In a 2019 post on his website, Young describe "Sign of Love" as "a love song that breaks my heart. Life is not always what you think it will be." Its lyrics describe a long relationship. Drummer
Dave Grohl would later overdub a drum track to the song, available on Young's website as an outtake. The lyrics of "Love and War" address the ambiguity and complexity of those topics, and the experiences of each individual create different perspectives that are rarely black and white. He explains on
NPR: "Hitchhiker" dates from 1975, from the sessions for
Zuma. The song chronicles various life changes and drug experiences of Young's life up until that point. Young jokes in a contemporary interview that "if it was a TV show, it would be called
The Drug Chronicles, T.M.I.", or too much information. Young memorably recalls performing the new song for
Bob Dylan and hearing his reaction in
Special Deluxe: "One night, Dylan came by and I played him a couple of new songs, "Hitchhiker" and "
Cortez the Killer." When he heard "Hitchhiker," a confessional about the progressive history of drugs I had taken through my life, he told me, 'That's honest.' That moment still crosses my mind. It makes me laugh every time I think of it because Bob's humor is so wry. I think it was his way of saying kindly that the song was not very inventive as far as creating a story goes, just that I was following a history and not making up anything new. It's still funny to me, at any rate, the way he put it." Young would revise the song and add a new verse during the sessions. He explains in
Waging Heavy Peace: "We hit a groove and recorded "Love and War" and "Peaceful Valley Boulevard," two songs written in Hawaii, and an older song called "Hitchhiker" that I hadn't cut yet. The previous night I had added a couple of new verses and changed some words to make it more relevant to me now, and it was "a good 'un," as Ben used to say. I did that song on Old Black through some amps Daniel had set up, and it sounded rockin'!" An acoustic take of the song from August 1976 would later be released in 2017 on
Hitchhiker. "Peaceful Valley Boulevard" is a sweeping environmental history of the Old West. "I walked into it hearing a gunshot across a valley, back in the day, and then everything else just unfolded. It did go from past to present to semi-future, but sometimes that happens. Not that often, but it does happen, and when it does I always feel fortunate, because it seems to always get somewhere that I don't usually get. A number of songs recorded during the sessions did not make it to the final album; these recordings were premiered in August 2019 as a part of
The Complete Le Noise Sessions film on
Neil Young Archives website and are available as outtakes. "Born in Ontario", "Twisted Road" and "For the Love of Man" would be later re-recorded with
Crazy Horse for
Psychedelic Pill. "You Never Call", a tribute to recently deceased
L.A. Johnson, a longtime associate of Young, appears on concert film
Neil Young Journeys. It and the solo piano song "Leia" were frequently performed live during the tour in support of the album. ==Recording==