Neil Young - Are You Passionate? (2002)
Album
Artist/Composer Neil Young
Length 65:43
CD Number CD
Genre Folk-Rock
Label Reprise Records
Index 446
In Collection Yes
Track List
01 You're My Girl 04:41
02 Mr. Disappointment 05:26
03 Differently 06:04
04 Quit (Don't Say You Love Me) 06:02
05 Let's Roll 05:54
06 Are You Passionate? 05:08
07 Goin' Home 08:49
08 When I Hold You In My Arms 04:44
09 Be With You 03:32
10 Two Old Friends 06:15
11 She's A Healer 09:08
Personal
Price € 0,00
Rating 70%
Details
Spars DDD
Rare No
Sound Stereo
Notes
Date of US Release March 26, 2002

Neil Young had been playing with Booker T & the MG's since the mid-'90s, touring heavily with the Stax house band, but the soul grooves on 2002's Are You Passionate?, the first album he cut with the group as a backing band, still comes as a surprise. It could be because that even when he assembled the Bluenotes for the proto-neo-swing This Note's for You, he never tried to be as warm, seductive and romantic as he does. That's right, the title is no joke - this is a romantic album, grounded with tight southern soul rhythms and dressed in Neil's signature fuzz tone Les Paul. No matter the topic of the song, the essential sound is the same: a lazy soul groove, built on what Booker T & the MG's did in the late '60s, vamping over Neil's three chords as he croons, usually in a falsetto but sometimes in a gruff lower-register, while kicking out a variation of the "I Can't Turn You Loose" (most notably heard on the opener, "You're My Girl," but rearing its head elsewhere). This is even true of "Let's Roll," a song inspired by the final words of Todd Beamer, one of the passengers on Flight 93 that helped overtake terrorists intent on flying a plane into Washington DC; though it's one of the first major post-9-11 songs, written by an artist notorious for his support of Reagan, it is neither reactionary nor all that moving - mostly, it just sounds like another mid-tempo groover on an album filled with them. And that's the main problem with the record - though it reads well on paper, and is certainly more ambitious than any Neil Young record in years, the songs aren't distinctive or developed, and, apart from the rather muscular Crazy Horse- backed "Goin' Home," they're all delivered in the same fashion, and all blend together. Instead of sounding like a refreshing change of pace, it's a muddled, aimless affair from an artist that's had too many middling efforts over the last decade.
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