


Check out a couple samples below and then go here to download the whole thing. Teen Daze, who recently showed up here with a collaborative Pink Floyd cover, drop a wildly inventive electro-pop version of “Harvest Moon.” Foxes In Fiction‘s delta-bluesy “Tell Me Why” sounds like they followed Robert Johnson into the studio in 1937. The free album Headed for the Ditch – the second tribute to use that title – opens with an almost completely unrecognizable cover of “Hey Babe” (fittingly subtitled “Butchered Version”) by Lost Boy. No playing it safe here: these covers range from the unconventional to the downright bizarre.

Now Universal Electricity pays homage to Young’s ditch ethic with a compilation of indie artists covering his songs. like when everyone says they wanted to be love but when someone tells them they love them, they freak out and leave the people who told them they love them.Never one to tread a straight line, Neil Young reported in the liner notes his 1977 compilation Decade that after the success of Harvest, he “headed for the ditch” out of boredom. On a sidenote: I think this song says a lot about people who are having a hard time what to feel or how act when something they thought they wanted is right in front of them. **** I think this part is knowing and being sad about the fact that the relationship could possibly end (since she's having a hard time making arrangements to herself) but also knowing that the only person who could make you happy is the person who's about to break your heart. **** i think it's about waiting for someone to make a decision whether they'll stay or go. When you're young enough to repay (old enough to stay in a committed, give-and-take relationship) but also young enough sell (young enough to sell out your relationship by taking the easy way out and breaking it off) Asking someone or yourself why is it hard to make arrangements with yourself
