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Listen to an Unreleased Neil Young Song From His ‘Archives Vol. III (1976–1987)’

AARP readers get to hear his Nicolette Larson duet ‘Lady Wingshot’ before the box set’s release


spinner image Neil Young in happi-coat relaxing at a hotel in Tokyo in March 1976
Getty Images

Prolific rock musician Neil Young, 78, is releasing his most copiously comprehensive box set yet: Neil Young Archives Vol. III (1976–1987), a heap of recorded history stretching across 198 tracks, 11 films and 28 hours. Fifteen tunes are previously unreleased, and you can hear one of the prettiest now, “Lady Wingshot,” which premiered exclusively on AARP on Aug. 21.

Listen to “Lady Wingshot” by clicking on the video player above.

It’s a midtempo duet with the late Nicolette Larson, Young’s partner on the 1978 hit “Lotta Love,” recorded Nov. 10, 1977, in Nashville. At the end, you hear persnickety perfectionist Young complaining that one guitar is “just a little louder than all the other ones.”

For Young, the archive is not a retirement hobby. He remains an active recording and touring musician, an outspoken environmental activist and a mercurial rock insurrectionist. He’s also one of the most demanding music historians alive, especially when it comes to his music. The limited deluxe edition of Neil Young Archives Vol. III (1976–1987), available at neilyoungarchives.com for $449.98 starting Sept. 6, holds 17 CDs and five Blu-rays, plus a 160-page book and a poster. (That’s $2.15 per tune or movie; there’s also a 17-disc CD box set of only the music for $240.) It spans 11 studio albums, including country/folk Comes a Time, grunge prototype Rust Never Sleeps, rockabilly detour Everybody’s Rockin’ and Kraftwerk-influenced electronic Trans.

spinner image The albums, Blu-Rays and book included in the Neil Young Archives Vol. III box set
The "Neil Young Archives Vol. III" box set.
Courtesy Warner Records

Tracks you’ve never heard before outnumber previously released versions of songs by about double: 121 to 62. The new ones are unreleased versions of live performances, studio cuts, mixes or edits.

The massive deluxe edition features his never-released albums Oceanside Countryside, Johnny’s Island and Summer Songs, and unreleased films Across the Water, Boarding House, Trans and Catalyst. Sprinkled throughout the collection are “Rap” tracks, with Young’s comments on recording details. Rarities abound. On “A Snapshot in Time,” Young is heard rehearsing with Larson and Linda Ronstadt. The 1976 European and Japanese tour by Young and Crazy Horse is captured in “Across the Water.” There’s even the 1982 comedy he codirected and starred in, Human Highway.

spinner image Neil Young playing an electric guitar onstage while singing into a microphone at the 2024 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival
Neil Young performs at the 2024 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival at Fair Grounds Race Course on May 4, 2024 in New Orleans.
Getty Images

It’s a smorgasbord for completists, but fans with lighter appetites can opt for Takes ($34.98) a double vinyl LP compilation that cherry-picks 16 tracks, including “Lady Wingshot”; “Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black),” performed live with Devo; “If You Got Love”; and “Sail Away,” live by the Ducks, the short-lived rock band Young joined in 1977.

Want even more Neil Young deep box sets, performance series, remasters, bootlegs and special releases? You can also get his Archives Vol. I (1963–1972), with Buffalo Springfield, the Squires, Crazy Horse and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, plus songs from After the Gold Rush and Harvest; and Archives Vol. II (1972–1976), with live discs and alternate cuts, demos and outtakes from Time Fades Away, Tonight’s the Night, On the Beach, Long May You Run and CSNY’s aborted Human Highway.

And there’s more to come. On his website, Young apologizes for how long it took to produce the latest volume: “Delayed by me changing my mind too many times.”

He adds, “V4 is coming along nicely.”

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