At a time when chaos and unpredictability hold sway in so much of the world, it's hard to fault anyone for wishing for something stable and familiar, even from someone as chronically unpredictable as
Neil Young. In 2019,
Young announced he was recording again with
Crazy Horse, and after a handful of especially eccentric and uneven albums -- 2016's
Peace Trail, 2017's
The Visitor, 2018's
Paradox -- the notion of
Neil and
Crazy Horse cranking up their amps and making some righteous noise sounded like the sort of comfort food many fans had been hungry for. However, in time-honored
Neil Young tradition, 2019's
Colorado is a bit different than what fans might have been expecting.
Frank "Poncho" Sampedro,
Young's longtime guitar foil in
Crazy Horse, opted not to participate in their latest reunion, and
Young recruited his occasional collaborator (and longtime
Bruce Springsteen sideman)
Nils Lofgren to take his place. Where
Sampedro had a knack for goading
Young into conjuring billows of howling brilliance from his axe, on
Colorado,
Lofgren instead gives him a strong, stable framework that allows
Neil room to explore yet doesn't push him forward. As a result, this isn't a cathartic blowout in the manner of
Rust Never Sleeps or
Ragged Glory but instead harkens back to the focused yet ambling mood of
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere and
Harvest, only with songs that are good but by no means exceptional. As with much of his work in the 2010s,
Young's lyrics here reflect an autumnal concern with politics, the environment, and mortality, and they're thoughtful and of their moment, but they sound more like blog posts than clearly thought-out messages. While this is hardly unexpected from rock's leading "First Thought Best Thought" man, they're still not up to the standard of his best music; after a while, repeatedly informing us he's an old white guy on "She Showed Me Love" sounds less like self-awareness and more like he's not sure if we know, which we certainly do. That said, if
Colorado isn't the great soul-satisfying rocker we were dreaming of, the dusty howl of
Young's electric guitar work is here in plentiful supply -- not at full strength but loud enough to matter (especially on "Shut It Down" and "Help Me Lose My Mind") --
Young is properly engaged with his material, and his interplay with
Lofgren, bassist
Ralph Molina, and drummer
Billy Talbot is a reminder of why
Crazy Horse has been on hand for so much of his greatest work. At a time when a great album from
Neil Young would have been more than welcome,
Colorado is instead a good one, but it's recognizably the work of a great artist, and that's more than can be said of the last few offerings
Young has given us. ~ Mark Deming