Don't Let It Bring You Down album art
May 11, 2026

Don't Let It Bring You Down

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

Blind man running through the light of night with an answer in his hand.

Neil Young wrote “Don’t Let It Bring You Down” during one of his darker periods—watching friends struggle, feeling the weight of an era that promised peace and delivered violence. The verses are apocalyptic: blind men, castles burning, dead ends everywhere. The chorus offers the title like a lifeline, but the music doesn’t believe it.

The 4 Way Street version strips everything to acoustic guitar and Young’s reedy voice. No band to hide behind. No arrangement to soften the blow. Just the words and the way he delivers them—half singing, half warning.

“Don’t let it bring you down. It’s only castles burning.”

Only. That word does a lot of work. It dismisses and acknowledges at the same time. Yes, everything is falling apart. Yes, that’s not the whole story. Young refuses to choose between despair and hope. He holds both, and the tension is the point.

The melody is almost pretty—a gentle descending figure that sounds like acceptance. But the imagery refuses to cooperate. Old man lying by the side of the road. Spiders crawling through the brain. This is not a comfort song. It’s a song about finding comfort impossible and trying anyway.

I play this when everything feels too heavy. Not because it makes things lighter, but because it understands the weight. Sometimes that’s enough.

The castles are always burning.

You walk through anyway.

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