By Mark Smotroff

While contemplating whom to vote for, you might want
to pick up Neil Young's most recent album "Americana" to listen,
watch and learn.
This Blu-ray Disc is a long form video album, with
repurposed "found" silent black & white film depicting Americans
in heartland and city scenarios -- from backwoods to big city depression to
civil war heroes and westward-driven pioneers, all set to the new Neil Young
music. It is absolutely riveting at
times.
If you desire a pristine Jazz At The Pawnshop-style
recording, then most Neil albums won't be your "cuppa." However, if you
want to hear passion oozing from your speakers, you should spend some time with
Neil. He goes to great pains to ensure his albums ring true. So if the
band plays loud and distorted in his barn studio, the record will reflect that
sound. Americana delivers the tone crunch of vintage amps turned up just right
so the hot tubes create "that sound" of Neil's 1959 Gibson "Black
Beauty" Les Paul in overdrive.
The CD of this album sounds good, but the 192 kHz /
24-bit stereo Blu-ray Disc trounces it with presence and detail. On "Gallows
Pole" I hear the resonance and pushed air of the kick drum. I can follow the smack of the sticks on the
snare drum head, as the drummer lets it float for a split second allowing the
snares to resonate before making the next hit. The ride cymbal rings
like a bell and the crash slashes through the mix. These details are all but lost on the CD.

This is my kind of demo disc as it tests whether your system
can deliver the heart and soul of the music.
A pristine recording may sound clean but oftentimes is rendered sterile
and thus won't push your gear to deliver the FEEL of a song the way the artist
intended. If the essence of the music
has been produced OUT of a recording you lose that magic something that sends a
shiver down your spine. Some artists
will work hard to get this feel and don't worry quite so much about a buzzing
amp or string here and there - that IS part of the recording. If artist, producer and engineer have done
their jobs right, the sound coming out of those speakers will not only be the
music, but pure feel.
Neil's tremolo and fingers bending guitar strings, the flowing
pulse of Ralph Molina's drums against Billy Talbot's bass and the interplay
between Neil and Frank "Poncho" Sampedro's guitars all combine
to evoke the yearning within Americana.
Big guitars, pounding drums, propulsive cymbals, raging rhythms, chanting voices and choirs - they are all there for the taking on Americana.



