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Music Library
2717 songs

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Prairie Wind
10 songs

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Greendale
11 songs

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Roxy Night
11 songs

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Dead Man
13 songs

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Mirror Ball
11 songs

25.
Eldorado
5 songs

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Unplugged
14 songs

28.
Weld
16 songs

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Solo Trans
9 songs

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Comes a Time
10 songs

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Harvest Moon
10 songs

34.
Arc Weld
17 songs

35.
Arc
1 songs

36.
Ragged Glory
10 songs

37.
Freedom
12 songs

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Life
9 songs

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Old Ways
10 songs

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Trans
9 songs

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Re-ac-tor
8 songs

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Live Rust
16 songs

47.
Decade
35 songs

48.
Zuma
9 songs

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Harvest
10 songs

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Neil Young
10 songs

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Crazy Horse
11 songs

Rank #326

Neil Young

 

Neil Percival Young[1] OM (born November 12, 1945) is a Canadian singer-songwriter, musician and film director.

Young's work is characterized by deeply personal lyrics, distinctive guitar work, and signature falsetto tenor singing voice. Although he accompanies himself on several different instruments—including piano and harmonica—his clawhammer acoustic guitar style and often idiosyncratic electric guitar soloing are the linchpins of a sometimes ragged, sometimes polished sound. Although Young has experimented widely with differing music styles, including swing, jazz, rockabilly, blues, and electronic music throughout a varied career, his best known work usually falls into either of two distinct styles: folk-esque acoustic rock ("Heart of Gold", "Harvest Moon" and "Old Man") and electric-charged hard rock (like "Cinnamon Girl", "Rockin' in the Free World" and "Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)"). In recent years, Young has adopted elements from newer styles like industrial, alternative country and grunge. Young's profound influence on the latter caused some to dub him "the godfather of grunge". As of mid-2008, Young has sold an estimated seventy-nine million albums worldwide.[2]

Young has directed (or co-directed) a number of films using the pseudonym Bernard Shakey, including Journey Through the Past (1973), Rust Never Sleeps (1979), Human Highway (1982), Greendale (2003), and CSNY Déjà Vu (2008). He is currently working on a documentary about electric car technology, tentatively titled Linc/Volt. The project involves a 1959 Lincoln Continental converted to hybrid technology, which Young plans to drive to Washington, DC as an example to lawmakers there.[3]

He is also an outspoken advocate for environmental issues and small farmers, having co-founded in 1985 the benefit concert Farm Aid, and in 1986 helped found The Bridge School,[4] and its annual supporting Bridge School Benefit concerts, together with his wife Pegi (in this, Young's involvement stems at least partially from the fact that both of his sons have cerebral palsy and his daughter, like Young himself, has epilepsy).

Although Young sings as frequently about U.S. legends and myths as he does about his native country, he remains a Canadian citizen and has never wanted to relinquish his Canadian citizenship.