Hawks & Doves
Hawks & Doves is the eleventh studio album by Canadian-American musician Neil Young, released on October 29, 1980, by Reprise Records.[1][2] Produced by Young alongside Tim Mulligan and others, the record clocks in at approximately 30 minutes and features a blend of acoustic folk and electric rock tracks.[3] The album's title draws from the contemporary political dichotomy between "hawks," favoring assertive foreign policy and military strength, and "doves," advocating restraint and negotiation, reflecting Young's commentary on issues like the Iran hostage crisis and U.S. defense debates amid the 1980 presidential election.[4] Half of the album consists of previously recorded but unreleased songs from the 1970s, including outtakes from sessions for earlier works like Tonight's the Night, while the remainder comprises new material hastily assembled in 1980 following Young's personal losses and creative shifts.[5] Standout tracks such as "Little Wing" and "The Old Homestead," the latter featuring contributions from Young's longtime collaborators in Crazy Horse, exemplify the album's raw, introspective style amid its patchwork production.[6] This abrupt release, diverging from the arena-rock bombast of Young's prior album Rust Never Sleeps, marked a return to more subdued, politically tinged songwriting. Upon release, Hawks & Doves received mixed reviews for its perceived inconsistency and brevity, though some praised its timely patriotism and Young's unpolished authenticity.[7] Commercially, it debuted at number 78 on the Billboard 200 and peaked at number 30, spending 16 weeks on the chart, reflecting moderate success compared to Young's blockbuster 1970s output.[8] The album's legacy endures as a transitional work in Young's discography, bridging his experimental phases and underscoring his resistance to commercial expectations through eclectic, vault-sourced content.[4]Background
Political and cultural context
The hawk-dove dichotomy in foreign policy, originating in Cold War discourse, distinguishes advocates of assertive military intervention ("hawks") from those favoring diplomacy and de-escalation ("doves").[9] This framework gained renewed salience in late 1979 amid escalating geopolitical crises, including the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan on December 24, 1979, which deployed over 100,000 troops to prop up a communist regime against mujahideen insurgents, marking a direct expansion of Soviet influence into South Asia.[10] Concurrently, the Iran hostage crisis, initiated on November 4, 1979, when militants seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran and held 52 Americans captive for 444 days, exposed vulnerabilities in U.S. deterrence and fueled debates over responding to revolutionary regimes with force versus negotiation.[11] These events underscored empirical threats from Soviet adventurism and Islamist militancy, challenging prior anti-war sentiments rooted in Vietnam-era pacifism by highlighting the costs of perceived U.S. restraint under President Jimmy Carter, whose responses included Olympic boycotts and arms embargoes but no direct military action. Hawks & Doves, released on October 29, 1980, emerged six days before the U.S. presidential election on November 4, 1980, in which Ronald Reagan decisively defeated Carter, securing 489 electoral votes to Carter's 49 amid widespread dissatisfaction with Carter's handling of foreign threats.[1][12] Reagan's campaign emphasized military rebuilding and confrontation of Soviet expansionism, signaling a hawkish resurgence against Carter's dovish emphasis on human rights and détente, which critics argued had invited aggression.[13] The album's title evoked this polarized debate, framing its content against a backdrop where Cold War realities—such as the Soviet occupation that would claim 15,000 Red Army lives and destabilize the region—prioritized credible deterrence over unilateral disarmament narratives.[10] The record subverted expectations among Neil Young's core audience, long associated with countercultural pacifism, by incorporating verifiable patriotic undertones that aligned with emerging Reagan-era sentiments rather than uniform anti-interventionism.[14] Tracks evoked working-class resilience and national commitment, puzzling reviewers who anticipated dovish critique but encountered elements promoting resolve in the face of external pressures, reflecting broader cultural shifts toward affirming American strength amid tangible Soviet and Iranian challenges.[15] This approach privileged causal links between geopolitical inaction and vulnerability, as evidenced by the era's crises, over idealized visions of perpetual peace.Personal influences and motivations
The birth of Neil Young's son Ben on September 19, 1977, profoundly shaped his personal and professional life, as Ben was diagnosed with severe cerebral palsy shortly thereafter, resulting in quadriplegia and an inability to speak. This condition demanded extensive family involvement in therapy and care, with Young dedicating significant time from late 1977 through 1980 and beyond to Ben's needs, including experimental treatments that fragmented his creative schedule.[16] These demands, compounded by Young's commitment to his wife Pegi amid the challenges, limited opportunities for sustained studio work, influencing the expedited production of Hawks & Doves as a response to contractual pressures rather than an ideal artistic vision.[7] Faced with these constraints, Young opted for a pragmatic compilation strategy, incorporating unreleased tracks from the 1974–1975 Homegrown sessions—such as "Little Wing" and "The Old Homestead," originally recorded at his Broken Arrow Ranch with contributions from musicians like Levon Helm—alongside fresher 1980 recordings. This approach allowed for a swift album assembly without extensive new material, reflecting a causal prioritization of family obligations over thematic unity or prolonged experimentation.[17][18] Young's lyrical focus stemmed from direct observations of mid-1970s to early 1980s American labor dynamics, including persistent economic malaise under high inflation and unemployment rates exceeding 7% by 1980, alongside skepticism toward union structures amid membership stagnation and strikes like the 1977 United Rubber Workers dispute. Tracks like "Union Man" critiqued rigid union mentalities—"I'm a union man, but I ain't got no job"—as emblematic of broader resilience amid industrial decline, drawing from Young's rural Canadian-American roots and firsthand encounters with working-class fortitude rather than abstract ideology.[5]Composition and Recording
Songwriting process
Tracks like "The Old Homestead," copyrighted in 1974 and stemming from sessions at Young's Broken Arrow Ranch, and "Little Wing," initially recorded on January 21, 1975, at Village Recorders in Los Angeles, were repurposed from earlier introspective periods following his work with Crazy Horse, highlighting Young's practice of salvaging material to maintain artistic continuity rather than discarding it.[19][14] Similarly, "Lost in Space" originated from 1977 sessions intended for the unreleased Oceanside/Countryside project, a solo acoustic effort compiled during a phase of experimental countrified songcraft amid personal and creative flux.[20] New compositions, comprising much of the album's "hawks" side, were penned in 1980 amid heightened geopolitical tensions, including the Iranian hostage crisis that began in November 1979. "Union Man," for instance, emerged as a satirical critique of union bureaucracy—specifically targeting inefficiencies in the musicians' union—delivered through straightforward, ironic lyrics that underscore Young's frustration with institutional inertia.[1] This track, along with others like the title song, was crafted rapidly to address contemporary American anxieties, prioritizing thematic urgency over prolonged refinement.[4] Young's songwriting approach for the album favored acoustic guitar as the foundational instrument, often augmented by harmonica for emotive texture, fostering a stripped-down method that emphasized lyrical directness and melodic simplicity over complex arrangements. This unadorned style, evident in the halting introspection of "Little Wing" and the twangy resolve of newer cuts, allowed for quick iteration and authentic expression, aligning with Young's broader ethos of capturing spontaneous insights without overproduction.[14][21]Studio sessions and production
The recording sessions for Hawks & Doves spanned multiple years and locations, reflecting Neil Young's practice of revisiting archival material for cost-effective production. Basic tracks for songs on side one, including "The Old Homestead," originated from 1974 sessions at Quadrafonic Sound Studio in Nashville, Tennessee, where quadraphonic demos were captured.[22] Additional foundational work occurred in 1975 at Young's Broken Arrow Ranch studio in Redwood City, California, emphasizing a minimalist approach with live-in-the-room setups to retain raw acoustic energy.[22] By 1980, to fulfill a contractual release obligation, Young assembled the album using these earlier recordings as cores, supplemented by targeted overdubs at facilities such as Triad Recording Studios in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Gold Star Studios in Hollywood, California; and The Village Recorder in Los Angeles.[23] [24] Production was handled by Young alongside engineers David Briggs and Tim Mulligan, who focused on sparse arrangements to highlight instrumental textures like Ben Keith's pedal steel guitar and piano, lending a country-folk intimacy to the predominantly acoustic "Doves" side.[25] Side two's "Hawks" incorporated more electric elements, achieved through efficient overdubs that prioritized immediacy over polish.[26] This multi-era piecing together, driven by budgetary restraint and deadline pressures, yielded a 30-minute runtime but introduced sonic variances from differing recording eras and equipment.[5] The final mixes, completed swiftly in 1980, preserved an unrefined vitality at the expense of uniformity, as Young's selective use of vaulted tapes avoided extensive re-recording.[27]Musical Style
Genre blending and instrumentation
The album Hawks & Doves fuses elements of folk, country rock, and rock, reflecting Neil Young's longstanding versatility across acoustic introspection and band-driven energy. The "Doves" side predominantly employs country-folk instrumentation, including Young's harmonica on tracks like "Little Wing" and acoustic guitar strumming that evokes rustic simplicity, supported by sparse contributions such as Ben Keith's dobro and Rufus Thibodeaux's fiddle for occasional twang.[28][29] In contrast, the "Hawks" side shifts to uptempo country rock, highlighted by electric guitar riffs in "Stayin' Power," where Young's rhythm guitar pairs with driving bass from Tim Drummond and drums by Greg Thomas to create a propulsive, live-wire momentum.[28][30] These choices draw from Young's foundational folk-rock period with Buffalo Springfield in the late 1960s, where he first blended acoustic narratives with electric edges, and his solo acoustic explorations in albums like After the Gold Rush (1970), which prioritized raw vocal phrasing over dense layering.[28] The country rock infusions align with the 1970s Americana surge, as evidenced by the commercial success of Young's own Harvest (1972), which topped charts with similar pedal steel and fiddle accents amid a broader revival of roots-oriented sounds by artists like The Eagles.[30] Arrangements throughout remain deliberately lean, foregrounding Young's piano on select cuts and harmony vocals from Keith and Ann O'Brien to enhance a communal, unpolished band dynamic that eschews the multi-track overdubs and synth-heavy production prevalent among 1980s rock peers.[29] This approach yields a textured yet uncluttered sonic palette, where instrumental interplay—such as Keith's steel guitar weeping against Young's harmonica breaths—serves the material's inherent drive without ornamental excess.[14]Structural and sonic characteristics
The vinyl edition of Hawks & Doves divides its content into Side A, designated as the "Doves" side featuring introspective acoustic tracks like "Little Wing" (2:10) and "The Old Homestead" (7:38), and Side B, the "Hawks" side with more propulsive, country-inflected songs such as "Union Man" (2:19) and "Hawks & Doves" (3:27).[31][25] This binary structure fosters a deliberate narrative arc, transitioning from contemplative folk elements rooted in earlier 1970s sessions to assertive, forward-driving resolve, thereby amplifying the album's exploration of contrasting stances on national defense and personal agency.[32] Most tracks maintain brevity, with an average length of approximately 3 minutes—ranging from under 2:30 for selections like "Stayin' Power" (2:17) to outliers like "Lost in Space" (4:13)—contributing to a compact total runtime of 29:25 that sustains listener engagement without dilution.[25] The sonic palette retains a lo-fi aesthetic characteristic of Young's preference for analog tape recordings, incorporating subtle tape hiss and unpolished warmth that echoes the raw production ethos of his 1970s work amid the emerging digital trends of the early 1980s.[14][7] Remastered editions released in 2003 as part of the Neil Young Archives series and further refined in 2016 editions offer improved dynamic range and clarity, reducing surface noise while preserving the original's unvarnished intimacy and avoiding aggressive compression that could undermine its organic feel.[33][34] These updates enhance accessibility for modern playback systems without altering the core contrasts that define the album's structural intent.[35]Themes and Lyrics
Political symbolism and hawk-dove dichotomy
The hawk-dove dichotomy originates in foreign policy debates, particularly intensified during the Vietnam War, where "hawks" favor military intervention and deterrence against threats, while "doves" prioritize diplomacy, de-escalation, and avoidance of force. By 1980, this framework applied to Cold War tensions, including the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 and the Iran hostage crisis that began on November 4, 1979, when Iranian militants seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran, holding 52 Americans captive for 444 days amid perceived U.S. irresolution under President Jimmy Carter. Neil Young's album Hawks & Doves, released on October 29, 1980—just days before the presidential election pitting Carter against Ronald Reagan—employs this symbolism to interrogate national responses to existential risks, extending Vietnam-era reflections to immediate perils without romanticizing unilateral pacifism.[36][37] The title track "Hawks & Doves" evokes the archetype through imagery of perpetual strife: "Hawks and doves are dancing the sky again," portraying policy factions in ceaseless aerial contention, akin to birds of prey versus symbols of peace. Lyrically grounded in adaptation to harsh realities—"Ain't getting old, ain't getting younger though / Just getting used to the lay of the land"—the song subtly critiques the exhaustion of endless debate, applying it to 1980's geopolitical landscape rather than solely historical anti-war protests. This contrasts Young's prior outright opposition to militarism, as in "Ohio" (1970), which condemned the Kent State shootings and escalated U.S. involvement in Vietnam; here, the focus shifts to causal necessities of security, acknowledging doves' introspection but highlighting hawks' pragmatic edge amid threats like resurgent Soviet expansionism.[38][39] "Captain Kennedy" exemplifies hawkish advocacy via a narrative of defiance, inspired by Captain Louis Kenedy, whose schooner was torpedoed by a German U-boat in 1918, yet framed against the Iran crisis—where Carter's dovish restraint culminated in the botched Operation Eagle Claw raid on April 24, 1980, killing eight U.S. servicemen and failing to rescue hostages. Young's lyrics demand confrontation: "Captain Kennedy's got a plan / He's gonna bring on the sharks / You know he will," urging proactive strength over negotiation's pitfalls, as evidenced by the hostages' prolonged captivity until Reagan's inauguration on January 20, 1981. Recorded on July 4, 1980, amid Young's expressed frustration with the impasse, the track integrates dove-like historical reflection with hawkish resolve, rejecting pacifism as axiomatic amid empirical failures of appeasement, such as Iran's revolutionary regime exploiting U.S. hesitation.[40][36] By juxtaposing these tracks, the album dissects the dichotomy without partisan absolutism, privileging evidence-based realism: dovish policies, while morally aspirational, often yield to aggressive actors, as seen in the 1979-1981 crisis where diplomatic overtures prolonged vulnerability, whereas hawkish deterrence correlates with restored leverage post-1981. Young's 1980 remarks endorsing Reagan's patriotic firmness further contextualize this evolution, challenging narratives of inherent dove virtue in media and academic accounts prone to understating security trade-offs.[41][39]Social commentary and patriotism
In "Union Man," Neil Young adopts the persona of a loyal dues-paying member who prioritizes solidarity over personal gain, refusing to cross picket lines even as he acknowledges arriving last for benefits, a portrayal that underscores the rigidities of closed-shop practices and the potential economic disruptions from prolonged strikes amid 1970s industrial decline.[42] This ironic tone critiques union structures that prioritized collective leverage over individual efficiency, reflecting broader domestic frustrations with labor practices contributing to stagflation, where U.S. unemployment reached 7.1% in 1975 and inflation hit 11% by 1979. The song's prescience manifested in the 1980s de-unionization wave, as union membership dropped from 20.1% of the workforce in 1983 to 16.1% by 1989, driven by Reagan administration policies curbing strikes and promoting right-to-work laws in response to perceived union overreach harming competitiveness. Patriotic undertones permeate tracks evoking heartland resilience, such as "Little Wing," which depicts a free-spirited figure navigating stalled progress and communal gatherings, symbolizing enduring American values of self-reliance and unity amid the era's malaise of energy crises and eroding manufacturing bases.[37] These elements affirm exceptionalism rooted in folk authenticity and blue-collar grit, countering narratives of inevitable decline by emphasizing internal renewal over external blame.[14] While the album's folk-rooted portrayal of domestic unity resonated with audiences seeking grounded realism, its perceived alignment with conservative shifts—evident in Young's 1980 interview comments praising Reagan's potential to restore strength—drew backlash from left-leaning fans, who viewed the hawkish domestic critique as a betrayal of countercultural ideals, contributing to polarized reception upon release.[41][4] This tension highlighted Young's rejection of ideological conformity, prioritizing empirical observation of union and societal fractures over partisan loyalty.[39]Release and Promotion
Album rollout and marketing
Hawks & Doves was released by Reprise Records on October 29, 1980, amid a subdued rollout that prioritized the artist's recent critical momentum from Rust Never Sleeps over intensive pre-release campaigns.[3][4] The album, compiled from recordings dating back to 1974, was marketed as a concise, thematic statement reflecting Young's personal and political reflections, with promotional efforts limited to radio singles and posters targeting core fans rather than broad commercial pushes.[43] This approach aligned with market realities for an interim release, capitalizing on established goodwill without the resources of a full-scale studio effort.[4] The cover artwork presented Young in a contemplative pose against a muted, agrarian backdrop, evoking rural authenticity and the album's heartland symbolism to convey stakes of individual resolve amid national tensions.[18] Marketing tie-ins were minimal, focusing on the title's hawk-dove duality to intrigue audiences attuned to Young's shifting perspectives, though no major advertising blitz accompanied the launch.[44] Touring support remained constrained in 1980, with Young opting for sporadic performances that previewed select tracks like "Little Wing" in acoustic formats, deferring comprehensive integration to later sets as the album served a transitional function before more experimental works.[4] This restrained strategy underscored a pragmatic response to creative flux, avoiding overexposure of material pieced from archival sessions.[45]Associated media and live performances
Tracks from Hawks & Doves received limited live exposure in the immediate post-release period, with Neil Young performing "Union Man" and the title track for the first time at the Bread & Roses Festival on October 3, 1980, at the William Randolph Hearst Greek Theatre in Berkeley, California.[46] These renditions featured Young solo on acoustic guitar, emphasizing the songs' folk-country leanings amid a benefit event lineup.[47] No extensive tour supported the album, reflecting Young's focus on personal matters including his father's health crisis, which influenced the record's hurried assembly and brevity.[4] Promotion emphasized radio outreach over visual media, as no official music videos were produced—a format not yet prevalent in rock promotion.[28] Reprise Records issued a promotional 12-inch single of "Hawks & Doves" backed with "Union Man" in September 1980, targeted at FM stations during a transitional era for album-oriented rock formats.[48] A follow-up promo paired "Stayin' Power" with "Captain Kennedy" in January 1981, but neither achieved significant commercial single status or widespread video tie-ins.[28] Young supplemented this through select 1980 radio appearances, discussing the album's thematic balance of vigilance and peace amid geopolitical tensions.[49]Critical and Commercial Reception
Initial critical responses
Initial critical responses to Hawks & Doves, released on October 29, 1980, were mixed, with reviewers praising its acoustic intimacy and rustic instrumentation while faulting its brevity, thematic opacity, and assembled-from-leftovers structure. Robert Christgau of The Village Voice described the album's sound as having a "homey feel" defined by Ben Keith's dobro and Rufus Thibodeaux's fiddle, lauding side two as "quite brilliant" for its concise tracks—most under 2:33 minutes—evoking an idealized, hook-driven country music stripped of slickness.[39] He highlighted the music's front-porch authenticity and Young's empathetic portrayal of ordinary Americans living "in the shadow of both" hawks and doves, interpreting songs like the title track as jingoistic yet nuanced affirmations of U.S. resilience.[39] Critics nonetheless questioned the album's political coherence and patchwork nature, with Christgau deeming the hawk-dove schematic—blue lyrics for doves, red for hawks—confusing and the overall statement "fragile, partial," more a window into Young's mindset than rigorous social analysis.[39] The record's under-30-minute length, incorporating mid-1970s leftovers on side one alongside fresh material, fueled perceptions of haste and inconsistency, especially following Young's ambitious 1979 double release of Rust Never Sleeps and Live Rust.[39] This prolific pace amplified views of the effort as uneven or underdeveloped, though its raw acoustic strengths and bold thematic risks—grappling with patriotism and division amid the 1980 election—signaled enduring artistic intent rather than outright decline.[39]Chart performance and sales data
Hawks & Doves debuted at number 78 on the US Billboard 200 chart dated November 22, 1980, before ascending to a peak of number 30 during the week of December 27, 1980, and spending a total of 16 weeks on the listing.[50] This marked a decline from the commercial heights of Neil Young's prior release, Rust Never Sleeps, which had peaked at number 8 on the same chart in 1979.[51] The album's more subdued acoustic and country-leaning sound, released amid a post-disco rock landscape favoring new wave and harder-edged acts, contributed to its tempered market reception. None of the album's tracks, including singles "Hawks & Doves" and "Stayin' Power," registered on major US singles charts such as the Billboard Hot 100.[52] Sales figures remained modest, with the album failing to achieve RIAA gold certification for 500,000 units shipped in the United States, underscoring its status as one of Young's lower-selling efforts of the era.[53]Legacy and Reappraisal
Long-term influence and reinterpretations
Over time, Hawks & Doves has been recognized for bridging Neil Young's earlier folk-country explorations to the introspective Americana style that gained prominence in subsequent decades, with its sparse arrangements and themes of personal and national resilience influencing acts emphasizing unadorned patriotism.[5] The album's "Hawks" side, featuring recent recordings like "Union Man" and "Comin' Apart at Every Nail," echoed the working-class grit and guarded optimism that resonated in Reagan-era reflections on American identity, positioning it as an understated pivot amid Young's volatile 1970s output.[4] Post-release reappraisals have increasingly viewed the album as a cohesive statement rather than a disjointed stopgap, with its dual-sided structure—older "Doves" tracks from 1974–1977 paired with urgent 1980 hawkish cuts—praised for mirroring Young's adaptive songwriting amid external pressures.[1] Fan-driven analyses, such as chronological listening retrospectives, highlight its thematic unity in contrasting pacifism and resolve, elevating it from early dismissals as an inconsistent entry to an underrated gem in Young's catalog.[5] Persistent critiques of production inconsistencies, including the abrupt assembly of vaulted material, stem from the album's rushed timeline, causally linked to Young's family challenges: his son Ben's cerebral palsy diagnosis and care demands in the late 1970s necessitated a hasty release to fulfill contractual obligations while prioritizing personal stability.[54] This context reframes perceived flaws not as artistic lapses but as pragmatic responses to real-world constraints, underscoring the album's endurance as a testament to Young's resilience during a "tumultuous decade."[1] Later Americana ensembles, including those explicitly invoking the title like Kasey Anderson's Hawks & Doves, have drawn on its raw, truth-telling ethos to advance traditions of introspective roots music.[55]Reissues, remasters, and archival context
The album Hawks & Doves remained unavailable on compact disc until its remastered release on August 19, 2003, as part of the Neil Young Archives Digital Masterpiece Series, utilizing HDCD encoding to enhance audio fidelity from the original masters.[33] This edition addressed prior accessibility limitations by providing a digitally optimized version with improved dynamic range and clarity compared to analog sources.[56] A further remaster appeared in 2016, tailored for streaming and digital platforms, which refined the sound further by emphasizing instrumental separation and reducing compression artifacts present in earlier transfers.[57] This version integrated into broader archival efforts via Neil Young's official digital collections, facilitating wider access while preserving the album's raw production aesthetic.[58] In 2018, Reprise Records issued a vinyl reissue remastered from the original analog tapes by engineer Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering, appealing to audiophiles seeking the warmth and depth of analog playback absent in some digital iterations.[59] This edition, part of ongoing reissue campaigns like the Official Release Series Vol. 4, underscored preservation initiatives by prioritizing high-quality analog sourcing to maintain sonic integrity for collectors.[60] Archival context reveals limited unreleased material exclusive to Hawks & Doves, though tracks like "Little Wing" trace origins to the 1975 Homegrown sessions, released in full on June 19, 2020, highlighting Young's practice of repurposing recordings across projects without significant alternate takes unique to the 1980 album. These efforts collectively enhance the album's longevity, bridging original intent with modern playback standards through verified master restorations rather than extensive bonus content.[28]Track Listing and Credits
Song details and sequencing
The original vinyl edition of Hawks & Doves, released on October 29, 1980, by Reprise Records, divides its nine tracks across two sides, creating a thematic progression from introspective, folk-leaning material on Side A (implicitly the "Doves" half) to more energetic, contrastingly assertive songs on Side B (the "Hawks" half). This sequencing emphasizes a shift from personal reflection and subdued acoustics—drawn largely from recordings made between 1974 and 1977—to punchier, contemporary tracks emphasizing resilience and societal commentary, culminating in the title track as a synthesizing closer. The total runtime approximates 30 minutes, with no bonus tracks included in the core LP pressing.[28] Side A establishes an arc of quiet contemplation, beginning with the brief opener "Little Wing" (2:10) and extending through longer, atmospheric pieces like "The Old Homestead" (7:38), which dominates the side's duration. The sequence continues with "Lost in Space" (4:13) and closes Side A with "Captain Kennedy" (2:50), maintaining a cohesive, unhurried flow suited to the analog format's constraints.[28]| Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| A1 | Little Wing | 2:10 |
| A2 | The Old Homestead | 7:38 |
| A3 | Lost in Space | 4:13 |
| A4 | Captain Kennedy | 2:50 |
| Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| B1 | Stayin' Power | 2:17 |
| B2 | Coastline | 2:24 |
| B3 | Union Man | 2:08 |
| B4 | Comin' Apart at Every Nail | 2:33 |
| B5 | Hawks & Doves | 3:27 |