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Rust Never Sleeps

Neil Young  Main Performer

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Track
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1 Sugar Mountain Young  
2 I Am a Child Young  
3 Comes a Time Young  
4 After the Gold Rush Young  
5 My My, Hey Hey    
6 The Loner Young  
7 Welfare Mothers Young  
8 The Needle and the Damage Done Young  
9 A Lotta Love Young  
10 Powderfinger Young  
11 Sedan Delivery Young  
12 Cortez the Killer Young  
13 Ride My Llama Young  
14 Cinnamon Girl Young  
15 Like a Hurricane Young  
16 My My, Hey Hey    
17 Tonight's the Night Young  
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Rust Never Sleeps

DVD [Video/DVD]

Label: Vapor Records

Style: Rock & Roll

Rust Never Sleeps

UPC: 060768833395

Release Date: 09/24/2002

Original Release Date: 09/24/2002

Tracks: [Sugar Mountain, I Am a Child, Comes a Time, After the Gold Rush, My My, Hey Hey, The Loner, Welfare Mothers, The Needle and the Damage Done, A Lotta Love, Powderfinger, Sedan Delivery, Cortez the Killer, Ride My Llama, Cinnamon Girl, Like a Hurricane, My My, Hey Hey, Tonight's the Night]
Contributors:

William Ruhlmann

Neil Young's second film is a faithful chronicle of one of the performances in his 1978 Rust Never Sleeps Tour (October 22 at the Cow Palace in San Francisco), a nearly two-hour concert during which Young with and without Crazy Horse presents a good selection of his best material dating back to "Sugar Mountain" and some excellent new songs, including "My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue)" (done acoustically) and "Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)" (done electrically). That's the good news. The bad news is that the show features some silly production ideas that distract from and even trivialize the performance. The concert takes seven minutes to get started, as cowled figures with glowing eyes, similar to the Jawas in Star Wars, scurry around the stage setting up giant props and the PA plays Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner" and the Beatles' "A Day in the Life." The "roadeyes," as Young calls them, return throughout the show, along with attendants in white coats, dancing men in robes and conical hats, and a stage announcer who blathers on about "rust-o-vision." For once, however, home video proves superior to the version in your local theater: at home, you have a fast-forward button. Still, the odd staging and Young's almost total lack of audience rapport make Rust Never Sleeps an odd viewing experience, despite the "live greatest hits" set list and strong performances. ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi