Although it was his fourth solo album,
Song for Juli was
Jesse Colin Young's first full-fledged effort under his own name, following a couple of early folk records, a series of
Youngbloods albums, and the tentative
Together.
Young organized a versatile backup band in which piano, violin, and horns complemented his tenor voice in arrangements that recalled
Van Morrison's Caledonia Soul Orchestra (no surprise, since
Young and
Morrison used several of the same musicians, notably reed player
Jim Rothermel) and featured familiar blues, country, and Cajun elements. In his lyrics,
Young hewed closely to the current back-to-the-land philosophy, celebrating his family life (Juli is his daughter) and his "Ridgetop" retreat in Marin County, CA. It was a viewpoint that was both self-affirming and xenophobic -- you couldn't help thinking that the people he wanted to leave him alone and the tourists he wanted to keep at bay included at least a few of his listeners. Of course, that's not the way it was thought of at the time, and
Young's fans responded strongly to
Song for Juli, giving it a higher chart placing than any album
the Youngbloods ever made and keeping it in the charts longer than any album he ever made. (Originally released in September 1973 as Warner Brothers 2734,
Song for Juli was reissued as Ridgetop Music 1105.)