Neil Young Music:

Trans



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Neil Young Music:
Trans



Music
Trans
by Neil Young

Trans
List Price: $14.98Label: Polydor UK

Salesrank: 25630

Released: March 19, 1999
Our Price: $9.17
Used Price: $8.41
Media: Audio CD

Trans Track Listing:
1. Little Thing Called Love
2. Computer Age
3. We R in Control
4. Transformer Man
5. Computer Cowboy (AKA Syscrusher)
6. Hold on to Your Love
7. Sample and Hold
8. Mr. Soul
9. Like an Inca

Editorial Review:
Unavailable on CD in the U.S.! Originally released in 1982, Trans was a bold and bewildering move into the 'modern age' for the veteran singer/songwriter. While it's been called his 'Electronic' album, Trans doesn't transport Neil into Depeche Mode territory. Instead, Trans finds Neil experimenting with an array of computers, keyboards and vocoders along with his standard guitar/bass/drums backbone. Nine tracks, including 'Little Thing Called Love', 'Computer Age', 'Transformer Man' and a drastically different version of his Buffalo Springfield classic 'Mr. Soul'. Universal.

Trans Reviews:
I like "robot" Neil Young more than regular Neil Young 5 Star Review
2009-10-23 - I'll admit that I'm not a fan of Neil Young. I know he's a great songwriter but he just doesn't do it for me. His voice is too whiny sounding and his songs too melancholy. HOWEVER, TRANS is a GREAT CD! The songs kick and are sometimes very beautiful. His "robotic" voice I think works great on the songs. I'll take TRANS over Harvest and Freedom any day.

this is neil young ??? 4 Star Review
2009-08-01 - I remember when I got this how blown away I was. One day while I was playing it softly at about 165 decibels and my room mate came home and asked 'who the hell is this ? and I said Neil Young. He said this is Neil Young ???? I've never been a huge fan of heavy duty synth music but this was not the usual dose of redundant drum machines and mindless lyrics I heard too much of during the worst decade ever for rock and pop - the 80's (thanks MTV). At the time I was recovering from a very serious neck and back injury and got a Commodore 64 computer to give me something to do and was beginning to learn to play computer music on it so perhaps that has something to do with my affection for Trans. It was also during the Reagan years and my big brotherish paranoia was in full swing so a song like We're in Control (A song about computers controlling everything) was very with the times I thought. Computer Cowboy was way ahead of it's time and eerily predicted what we know so well now with computer geeks writing viruses, spyware and all the stuff that makes the internet such a freak show now. I see some were disappointed by Sample and Hold (was there another version of this - if so it's news to me) but it was easily the strongest track on the album. Mr Soul was ok simply because it's a good song even if I sang it. Like an Inca was good but really didn't fit in at all with the album. The rest of the songs were pretty weak which is why I only gave it 4 stars.

Bottom line is that it's far from Neil's best and far from his worst but the real beauty of it is that it proves perhaps more than any other album he made (except for On the Beach maybe) that you never know what Neil will do next and that he's always willing to gamble instead of playing it safe like most of the corporate rock bands of the era seemed to be doing then. Thank you Neil for making life bearable during a very difficult time for me during the dawn of the sell out era.

STRANGE... 3 Star Review
2007-08-27 - Thats all that I can say about it. This album is odd. Neil Young doing electronica? Like years before electronics was popular? It's just weirdness. How did he even get the urge to do this thing? I think somebody must have given him some machines, and he was like, "check it out, I can do anything!"

I can't say that the album is a failure though. If you dig the likes of bands such as The Flaming Lips (I always thought of that band as very Neil Young sounding... and I would imagine that the band maybe copped some of their style directly from this album...)listen to The Lips album Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots and compare to Neil's TRANSFORMER MAN from this album (prolly the only track on this album that actually works, and done better on his unplugged album) It's Neil Youngs voice, only filtered through machines. Again, strange. Most of the songs are like that... including an electronic version of his classic song MR. SOUL, but besides the two tracks mentioned the sound gets very old fast, and at some points is so primitive that it hurts.

Besides that there are a few somewhat ok songs that don't go over the top in electronica, the best song on the album being the nine minute final track LIKE AN INCA, which is completely out of place with the rest of the album, but it's good to have if you somehow find yourself with this album.

A curiosity at most. Some interesting stuff, mostly just repetitive, early electronics used very much over the top. Hard to even consider this a Neil Young album... 3 stars.

quite a bizarre album, but Neil's passion and quality songwriting can't be denied 4 Star Review
2006-02-19 - Neil Young has become notorious for the abrupt genre-hopping he has done, particularly throughout the '80s. That said, "Trans", which was originally released in December of 1982/ January of 1983, is a pretty bizarre album any way you look at it, and it's an album that you can't easily summarize.

The majority of "Trans" finds Neil going in a highly-synthesized direction, definitely New Wave-ish, but tracks such as "Computer Age" and "Sample and Hold" also have a distinct Europop feel. On all six of the album's 'high-tech' tracks, Neil used a vocoder to give his vocals a computerized effect--it's generally very effective, but the downside to it is that, frequently, the lyrics are incredibly hard, if not impossible, to decipher just by listening. This is atypical Neil Young stuff for sure, but you can tell he wasn't joking around. It's become well-known among fans that Neil Young was experiencing great frustration in the early '80s at his inability to communicate with his son Ben who was a quadriplegic suffering from cerebral palsy, and you can very much detect this theme on "Trans" in the lyrics to several of the songs, as well as with the back cover which shows what appears to be an electronic variation of a human heart. The difficulty in merely making out the words that Young is singing is a drawback, but still, "Computer Age" is atmospherically arresting and extremely catchy; the ominous "We R In Control" is powerful; and "Computer Cowboy", though a bit sluggish, is also highly effective. The ominous, robot dating service-themed "Sample And Hold" is also undeniably catchy, although the "Trans" CD I have contains the 8+ minute version which does drag in spots. On the down side, "Transformer Man" does sound quite thin and off-the-mark; and the stiff, robotic remake of "Mr. Soul" doesn't work very well and is pretty pointless.

What makes the album as a whole even more strange is that there are also three additional tracks, with 'regular' Neil vocals, that seem to have come from an entirely different project. Two of them are relatively conventional pop-rockers--the ballad "Hold On To Your Love" is wonderfully tuneful and uplifting; and the album-opening "Little Thing Called Love" is an irresistibly catchy confection with a somewhat tropical flavor, and notice at the end of the bridge the appearance of the very same acoustic guitar riff that would later re-emerge as the main riff on the song "Harvest Moon". The edgy, looping, 9+ minute album closer "Like An Inca", despite the slightly distracting, rattling acoustic guitar strumming (come on Neil, what the heck), is otherwise excellent, with a great harmonized chorus, a commanding lead vocal from Neil, and highly memorable, mysterious lyrics; the song, which bares an uncanny resemblance to Steely Dan's "Your Gold Teeth", is also interesting because it's basically structured in typical 'epic Neil' style, but Neil's usual 'mad soloing' is replaced by sliding leads and fluid guitar soloing that Neil obviously didn't (and couldn't) play.

With the exception of "Mr. Soul", Neil doesn't deliver any of his trademark noisy guitar soloing here. Don't get the wrong idea though--even with the abundance of synthesizers/ electronics on the album, there are still a lot of guitars. There are prominent, crunchy guitars on "We R In Control" and "Computer Cowboy", plus smooth double-tracked guitar on "Computer Age".

All in all, "Trans" is definitely a worthwhile record from Neil Young, thanks to his obvious passion and his consistently high quality songwriting.

Trans is Neil's Most Under-rated Work 5 Star Review
2006-02-16 - If you don't like this, you're not the real deal Neil fan.










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