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This CD cover image released by Third Man Records shows "A Letter Home," by Neil Young. (AP Photo/Third Man Records) Image Credit: AP

Neil Young, A Letter Home (Reprise)

Neil Young’s sporadic concept records aren’t for everyone. A Letter Home should be.

While still an esoteric venture — Young recorded it in a refurbished 1947 Voice-O-Graph — the songs he chose are familiar ones, making this more accessible than previous out in left field Young releases.

Among the songs: Bob Dylan’s Girl From the North Country, Bruce Springsteen’s My Home Town, Willie Nelson’s On the Road Again and Crazy, and Gordon Lightfoot’s Early Morning Rain. They are a reflection of Young’s roots and musical backbone, made all the more clear by the heartfelt and intimate delivery.

Now, back to the box.

Young, 68, was captivated by the Voice-O-Graph that Jack White had restored and made available at his recording studio in Nashville, Tennessee. Typically used by amateurs to record one song at a time, which is immediately laid down on vinyl, Young decided to cram himself into the phone booth-sized contraption and record an entire record.

The songs sound like they came from another age — complete with scratches, pops and imperfections usually only heard on old vinyl records. Adding to the idiosyncratic approach, Young fashioned the entire record as a letter home to his deceased mother, delivering her a playlist of some of his favourite tunes.

It’s clear these songs are a part of Young’s musical DNA, and it’s almost as if the listener is being invited into his living room for a private concert - delivered from inside a phone booth, of course.