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Zuma

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Download links and information about Zuma by Neil Young & Crazy Horse. This album was released in 1975 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 36:27 minutes.

Artist: Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Release date: 1975
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 9
Duration: 36:27
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Don't Cry No Tears (featuring Neil Young) 2:35
2. Danger Bird (featuring Neil Young) 6:54
3. Pardon My Heart (featuring Neil Young) 3:47
4. Lookin' for a Love (featuring Neil Young) 3:16
5. Barstool Blues (featuring Neil Young) 3:00
6. Stupid Girl (featuring Neil Young) 3:12
7. Drive Back (featuring Neil Young) 3:33
8. Cortez the Killer (featuring Neil Young) 7:31
9. Through My Sails (featuring Neil Young) 2:39

Details

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Having apparently exorcised his demons by releasing the cathartic Tonight's the Night, Neil Young returned to his commercial strengths with Zuma (named after Zuma Beach in Los Angeles, where he now owned a house). Seven of the album's nine songs were recorded with the reunited Crazy Horse, in which rhythm guitarist Frank Sampedro had replaced the late Danny Whitten, but there were also nods to other popular Young styles in "Pardon My Heart," an acoustic song that would have fit on Harvest, his most popular album, and "Through My Sails," retrieved from one of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's abortive recording sessions. Young had abandoned the ragged, first-take approach of his previous three albums, but Crazy Horse would never be a polished act, and the music had a lively sound well-suited to the songs, which were some of the most melodic, pop-oriented tunes Young had crafted in years, though they were played with an electric-guitar-drenched rock intensity. The overall theme concerned romantic conflict, with lyrics that lamented lost love and sometimes longed for a return ("Pardon My Heart" even found Young singing, "I don't believe this song"), though the overall conclusion, notably in such catchy songs as "Don't Cry No Tears" and "Lookin' for a Love," was to move on to the next relationship. But the album's standout track (apparently the only holdover from an early intention to present songs with historical subjects) was the seven-and-a-half-minute epic "Cortez the Killer," a commentary on the Spanish conqueror of Latin America that served as a platform for Young's most extensive guitar soloing since his work on Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere.