hadn't seen anybody for about 8 days - no planes, no other boats - just the horizon. So I was pretty spacey out there by then. In one night I wrote three songs: 'Ordinary People', 'Sixty To Zero' and 'Days That Used To Be'.[4]

"Don't Cry" was inspired by a relationship of Niko Bolas' that had fallen apart.[5] The music was influenced by Roy Orbison. According to Young in a November 1990 Vox interview with Nick Kent: "I've always put a piece of Roy Orbison on every album I've made. His influence is on so many of my songs. I even had his photograph on the sleeve of Tonight's The Night for no reason, really. Just recognizing his presence. There's a big Orbison tribute song on Eldorado called Don't Cry. That's totally me under the Roy Orbison spell. When I wrote it and recorded it I was thinking 'Roy Orbison meets trash metal'"[6]

"Rockin' in the Free World" originates with a phrase Young borrowed from guitarist Poncho Sampedro. Sampedro would explain in a 2013 interview for Rolling Stone: "We were on the road with the Lost Dogs in 1989. I was riding on Neil's bus at the time. I was his cook on the bus, so we were hanging out 24/7. All this stuff was going down with the Ayatollah. I don’t know if you remember that footage of them passing the casket along over the heads of thousand and thousands of people. There was a lot of 'Hate America' demonstrations and we were supposed to do this exchange. We were going to Russia for the first time. It was a cultural exchange. They were getting us in exchange for the Russian Ballet. And it just fell through. Neil was like, 'Damn, I really wanted to go.' I said, 'Me too. I guess we’ll have to keep on rockin’ in the free world.' He was like, 'Wow, that’s a cool line.' Then I said it again later and he said, 'That’s a really good phrase. I wanna use it.' He told me he was going to use it. The next day he came up to me and told me to check out this lyric sheet. I only questioned one of them. I think it was 'Keep Hope Alive' or something. He said, 'No, no, no. That’s a good one.' We just started singing it and he taught me the harmony part. That night we played it in Seattle. It was this cool theater. We didn’t even rehearse it with the band. I was telling the chords to [bassist] Rick Rosas as we went along."[7]

Recording Edit

The first songs recorded for the album were "Someday" and "Crime in the City". Young recorded the songs at his home studio at Broken Arrow Ranch in late July 1988, in between sessions for the CSNY album American Dream The sessions took place during a break in the tour supporting This Note's for You, and feature performers from his touring band. "Ordinary People" from Chrome Dreams II was also recorded at this time, as was a driving, electric version of "Crime in the City". Both the electric version and the acoustic album version were recorded as "Sixty to Zero" with all verses. The album take was later edited to remove the first half of the verses. Young explained the edit in a contemporary interview for Dutch radio: "It's too long as one thing. It's meant to stand by itself, not to be played with anything else. If I play the long version in concert, it's too overpowering. If you can imagine listening to anything for 18 minutes, it disturbs the flow. It's too much of the same thing so I do the short version.[8]

After the completion of the Bluenotes tour in December 1988, Young booked time at the Hit Factory in Times Square, New York with bassist Rick Rosas and drummer Chad Cromwell, the rhythm section from the previous tour. Young would dub the trio "Young and the Restless", a play on the name of the long running soap opera. During the sessions, Young would pursue the loudest sound possible by routing his guitar "Old Black" through different combinations of amps. According to producer and sound engineer Niko Bolas, the loudness was in response to the saccharine production of American Dream: "That record came about as a direct result of doing CSNY. Neil was so pissed off at having to do a record that he didn’t want to do, with pretty songs that he fuckin’ hated, that he just retaliated."[5] The trio recorded the songs "Heavy Love", "Wrecking Ball", "Cocaine Eyes", "Don't Cry", "On Broadway", "El Dorado" and "Boxcar". Young sequenced an early version of Freedom from these songs plus the earlier "Someday" and "Crime in the City" with a proposed title of Times Square. Instead of releasing the album, Young embarked on a tour of Australia and then Japan with the Restless plus Ben Keith and Poncho Sampedro. He would dub this band the lost dogs. To promote the tour, Young released a five-song EP of the Hit Factory songs, Eldorado. The release was limited to Australia and Japan.

Though the Times Square tracks would still from the core of the album, Young would continue to incorporate more material. At his ranch in March 1989, Young would record new songs "No More" and "Rockin' in the Free World" and revisit "Too Far Gone" and "The Ways of Love" from the 1970s. In July, he would round out the album by recording "Hanging on a Limb" and overdub vocals to "The Ways of Love" with Linda Ronstadt. A live acoustic take of "Rockin' in the Free World" from Jones Beach from June would open the album. "Rockin' in the Free World" became one of Young's signature songs and a live favorite, and bookends the album in acoustic and electric variants, a stylistic choice previously featured on Rust Never Sleeps. Young explains the wide array of music in the album thus: "I knew that I wanted to make a real album that expressed how I felt. I just wanted to make a Neil Young record per se. Something that was just me, where there was no persona, no image, no distinctive character like the Bluenotes guy or the guy in Everybody's Rockin'. It's the first time I've felt like doing an album like this in years." Although he originally planned to release a purely electric rock album ("nothing but abrasiveness from beginning to end"), Young says the final product is "almost like listening to the radio - it keeps changing and going from one thing to another."[9]

Tour Edit

Saturday Night Live Edit

Young would perform the songs "Rockin' in the Free World", "Needle and the Damage Done" and "No More" live in September 1989 for the television show Saturday Night Live. For the performance, Young played with Poncho Sampedro, Charley Drayton and Steve Jordan. In concert, Young would typically play "Rockin' in the Free World" well into the set, when the band's energy is at a high. To achieve the same level of energy, Young worked out with his trainer 30 minutes prior to the performance. He explained to author Jimmy McDonough:

"I don't like TV. Never have. It always sucks and there's nothing you can do about it. I was trying to get to the place where I would be when I did "Rockin’ in the Free World" during my live show. To do that I had to ignore Saturday Night Live completely. I had to pretend I wasn’t there. I had a dressing room, a little place with an amp in it, in another part of the building. And I walked from there into Saturday Night Live—and then left. I developed a whole new technique for television. I had my trainer, and we just lifted weights and I did calisthenics to get my blood to the level it would be at after performing for an hour and twenty-five minutes—which is usually how long I’d be onstage by the time I did that song. To perform that song the way it’s supposed to be performed, you have to be at peak blood level. Everything has to be up, your machine has to be stoked. You can’t walk on cold and do that or you’re gonna look like a fuckin’ idiot. So that’s what I did. I tried to warm up and come on, like, y’know, not part of the show. Like they changed the channel for a minute, heh heh"[10][5]

Comedian Dennis Miller would later say that "Rockin' in the Free World" was the single greatest performance on the show in its history.

Reception Edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [11]
Robert ChristgauA[12]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music     [14]
Rolling Stone     [13]

Freedom has received mainly positive reviews, especially in comparison to the rest of Young's '80s work. AllMusic's William Ruhlmann explained that it "was the album Neil Young fans knew he was capable of making, but feared he would never make again." He also stated that "there were tracks that harked back to [his] acoustic-based, country-tinged albums."[11] Robert Christgau, writing for The Village Voice, rated it an A. He declared that it contains a combination of "the folk ditties and rock galumph that made (Young) famous" and "the Nashvillisms and horn charts that made him infamous." He also said "it features a bunch of good stuff about a subject almost no rocker white or black has done much with--crack".[12] David Fricke of Rolling Stone rated it five out of five stars. He called it "the sound of Neil Young, another decade on, looking back again in anger and dread" and that it is about "the illusion of freedom" and "Young's refusal to accept that as the last word on the subject." Fricke summed up the review by calling it "a harsh reminder that everything still comes with a price."[13]

AllMusic reviewer Matthew Greenwald offered strong praise for the second track, "Crime in the City," calling it "undoubtedly the centerpiece of the album," "cinematic in scope" and "one of Neil Young's most accomplished works".[15] The album is ranked number 996 in All-Time Top 1000 Albums (3rd. edition, 2000).[16][17]

Track listing Edit

All tracks are written by Neil Young, except where noted

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Rockin' in the Free World" (Live acoustic) 3:38
2."Crime in the City (Sixty to Zero Part I)" 8:45
3."Don't Cry" 4:14
4."Hangin' on a Limb" 4:18
5."Eldorado" 6:03
6."The Ways of Love" 4:29
7."Someday" 5:40
8."On Broadway"Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller4:57
9."Wrecking Ball" 5:08
10."No More" 6:03
11."Too Far Gone" 2:47
12."Rockin' in the Free World" (Electric) 4:41

Personnel Edit

Additional personnel

Production

  • Neil Young – producer, mixing engineer
  • Niko Bolas – producer, recording engineer except on tracks 1 4, mixing engineer except on tracks 1 4
  • Tim Mulligan – digital engineer, recording engineer on 4
  • Harry Sitam – senior technical engineer
  • Dave Collins – digital editor
  • Doug Sax – digital mastering engineer
  • Dave Hewitt – recording engineer on 1, mixing engineer on 1

Charts Edit

Weekly charts

Chart (1989) Peak
position
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[18] 29
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[19] 16
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[20] 30
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[21] 40
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[22] 21
UK Albums (OCC)[23] 17
US Billboard 200[24] 35

Singles Edit

Year Single Chart Position
1989 "No More" Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks[25] 7
"Rockin' in the Free World" (Electric) 2
1990 "Crime in the City" (Electric) 34

Certifications Edit

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Canada (Music Canada)[26] Gold 50,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[27] Silver 60,000^
United States (RIAA)[28] Gold 500,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

References Edit

  1. ^ https://sugarmtn.org/sm_quotes.php?song=588
  2. ^ https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/neil-young-christmas-surprise-lost-1987-album-summer-songs-1276015/
  3. ^ https://sugarmtn.org/sm_quotes.php?song=118
  4. ^ https://sugarmtn.org/sm_quotes.php?song=443
  5. ^ a b c McDonough, Jim (2002). Shakey: Neil Young's Biography. Jonathan Cape. ISBN 978-0-224-06914-4.
  6. ^ This Young Will Run and Run,Nick Kent, Vox, November 1990
  7. ^ https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/crazy-horse-guitarist-frank-poncho-sampedro-my-gut-tells-me-this-is-the-last-tour-234128/
  8. ^ https://sugarmtn.org/sm_quotes.php?song=513
  9. ^ "100 Best Albums of the Eighties". Rolling Stone. 16 November 1989.
  10. ^ https://sugarmtn.org/sm_quotes.php?song=483
  11. ^ a b Ruhlmann, William. Freedom – Neil Young at AllMusic. Retrieved 2 July 2004.
  12. ^ a b Christgau, Robert (October 31, 1989). "Consumer Guide: Neil Young: Freedom". The Village Voice. Retrieved 4 January 2012. Relevant portion also posted at "Neil Young: Freedom > Consumer Guide Album". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 10 March 2006.
  13. ^ a b Fricke, David (November 2, 1989). "Neil Young Lets 'Freedom' Ring". Rolling Stone. No. 564. p. 91. from the original on 2007-11-04. Retrieved 4 September 2007.
  14. ^ Larkin, Colin (2007). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195313734.
  15. ^ Matthew Greenwald. "Crime in the City (Sixty to Zero, Pt. 1) – Neil Young". AllMusic. Retrieved March 5, 2012.
  16. ^ "Rocklist". Retrieved July 22, 2018.
  17. ^ Colin Larkin, ed. (2000). All Time Top 1000 Albums (3rd ed.). Virgin Books. p. 299. ISBN 0-7535-0493-6.
  18. ^ "Austriancharts.at – Neil Young – Freedom" (in German). Hung Medien. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  19. ^ "Top RPM Albums: Issue 6677". RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  20. ^ "Dutchcharts.nl – Neil Young – Freedom" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  21. ^ "Offiziellecharts.de – Neil Young – Freedom" (in German). GfK Entertainment Charts. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  22. ^ "Swedishcharts.com – Neil Young – Freedom". Hung Medien. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  23. ^ "Official Albums Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  24. ^ "Neil Young Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  25. ^ "Neil Young Chart History: Mainstream Rock". Billboard. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  26. ^ "Canadian album certifications – Neil Young – Freedom". Music Canada. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  27. ^ "British album certifications – Neil Young – Freedom". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  28. ^ "American album certifications – Neil Young – Freedom". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved September 21, 2020.

freedom, neil, young, album, freedom, 17th, studio, album, canadian, american, musician, neil, young, released, october, 1989, freedom, relaunched, young, career, after, largely, unsuccessful, decade, after, many, arguments, lawsuit, young, left, geffen, recor. Freedom is the 17th studio album by Canadian American musician Neil Young released on October 2 1989 Freedom relaunched Young s career after a largely unsuccessful decade After many arguments and a lawsuit Young left Geffen Records in 1988 and returned to his original label Reprise with This Note s for You Freedom brought about a new critical and commercially successful album It was released as an LP record cassette tape and CD FreedomStudio album by Neil YoungReleasedOctober 2 1989 October 2 1989 RecordedJuly 25 1988 1988 07 25 July 10 1989 1989 07 10 StudioThe Barn Redwood Digital Arrow Ranch Woodside California Jones Beach New York track 1 The Hit Factory New York City tracks 3 5 8 GenreHeartland rock hard rockLength61 11LabelRepriseProducerNeil Young Niko BolasNeil Young chronologyThis Note s for You 1988 Freedom 1989 Ragged Glory 1990 Singles from Freedom Rockin in the Free World Released November 14 1989 Contents 1 Writing 2 Recording 3 Tour 3 1 Saturday Night Live 4 Reception 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 7 Charts 7 1 Singles 8 Certifications 9 ReferencesWriting EditThe songs on Freedom were written over the span of more than a decade Too Far Gone dates to the Zuma era and would be performed regularly in concert in 1976 The Ways of Love was written in the mid 1970s attempted for Comes a Time and first performed live during the May 1978 Boarding House concerts for Rust Never Sleeps 1 El Dorado would first appear as Road of Plenty in concert in 1986 Young would rehearse the song with Buffalo Springfield during a brief attempt at a reunion that year Someday Wrecking Ball and Hangin on a Limb appear on Summer Songs a 1987 collection of solo performances of eight new songs that Young would release on his website on Christmas Day 2021 2 Crime in the City would first be performed and recorded with twelve verses as Sixty to Zero 3 He wrote the song in 1988 while sailing in the Pacific I was in the middle of the ocean I was sailboat sailing to Hawaii I d been out at sea almost 10 days about halfway over there I hadn t seen anybody for about 8 days no planes no other boats just the horizon So I was pretty spacey out there by then In one night I wrote three songs Ordinary People Sixty To Zero and Days That Used To Be 4 Don t Cry was inspired by a relationship of Niko Bolas that had fallen apart 5 The music was influenced by Roy Orbison According to Young in a November 1990 Vox interview with Nick Kent I ve always put a piece of Roy Orbison on every album I ve made His influence is on so many of my songs I even had his photograph on the sleeve of Tonight s The Night for no reason really Just recognizing his presence There s a big Orbison tribute song on Eldorado called Don t Cry That s totally me under the Roy Orbison spell When I wrote it and recorded it I was thinking Roy Orbison meets trash metal 6 Rockin in the Free World originates with a phrase Young borrowed from guitarist Poncho Sampedro Sampedro would explain in a 2013 interview for Rolling Stone We were on the road with the Lost Dogs in 1989 I was riding on Neil s bus at the time I was his cook on the bus so we were hanging out 24 7 All this stuff was going down with the Ayatollah I don t know if you remember that footage of them passing the casket along over the heads of thousand and thousands of people There was a lot of Hate America demonstrations and we were supposed to do this exchange We were going to Russia for the first time It was a cultural exchange They were getting us in exchange for the Russian Ballet And it just fell through Neil was like Damn I really wanted to go I said Me too I guess we ll have to keep on rockin in the free world He was like Wow that s a cool line Then I said it again later and he said That s a really good phrase I wanna use it He told me he was going to use it The next day he came up to me and told me to check out this lyric sheet I only questioned one of them I think it was Keep Hope Alive or something He said No no no That s a good one We just started singing it and he taught me the harmony part That night we played it in Seattle It was this cool theater We didn t even rehearse it with the band I was telling the chords to bassist Rick Rosas as we went along 7 Recording EditThe first songs recorded for the album were Someday and Crime in the City Young recorded the songs at his home studio at Broken Arrow Ranch in late July 1988 in between sessions for the CSNY album American Dream The sessions took place during a break in the tour supporting This Note s for You and feature performers from his touring band Ordinary People from Chrome Dreams II was also recorded at this time as was a driving electric version of Crime in the City Both the electric version and the acoustic album version were recorded as Sixty to Zero with all verses The album take was later edited to remove the first half of the verses Young explained the edit in a contemporary interview for Dutch radio It s too long as one thing It s meant to stand by itself not to be played with anything else If I play the long version in concert it s too overpowering If you can imagine listening to anything for 18 minutes it disturbs the flow It s too much of the same thing so I do the short version 8 After the completion of the Bluenotes tour in December 1988 Young booked time at the Hit Factory in Times Square New York with bassist Rick Rosas and drummer Chad Cromwell the rhythm section from the previous tour Young would dub the trio Young and the Restless a play on the name of the long running soap opera During the sessions Young would pursue the loudest sound possible by routing his guitar Old Black through different combinations of amps According to producer and sound engineer Niko Bolas the loudness was in response to the saccharine production of American Dream That record came about as a direct result of doing CSNY Neil was so pissed off at having to do a record that he didn t want to do with pretty songs that he fuckin hated that he just retaliated 5 The trio recorded the songs Heavy Love Wrecking Ball Cocaine Eyes Don t Cry On Broadway El Dorado and Boxcar Young sequenced an early version of Freedom from these songs plus the earlier Someday and Crime in the City with a proposed title of Times Square Instead of releasing the album Young embarked on a tour of Australia and then Japan with the Restless plus Ben Keith and Poncho Sampedro He would dub this band the lost dogs To promote the tour Young released a five song EP of the Hit Factory songs Eldorado The release was limited to Australia and Japan Though the Times Square tracks would still from the core of the album Young would continue to incorporate more material At his ranch in March 1989 Young would record new songs No More and Rockin in the Free World and revisit Too Far Gone and The Ways of Love from the 1970s In July he would round out the album by recording Hanging on a Limb and overdub vocals to The Ways of Love with Linda Ronstadt A live acoustic take of Rockin in the Free World from Jones Beach from June would open the album Rockin in the Free World became one of Young s signature songs and a live favorite and bookends the album in acoustic and electric variants a stylistic choice previously featured on Rust Never Sleeps Young explains the wide array of music in the album thus I knew that I wanted to make a real album that expressed how I felt I just wanted to make a Neil Young record per se Something that was just me where there was no persona no image no distinctive character like the Bluenotes guy or the guy in Everybody s Rockin It s the first time I ve felt like doing an album like this in years Although he originally planned to release a purely electric rock album nothing but abrasiveness from beginning to end Young says the final product is almost like listening to the radio it keeps changing and going from one thing to another 9 Tour EditSaturday Night Live EditYoung would perform the songs Rockin in the Free World Needle and the Damage Done and No More live in September 1989 for the television show Saturday Night Live For the performance Young played with Poncho Sampedro Charley Drayton and Steve Jordan In concert Young would typically play Rockin in the Free World well into the set when the band s energy is at a high To achieve the same level of energy Young worked out with his trainer 30 minutes prior to the performance He explained to author Jimmy McDonough I don t like TV Never have It always sucks and there s nothing you can do about it I was trying to get to the place where I would be when I did Rockin in the Free World during my live show To do that I had to ignore Saturday Night Live completely I had to pretend I wasn t there I had a dressing room a little place with an amp in it in another part of the building And I walked from there into Saturday Night Live and then left I developed a whole new technique for television I had my trainer and we just lifted weights and I did calisthenics to get my blood to the level it would be at after performing for an hour and twenty five minutes which is usually how long I d be onstage by the time I did that song To perform that song the way it s supposed to be performed you have to be at peak blood level Everything has to be up your machine has to be stoked You can t walk on cold and do that or you re gonna look like a fuckin idiot So that s what I did I tried to warm up and come on like y know not part of the show Like they changed the channel for a minute heh heh 10 5 Comedian Dennis Miller would later say that Rockin in the Free World was the single greatest performance on the show in its history Reception EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 11 Robert ChristgauA 12 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 14 Rolling Stone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 13 Freedom has received mainly positive reviews especially in comparison to the rest of Young s 80s work AllMusic s William Ruhlmann explained that it was the album Neil Young fans knew he was capable of making but feared he would never make again He also stated that there were tracks that harked back to his acoustic based country tinged albums 11 Robert Christgau writing for The Village Voice rated it an A He declared that it contains a combination of the folk ditties and rock galumph that made Young famous and the Nashvillisms and horn charts that made him infamous He also said it features a bunch of good stuff about a subject almost no rocker white or black has done much with crack 12 David Fricke of Rolling Stone rated it five out of five stars He called it the sound of Neil Young another decade on looking back again in anger and dread and that it is about the illusion of freedom and Young s refusal to accept that as the last word on the subject Fricke summed up the review by calling it a harsh reminder that everything still comes with a price 13 AllMusic reviewer Matthew Greenwald offered strong praise for the second track Crime in the City calling it undoubtedly the centerpiece of the album cinematic in scope and one of Neil Young s most accomplished works 15 The album is ranked number 996 in All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd edition 2000 16 17 Track listing EditAll tracks are written by Neil Young except where notedNo TitleWriter s Length1 Rockin in the Free World Live acoustic 3 382 Crime in the City Sixty to Zero Part I 8 453 Don t Cry 4 144 Hangin on a Limb 4 185 Eldorado 6 036 The Ways of Love 4 297 Someday 5 408 On Broadway Barry Mann Cynthia Weil Jerry Leiber Mike Stoller4 579 Wrecking Ball 5 0810 No More 6 0311 Too Far Gone 2 4712 Rockin in the Free World Electric 4 41Personnel EditNeil Young vocals acoustic guitar electric guitar harmonica piano on 9 Chad Cromwell drums Rick The Bass Player Rosas bass Frank Poncho Sampedro guitar on 2 5 as Poncho Villa 9 12 keyboards on 5 7 mandolin on 11 vocals on 12 Ben Keith alto saxophone on 2 7 pedal steel guitar on 2 6 11 keyboards on 10 12 vocals on 11Additional personnel Linda Ronstadt vocals on 4 6 Tony Marsico bass on 10 Steve Lawrence tenor saxophone on 2 7 Larry Cragg baritone saxophone on 2 7 Claude Cailliet trombone on 2 7 John Fumo trumpet on 2 7 Tom Bray trumpet on 2 7Production Neil Young producer mixing engineer Niko Bolas producer recording engineer except on tracks 1 4 mixing engineer except on tracks 1 4 Tim Mulligan digital engineer recording engineer on 4 Harry Sitam senior technical engineer Dave Collins digital editor Doug Sax digital mastering engineer Dave Hewitt recording engineer on 1 mixing engineer on 1Charts EditWeekly charts Chart 1989 PeakpositionAustrian Albums O3 Austria 18 29Canada Top Albums CDs RPM 19 16Dutch Albums Album Top 100 20 30German Albums Offizielle Top 100 21 40Swedish Albums Sverigetopplistan 22 21UK Albums OCC 23 17US Billboard 200 24 35Singles Edit Year Single Chart Position1989 No More Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks 25 7 Rockin in the Free World Electric 21990 Crime in the City Electric 34Certifications EditRegion Certification Certified units salesCanada Music Canada 26 Gold 50 000 United Kingdom BPI 27 Silver 60 000 United States RIAA 28 Gold 500 000 Shipments figures based on certification alone References Edit https sugarmtn org sm quotes php song 588 https www rollingstone com music music news neil young christmas surprise lost 1987 album summer songs 1276015 https sugarmtn org sm quotes php song 118 https sugarmtn org sm quotes php song 443 a b c McDonough Jim 2002 Shakey Neil Young s Biography Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 224 06914 4 This Young Will Run and Run Nick Kent Vox November 1990 https www rollingstone com music music news crazy horse guitarist frank poncho sampedro my gut tells me this is the last tour 234128 https sugarmtn org sm quotes php song 513 100 Best Albums of the Eighties Rolling Stone 16 November 1989 https sugarmtn org sm quotes php song 483 a b Ruhlmann William Freedom Neil Young at AllMusic Retrieved 2 July 2004 a b Christgau Robert October 31 1989 Consumer Guide Neil Young Freedom The Village Voice Retrieved 4 January 2012 Relevant portion also posted at Neil Young Freedom gt Consumer Guide Album Robert Christgau Retrieved 10 March 2006 a b Fricke David November 2 1989 Neil Young Lets Freedom Ring Rolling Stone No 564 p 91 Archived from the original on 2007 11 04 Retrieved 4 September 2007 Larkin Colin 2007 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music 4th ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195313734 Matthew Greenwald Crime in the City Sixty to Zero Pt 1 Neil Young AllMusic Retrieved March 5 2012 Rocklist Retrieved July 22 2018 Colin Larkin ed 2000 All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd ed Virgin Books p 299 ISBN 0 7535 0493 6 Austriancharts at Neil Young Freedom in German Hung Medien Retrieved September 21 2020 Top RPM Albums Issue 6677 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved September 21 2020 Dutchcharts nl Neil Young Freedom in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved September 21 2020 Offiziellecharts de Neil Young Freedom in German GfK Entertainment Charts Retrieved September 21 2020 Swedishcharts com Neil Young Freedom Hung Medien Retrieved September 21 2020 Official Albums Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved September 21 2020 Neil Young Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved September 21 2020 Neil Young Chart History Mainstream Rock Billboard Retrieved September 21 2020 Canadian album certifications Neil Young Freedom Music Canada Retrieved September 21 2020 British album certifications Neil Young Freedom British Phonographic Industry Retrieved September 21 2020 American album certifications Neil Young Freedom Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved September 21 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Freedom Neil Young album amp oldid 1177968615, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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