Skip to content
Search

Neil Young Trashes Amazon, Gives His Complete Musical Catalog to Greenland for Free

“Amazon is owned by Jeff Bezos, a billionaire backer of the president,” Young writes to fans. “My music will never be available on Amazon, as long as it is owned by Bezos”

Neil Young Trashes Amazon, Gives His Complete Musical Catalog to Greenland for Free
Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images/Santa Barbara International Film Festival

Back in October, Neil Young pledged to remove all of his music from Amazon. And in a recent post on the Neil Young Archives, he said he’s sticking with the plan.

Amazon is owned by Jeff Bezos, a billionaire backer of the president,” he wrote. “The president’s international policies and his support of ICE make it impossible for me to ignore his actions. If you feel as I do, I strongly recommend that you do not use Amazon. There are many ways to avoid Amazon and support individual Americans and American companies that supply the same products. I have done that with my music and people who are looking can find it in a lot of other places.”


“Record stores provide all my vinyl and CDs, while the digital music world has many alternative options to purchase my music if you like it,” he continued. “My music will never be available on Amazon, as long as it is owned by Bezos. My position is unfortunately harmful to my record company in the short term, but I think the message I am sending is important and clear. Thanks for buying music locally and from independent digital services.”

Young’s complete catalog and a vast archive of live concerts, studio outtakes, and concert films are available on the Neil Young Archives in super-high-definition sound. Prices range from $24.99 to $99.99 a year, but he’s just gifted all of it to the people of Greenland in response to President Donald Trump’s threats against the nation.

“I hope my music and music films will ease some of the unwarranted stress and threats you are experiencing from our unpopular and hopefully temporary government,” he wrote. “It is my sincere wish for you to be able to enjoy all of my music in your beautiful Greenland home, in its highest quality. This is an offer of peace and love. All the music I made during the last 62 years is yours to hear. You can renew for free was long as you’re in Greenland. We do hope other organizations will follow in the spirit of our example.”

Residents of Greenland can go to NeilYoungArchives.com/Greenland to sign up.

Finally, in a public letter he posted on Monday, his third in just three days, Young also shared some thoughts on the media landscape today. “If you watch Fox, try another channel for your news for just one day,” he wrote. “Untruths are abounding on Fox. New York Times used to be where I went for news. Now I go to The Guardian. I suggest you give it a try. Forget the news ‘shows’ on media. They are all posers and good looks. Remember ‘News Programs’ where it was not all about posing? Americans need some truth, not media obsessed with satisfying everybody. CNN? Trash mostly. Look deeper. There is real coverage. Go to independent journalism. Get some relief from white-washed ‘news shows.'”

Young has had a lot of time to read The Guardian since playing his most recent show at the Painted Turtle Camp in Lake Hughes, California, on Oct. 25. He kicks off a European tour with the Chrome Hearts on June 17 at the Eden Project in Cornwall, England.

More Stories

Harry Styles, Arctic Monkeys, Wizkid and Asake, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Harry Styles

Harry Styles, Arctic Monkeys, Wizkid and Asake, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week

Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Harry Styles makes a glittering pivot to the discotheque, Arctic Monkeys return with a swaying charity single, and Wizkid and Asake unite for a sleek highlight from their collaborative EP. Plus, new music from Snail Mail, Lucinda Williams, Jessie Ware, Dermot Kennedy, The New Pornographers, Holly Humberstone, and Underscores.

Harry Styles, “Aperture” (YouTube)

Keep ReadingShow less
Fugees’ Pras Michel Denied Bail As He Appeals Foreign Influence Conviction, 14-Year Sentence

Fugees’ Pras Michel Denied Bail As He Appeals Foreign Influence Conviction, 14-Year Sentence

Fugees rapper Pras Michel failed to convince his trial judge that he should remain free on bail while he appeals his conviction and resulting 14-year prison sentence in his money laundering, illegal lobbying, and witness tampering case.

In a Thursday ruling, U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said Michel was convicted of 10 offenses more than two years ago, and his motion for bail pending appeal didn’t meet the burden required to overcome the presumption that he should be detained. But in a small victory for the musician, the judge agreed to delay Michel’s surrender date by two months so he could appeal the bail issue at the federal circuit court level.

Keep ReadingShow less
Palomosa 2026 annouces new dates and MGMT as headliner
Palomosa*

Palomosa 2026 annouces new dates and MGMT as headliner

The Palomosa festival is already starting to reveal details about its third edition. After taking place in September in 2024 and 2025, the 2026 edition will now be held in mid-May, from May 14 to 16.

As news rarely comes alone, it has also been announced that New York band MGMT will be in the spotlight on May 15. The duo, known for hits such as Kids, Time to Pretend and Electric Feel, will perform in a DJ set format.

Keep ReadingShow less
Is the Touring Business Broken for Indie Acts?
Griffin Lotz for Rolling Stone

Is the Touring Business Broken for Indie Acts?

Dry Cleaning had big plans for January 2026. The English band spent much of the past two years making their third and best album, Secret Love, which brings their uniquely beguiling mix of post-punk and art-rock styles to a new creative peak. Now, with the album’s release set for early this month on 4AD, they were preparing to launch a 21-date tour of North America, historically a strong market for the band, with a Jan. 23 show in Chicago.

Ticket sales were looking good, and the band was feeling excited. But their U.S. visas hadn’t come through yet, months after they got their applications in. Soon they were facing thousands of dollars in expediting fees, on top of the already high costs of mounting a tour of that size. “I started to look at it and I was like, ‘I’m a little bit worried about cash flow,’” says their manager, Tim Hampson. “There were just too many variables starting to stack in a way that made me feel extremely uncomfortable.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Drake Appeals Dismissal of ‘Not Like Us’ Defamation Case, Calls Ruling ‘Dangerous’
Simone Joyner/Getty Images for ABA

Drake Appeals Dismissal of ‘Not Like Us’ Defamation Case, Calls Ruling ‘Dangerous’

Three months after a federal judge dismissed Drake’s defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group, the superstar rapper and his lawyers filed an opening appellate brief Wednesday that seeks to overturn the ruling and revive his bid for damages over Kendrick Lamar’s Grammy-winning diss track, “Not Like Us.”

In the new 60-page brief obtained by Rolling Stone, Drake argues that Lamar’s track states, as an “unambiguous matter of fact,” that he is a “certified pedophile.” He also claims Universal Music Group “relentlessly” marketed the song in a way that misled consumers and caused him serious harm. The brief contends that the allegation carries a “precise” and readily understood meaning that is “capable of being proven true or false,” a point the district court previously acknowledged, according to the filing.

Keep ReadingShow less