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Andy Curran covered the song on the Neil Young tribute album Borrowed Tunes: A Tribute to Neil Young. The indie rock bands Big Head Todd and the Monsters and Toad the Wet Sprocket united to cover the song in the Monsters Music Monthly series. [17] Radiohead is known to have played the song live on several occasions and bootlegs are common on ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cinnamon_Girl_(Neil_Young_song)&oldid=528974569"
"Down by the River" is a song composed by Neil Young. It was first released on his 1969 album with Crazy Horse, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere.Young explained the context of the story in the liner notes of his 1977 anthology album Decade, stating that he wrote "Down by the River," "Cinnamon Girl" and "Cowgirl in the Sand" while delirious in bed in Topanga Canyon with a 103 °F (39 °C) fever.
There is also a 200-gram vinyl LP pressing by Classic Records. Though originally planned to include a bonus performance of "Cinnamon Girl" as a bonus track, [11] the final product has the same track listing as the CD and DVD. "Cinnamon Girl" is separately available online.
Greendale is the 27th studio album by Neil Young. Young and Crazy Horse 's Greendale is a 10-song musical novel [ 3 ] set in a fictional California seaside town of the same name. Based on the saga of the Green family, Greendale combines numerous themes on corruption, observation of the passing of time, environmentalism and mass media consolidation.
Live at the Cellar Door is a live album by Neil Young, featuring performances from his six 1970 concerts in Washington D.C. [9] It was released on December 10, 2013. The album is volume 02.5 in Young's Archives Performance Series. [10]
The story of how Ed Sheeran surprised well-known NYC subway singer Mike Yung as he crooned his latest single, "Eyes Closed." ... "Eyes Closed," with folded lyrics in hand, a man with red hair and ...
Allmusic critic Matthew Greenwald described "Cowgirl in the Sand" as "one of Neil Young's most lasting compositions" and "a true classic". [3] Rolling Stone critic Rob Sheffield calls it and "Down by the River" the "key tracks" on Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, calling them "long, violent guitar jams, rambling over the nine-minute mark with no trace of virtuosity at all, just staccato guitar ...