Much like Bob Dylan and Neil Young has shown with his Unplugged album, why he still belongs to the reference class of singer / songwriter, and has influenced countless musicians. The music veteran of Canada may well be counted confidently to the veterans of the industry: from its acoustic beginnings to Woodstock times in Schrammler squad Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young to his feedback orgies with the grunge rockers Pearl Jam in the '90s Neil Young has always been an established name in the music business. On this album, Neil Young does what he does best. The man does not count for nothing the greats on the acoustic guitar and his Unplugged show needs no experiments or unusual arrangements. Strapped with a guitar on his lap, the harmonica and occasionally (in "Helpless" or "Stringman") also plays the piano and sings sitting by a relaxed set with some of his best-known numbers. That for the early Neil Young typical countryeske Feeling spread campfires and lets (especially in "Harvest Moon") arise longing for warm summer nights. The absolute highlights come to my mind in the end, even though we already have with the drug ballad "Needle and the Damage Done" or an orchestral version of "Like a Hurricane" some of his greatest classics behind us. But the last 4 songs ("The Unknown Legend", "Look out for my love", "Long May You Run" and "From Hank to Hendrix") are quite simply the best thing MTV Unplugged has ever transmitted.