Description
Harvest is the fourth studio album by Canadian-American musician Neil Young, released on February 1, 1972, by Reprise Records, catalogue number MS 2032. It featured the London Symphony Orchestra on two tracks and vocals by guests David Crosby, Graham Nash, Linda Ronstadt, Stephen Stills, and James Taylor. It topped the Billboard 200 album chart for two weeks, and spawned two hit singles, “Old Man“, which peaked at No. 31 on the US Billboard Hot 100, and “Heart of Gold“, which reached No. 1. It was the best-selling album of 1972 in the United States.
The album has since remained Neil Young’s signature album as well as his best selling. In 2015, Harvest was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.
Background
In 1970, Young released both Déjà Vu with Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and his third solo album, After the Gold Rush. The year also saw Young tour as a solo act and with both CSNY and his collaborators Crazy Horse. In the fall of 1970, Young released After the Gold Rush, divorced his wife Susan Acevedo, and purchased Broken Arrow Ranch in Redwood City, California, where he would live for the next four decades. While renovating his new home, Young injured his back, limiting his mobility and ability to perform electric guitar. Around the same time, Young would also begin his relationship with actress Carrie Snodgress. Young’s new home and romantic relationship would inspire several new songs.
After completing After the Gold Rush, Young promoted the album through a series of solo acoustic concerts. After playing Carnegie Hall in December 1970, Young returned to his ranch for a break in touring. While picking up a slab of walnut, Young injured his back, which prevented him from standing up while performing, limiting him to playing acoustic music. Young explains in an August 1975 interview with Cameron Crowe for Rolling Stone:
I was in and out of hospitals for the two years between After the Gold Rush and Harvest. I have one weak side and all the muscles slipped on me. My discs slipped. I couldn’t hold my guitar up. That’s why I sat down on my whole solo tour. I couldn’t move around too well, so I laid low for a long time on the ranch and just didn’t have any contact, you know. I wore a brace. Crosby would come up to see how I was, we’d go for a walk and it took me 45 minutes to get to the studio, which is only 400 yards from the house. I could only stand up four hours a day. I recorded most of Harvest in the brace. That’s a lot of the reason it’s such a mellow album. I couldn’t physically play an electric guitar. “Are You Ready for the Country”, “Alabama”, and “Words” were all done after I had the operation. The doctors were starting to talk about wheelchairs and shit, so I had some discs removed. But for the most part, I spent two years flat on my back.
Young embarked on a solo acoustic tour in January and February 1971 where he debuted many of the album’s songs. A performance on The Johnny Cash Show led to collaborations with record producer Elliot Mazer and Nashville studio musicians. In Nashville, Young recruited a group of country session musicians, whom he would dub The Stray Gators to record his new songs. The resulting record was a massive hit, producing a US number one single in “Heart of Gold”. The album’s success caught Young off guard and his first instinct was to back away from stardom. He would later write that the record “put me in the middle of the road. Traveling there soon became a bore so I headed for the ditch. A rougher ride but I saw more interesting people there.”
Writing
In a post on his website, Young shares that much of Harvest “was written about or for Carrie Snodgress, a wonderful actress and person and Zeke Young’s mother.” In a radio interview, Young specifically cites “Heart of Gold“, “Harvest” and “Out on the Weekend” as being inspired by his then blossoming love.
“A Man Needs a Maid” was also inspired by Young’s budding relationship with Snodgress, whom he contacted after seeing her picture in a magazine. At a Philadelphia concert in October 2014, Young shared that the song was also inspired by a light switch in a hotel he stayed at while touring with CSNY:
Now maid is a word that’s been hijacked. It doesn’t mean what it means anymore. Now it’s like a derogatory thing. It’s something bad. Someone working. Sometimes I tell a little story here about something. Kinda tears it for people a little bit. So a while ago a long time ago I was in a band and we were playing in London. I was in this hotel and there was this light switch on the wall. I walked over to it but it wasn’t a light switch. I was surprised to see two buttons. The top one you pressed a MAN and the second one you pressed MAID. I immediately went to the piano. That’s how it happened.
“Heart of Gold” has become Young’s signature song and was his only number 1 hit in the United States. In 1974, he would tell a journalist that its composition was influenced by French song “Love Is Blue.”
“Are You Ready for the Country?” was written shortly before being recorded for the album. It, like “Words” and “Alabama”, was recorded to provide contrast to the acoustic songs on the album. Young explains in a post on his website: “Are You Ready for the Country?” was written at the ranch shortly before the barn sessions happened. It’s a simple song based on an old blues melody that has been used many times. I thought it would bring some welcome relief from the other songs.”
“Old Man” was inspired by Louis Avila, the caretaker of the Northern California ranch Young had recently purchased. He explains an audience in January 1971: “This is a new song that I wrote about my ranch. I live on a ranch now. Lucky me. There’s this old man who lives on it, that uh, he came with the place when I bought it. Ranches have foremen you know usually that sort of like stay there with the cows, no matter who owns it.” He further describes Avila in his 2015 memoir, Special Deluxe:
Louis and Clara were each about sixty years old and Louis had a very leathery face from being out in the sun working the land his whole life. His hair was full and white and he talked slowly in a friendly way. Clara, his wife of about forty years, was a very nice, soft-spoken lady. They were very much in love and lived in a little house about two hundred yards from my cabin, just on the other side of the beautiful little lake. They were there the day I first saw the place. Louis stood a little off-center due to an injury he sustained while walking through a field one day when he stepped in a deep hole and put his back out. He never got it fixed. He just soldiered on. His manner was always casual, country.
“Alabama” is “an unblushing rehash of ‘Southern Man‘”; to which American southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd wrote their 1973 hit “Sweet Home Alabama” in reply, stating “I hope Neil Young will remember, a southern man don’t need him around, anyhow”. Young later wrote of “Alabama” in his autobiography Waging Heavy Peace, saying it “richly deserved the shot Lynyrd Skynyrd gave me with their great record. I don’t like my words when I listen to it. They are accusatory and condescending, not fully thought out, and too easy to misconstrue.”
“The Needle and the Damage Done” was inspired directly by an overdose by bandmate Danny Whitten, who would later succumb to his addictions. The song was also inspired by several artists Young had seen fall to heroin, as he explained to a January 1971 audience: “I got to see to see a lot of great musicians before they happened. Before they became famous. When they were just gigging. Five and six sets a night. Things like that. I got to see a lot of great musicians who nobody got to see for one reason or another. But strangely enough the real good ones that you never got to see was because of heroin. And that started happening over and over. And then it happened to some that everybody knew about.”
“Words (Between the Lines of Age)”, the last song on the album, featured a lengthy guitar workout with the band. In his 2012 memoir Waging Heavy Peace, Young reveals that the song “Words” was inspired by Young’s growing fame, and the first cracks in his relationship with Snodgress:
“Words” is the first song that reveals a little of my early doubts of being in a long-term relationship with Carrie. It was a new relationship. There were so many people around all the time, talking and talking, sitting in a circle smoking cigarettes in my living room. It had never been like that before. I am a very quiet and private person. The peace was going away. It was changing too fast. I remember actually jumping out the living room window onto the lawn to get out of there; I couldn’t wait long enough to use the door! Words – too many of them, it seemed to me. I was young and not ready for what I had gotten myself into. I became paranoid and aware of mind games others were trying to play on me. I had never even thought of that before. That was how we did Harvest, in love in the beginning and with some doubts at the end.