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Freedom (Neil Young album) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Freedom (Neil Young album)
''Freedom'' is the eighteenth studio album by Canadian rock musician Neil Young, released on October 2, 1989. ''Freedom'' effectively relaunched Young's career after a largely unsuccessful decade. After many arguments (and a lawsuit), Young left Geffen Records in 1988 and returned to his original label, Reprise, with ''This Note's for You''. ''Freedom'', however, brought about a new, critical and commercially successful album. This album was released in the United States as an LP record and a CD in 1989. ==Content== Stylistically, the album was one of Young's most diverse records, ranging from acoustic love songs to raging rockers. Three of the songs on ''Freedom'' ("Don't Cry," "Eldorado" and "On Broadway") had previously been released on the Japan and Australia-only EP ''Eldorado'', and featured heavy waves of thundering distortion and feedback, juxtaposed with quieter sections. ''Freedom'' contains one song, "Rockin' in the Free World", that bookends the album in acoustic and electric variants, a stylistic choice previously featured on ''Rust Never Sleeps''. The song, despite lyrics critical of the then-new George H. W. Bush administration ("we got a thousand points of light"; "kinder, gentler machine gun hand"), became the ''de facto'' anthem of the collapse of Communism. An edited cut of the electric version of the song was used over the final credits of Michael Moore's film ''Fahrenheit 9/11,'' and the song was re-released as a single at the time of the film's release.
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