Living with War

Living With War
Studio album by Neil Young
Released May 2, 2006 (Free Streaming Download),[1]
May 8, 2006 (US Retail Stores)[1]
May 9, 2006 (International Retail Stores and Internet Stores)
Recorded March & April 2006
Redwood Digital and Capitol Studios
Genre Rock
Length 41:36
Label Reprise
Producer Neil Young, Niko Bolas and L.A. Johnson
Neil Young chronology
Prairie Wind
(2005)Prairie Wind2005
Living With War
(2006)
Live at the Fillmore East
(2006)Live at the Fillmore East2006
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
Robert ChristgauB+[3]
Mojo[4]
Okayplayer[5]
Pitchfork Media7.6/10[6]
Rolling Stone[7]

Living With War, released on May 2, 2006, is the Grammy and Juno Award-nominated twenty-eighth studio album by the Canadian musician Neil Young. The album's lyrics, titles, and conceptual style are highly critical of the policies of the George W. Bush administration; the CTV website defined it as "a musical critique of U.S. President George W. Bush and his conduct of the war in Iraq".[8] Written and recorded over the course of only nine days in March and April 2006,[1][9] its lyrics are in line with the early 1960s albums of folk artists such as Phil Ochs and Bob Dylan, although they are set to what Young calls "metal folk protest music"[10] courtesy of Young, bassist Rick Rosas, drummer Chad Cromwell and trumpet player Tommy Bray.

The rhythm section of Cromwell and Rosas and Young's "Volume Dealers" co-producer Niko Bolas were also at the core of Young's 1989 album Freedom, which contained an angry criticism of Reagan-George H. W. Bush America. There are other links between the albums: Bray also performed on Freedom and Freedom's hit single "Rockin' in the Free World" also contained a quotation of a President Bush: "a thousand points of light".

Production and release

Young began writing songs for Living with War in a Gambier, Ohio, hotel room while visiting his daughter at her college.[11] While retrieving coffee from a vending machine early one morning, Young saw the front page of a USA Today issue documenting a surgery room on an airplane flying seriously wounded US soldiers from Iraq to Germany.[11] He later told Charlie Rose that the combination of the vivid picture and the headline (which focused not on any suffering and death depicted, but rather on medical breakthroughs made during the war) moved him: "For some reason, that was what did it to me. I went upstairs after that. I wrote this song, 'Families'; I started writing another song, 'Restless Consumer'; I started writing all these songs all at once; I had like four songs going at once."[11] Young has said that after writing the songs, he quickly began "coming apart."[11] He called his wife Pegi back to their room, and "I held on to her, and I was sobbing. I was sobbing so hard, that things were coming out of my face."[11]

The sessions were recorded on 16-track analog tape and mixed to a half-inch analog two-track master, then transferred to high-resolution digital media for CD and DVD manufacturing.[1] The vinyl pressing was on 200 g discs.

On April 28, 2006, the album was given a pre-release premiere in its entirety on the Los Angeles radio station KLOS (95.5) by Jim Ladd.[1][12] The album was released onto the Internet on May 2, 2006, before entering retail in May 2006.[1] Young has expressed that his intent is that the work be considered as a whole, and the streaming-audio internet release was the whole album, rather than individually selectable songs.

"That first impression is so important" ... "Instead of just going to "Let's Impeach the President", people will have to absorb the whole thing. To understand the songs, you need to understand where the whole album's coming from. It protects my right as an artist to have the work presented the way I created it." - Neil Young

The rush release and the political nature of the tracks are also comparable to Young's 1970 song "Ohio".

Reviewing the album for Mojo magazine, Sylvie Simmons described the songs as "Urgent, instant, bolshie mostly, with a stronger individual melodic sense than, say, Greendale, but without the intense beauty of, say, Ohio … though definitely an improvement on Let's Roll".[4] Living with War was nominated for three 2007 Grammy Awards in the categories of Best Rock Album, Best Rock Song and Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance (both for "Lookin' for a Leader").

Despite the album's content and criticism from right wing blogs leading up to the release, Young stated that he considers the album nonpartisan.[13] He said in an interview with The New York Times: "If you impeach Bush, you're doing a huge favor for the Republicans … They can run again with some pride."[13] Commenting on the lack of artists writing songs critical of American policy at the time, Young said, "I was hoping some young person would come along and say this and sing some songs about it, but I didn't see anybody, so I'm doing it myself. I waited as long as I could."[14]

Track listing

All songs written by Neil Young except where noted.

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."After the Garden" 3:23
2."Living with War" 5:04
3."The Restless Consumer" 5:47
4."Shock and Awe" 4:53
5."Families" 2:25
6."Flags of Freedom" 3:42
7."Let's Impeach the President" 5:10
8."Lookin' for a Leader" 4:03
9."Roger and Out" 4:25
10."America the Beautiful"Katharine Lee Bates, Samuel Augustus Ward2:57

Personnel

Charts

Chart (2006) Peak
position
Canadian Albums Chart 7
UK Albums Chart 14
U.S. Billboard 200 15
Irish Albums Chart 24

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Living With War Timeline". Neilyoung.com. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  2. Stephen Thomas Erlewine (2006-05-09). "Living with War - Neil Young | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  3. "CG: neil young". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  4. 1 2 Simmons, Sylvie (July 2006). "Presidential Suite: Neil Young Living With War". Mojo. p. 112.
  5. "Neil Young - Living with War". Okayplayer.com. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  6. "Neil Young: Living With War | Album Reviews". Pitchfork. 2006-04-30. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  7. Fricke, David (2006-05-01). "Neil Young Living With War Album Review". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  8. "CTV News | Top Stories - Breaking News - Top News Headlines". Ctv.ca. 2014-10-22. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  9. Petridis 2006
  10. "Neil Young's new 'metal folk protest music'". Jimdero.com. 1970-05-15. Retrieved 2015-06-03.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5
  12. Butler 2006
  13. 1 2 PARELES, JON. "Neil Young's 'Living With War' Shows He Doesn't Like It". New York Times. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  14. Rayner, Ben (2 November 2008). "U.S. musicians slowing warmed to burning Bush". Toronto Star.
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