"Primal Young", Steve's first album in 6 years, showcases his 
        various musical influences - and excellent vocal prowess and guitar technique 
        - to great effect. There is an atmospheric interpretation of Dick Gaughan's 
        "Worker's Song"; a rollicking run through of Tom T. Hall's "The 
        Year That Clayton Delaney Died"; a laid-back take on the R & 
        B classic "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and reflective ballads such as 
        "Sometimes I Dream" and "Heartbreak Girl". Young is 
        singing, playing , writing and interpreting here as good as ever...
   (www.Shoeshine.co.uk)
   
   Steve Young has a big voice. It is the type of voice most shower dreamers 
        wish they had, comprised of volume, sustain, range, and emotion. Young, 
        however, is also an accomplished songwriter, though, typically, his albums 
        tend to be half covers and half originals. This album, released 30 years 
        into his career, finds Young's vocal pipes as strong as ever and his songwriting 
        just as sharp as when he penned such classics as "Seven Bridges Road" 
        and "Montgomery in the Rain." And, true to form, there are six 
        originals to five covers. The opening cut, "Jig," is a Young 
        song about the dance (jig) of life. The "jig" is universal and 
        individual: "If you wanna get it on with me/you gotta listen to my 
        tune/If you want me to get it on with you/you gotta play your tune, too." 
        It is a subtle, solid beginning by a sure, old hand. Cut two, "Scotland 
        Is a Land," is a Young-penned song anthemic enough to become Scotland's 
        national song (or some such). Young's powerful baritone, accompanied by 
        the erstwhile Van Dyke Parks on accordion, is hypnotic as he proclaims, 
        "Scotland is a land/where I might want to die." For a cracker 
        from North Georgia, Young sings of Scotland with the conviction of a native. 
        And that is Young's strength as a songwriter -- he is instantly, and naturally, 
        believable. Of course, it doesn't hurt that his booming voice nails the 
        listener to a wall. Young's take of "East Virginia" evidences 
        another of his strong points -- he can play an acoustic guitar as fast 
        and deft as if playing a banjo. In fact, on up-tempo burners, Young frequently 
        plays banjo lines on the guitar, pumping like some crazed-though-on-the-one 
        piston. The tempo of his vocal on "East Virginia" is only half 
        the tempo of his breakneck picking, creating a unique tension and emphasis 
        on what he is singing. It is as attention grabbing as a steady gaze across 
        a bustling room. Young has successfully plied this technique in the past 
        on such songs as "Travelin' Kind" and "The White Trash 
        Song." Nothing misses on Primal Young. Other originals, such as "Heartbreak 
        Girl," "Little Birdie," and "No Longer Will My Heart 
        Be Truly Breaking," are so distinguished in composition and performance, 
        one once again wonders why Steve Young has never been placed on an equal 
        pedestal with the likes of Merle Haggard or Waylon Jennings. The covers, 
        including a devil-may-care, shirttails-out rendition of Tom T. Hall's 
        "The Year That Clayton Delaney Died" and a warbling, soul-drenched 
        take of Lloyd Price's "Lawdy Miss Clawdy," are so splendidly 
        bent to Young's style, he could easily be their composer. Thirty years 
        in and Steve Young is still "primal." 
   (by Steve Cooper, AMG)