"Mideast Vacation" The first three tracks all handle the topic of world politics, and ponder the role of the United States in the world. "Mideast Vacation" is a dream-like narrative where Young imagines experiencing warfare while on vacation abroad.
"Long Walk Home" "Long Walk Home" empathizes with troops deployed overseas. It was originally written as "Letter from 'Nam" in the early 1970s with different lyrics concerning the experience of soldiers returning home from the Vietnam War. That track was officially released in 2020 on the
Archives Volume II. For
Life, Young would update the lyrics in response to the foreign policy issues of the time (
Beirut,
Qaddafi).
"Inca Queen" "Inca Queen" finds Young imagining life in pre-Columbian times, much as he does on the earlier "
Cortez the Killer" and "Like an Inca".
"Prisoners of Rock and Roll" "Prisoners of Rock and Roll" finds Young protesting his relationship with his record company, with lyrics suggesting "that's why we don't wanna be good".
Life would be his fifth and final album under his contract with
Geffen. The cover depicts a picture of Young behind prison bars with five tally marks scratched into the wall.
"Cryin' Eyes" "Cryin' Eyes" was first performed in 1977 with Young's short-lived collaborators
The Ducks.
"We Never Danced" "We Never Danced" had made its first appearance on the soundtrack to the 1987 film
Made in Heaven, in a version sung by
Martha Davis of
the Motels. Young had a cameo in the film as a truck driver. ==Legacy==