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Bob Dylan – Triplicate (2017)

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TriplicateBob Dylan is evidently not finished with his (grand, now exhaustive) inquiry into the Great American Songbook. The 2016 winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, who was hailed by the Swedish Academy for “having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition,” is releasing a three-disc mega-dose from the pre-rock era of that tradition on March 31.
Triplicate, recorded at Capitol Studios in L.A. with Dylan’s touring band, follows two similar efforts – Fallen Angels (2016) and Shadows in the Night (2015) – and is his 38th studio release. Its 30 songs bring Dylan’s recorded output of standards to just over 50 – or seven more than the 43 songs contained on his world-shaking landmarks Another Side of Bob Dylan, Bringing It All Back Home,…

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…Highway 61 Revisited, and Blonde on Blonde.

The sheer volume of material prompts a distancing step backward: What is going on here? What’s the intention behind this extra-large serving of unabashedly romantic tunes? La La Land notwithstanding, these compositions are out of step with contemporary culture; as Dylan sings on “September of My Years,” they “reach back to yesterday” with jazz-age chords and quaint lyrics about quaint courtship rituals. It’s fair to say that few in Dylan’s core audience know these tunes, and even fewer have been waiting for their revival by a 75-year-old road warrior with a compromised vocal instrument.

In the past, it’s been possible to dismiss Dylan’s crooner jag as a lark, an old man’s sentimental journey, the Early Bird Special version of Carpool Karaoke. Now, tripling down on swing with a slow, slinky version of “Sentimental Journey” and a languid “Stardust,” Dylan appears – and sounds – deeply committed to this music. He seems to be saying something major about the art of the song, about what constitutes a song.

Here’s a theory: Maybe all this time on the bandstand of the mythic Starlite Ballroom has left Dylan alarmed about the current state of popular song. He’s checked out the works of the reigning superstars and observed – because for all his poetry, he’s also a systems/structure guy – that most of what’s successful today centers around static harmony (looped one or two chord vamps) and three-note melodic lines that resemble playground taunts. High tech production masking a deficit of melody. In terms of musical sophistication, they’re a long, devolved way from the sweeping grace of “Stardust.”

Dylan is not the first to notice this, of course. (And, it should be noted, lots of latter-day pop stars have schmaltzed their way through the Songbook, to lucrative ends.) But Dylan occupies a unique place in music. Having written so many songs that profoundly upended conventional wisdom about what a song could be, his decisions have some gravitas. Dylan going deep on tunes written for Broadway musicals and WWII-era pop stars can be read as an act of radical conservation – the work of a Noah figure who’s out to rescue not just specific songs but an entire approach to songwriting. A discipline. An ideal.

Because as Frank Sinatra and Chet Baker and countless others knew, the concise songs of the Songbook era are magical self-renewing energy systems. In the space of just 32 measures, less than a minute, they lay out an idea or narrative, develop it, take it into a different tonality for new perspective, and return “home” in a way that makes listeners want to take the ride again.

The composers – and among those covered on Triplicate are Harold Arlen, Cy Coleman, Hoagy Carmichael – created winding-path melodies that are challenging to sing casually, yet somehow burrow into the ear. Around those, they created winding-path chord sequences that detour abruptly into different keys and inspire endless variations as the tune unfolds. Examine the formative work of Dylan, Chuck Berry (RIP), The Beatles, any significant rock-era figure, and you find that at one point or another, they came to understand and appreciate the structure of the standard tune, along with related structures like the blues. In every case, that understanding became crucial to the development of their own material.

Dylan seems keenly aware of this debt; he moves with great reverence through these melodies, catching the neon-sign emotions and the more delicious whispered grace notes between them. He understands the innerworkings of a song like “These Foolish Things,” which tells how small things, like “a tinkling piano in the next apartment,” trigger the memory of a long-gone lover. In his version, the nostalgia hangs in the air like stale smoke, and his wise, old, serrated voice does illuminating justice to the pain of looking back. Dylan sings it at close range and at human scale – he’s sketching the intimate moments that make up a life, and pulling from them universal truths about longing and loneliness, the way all the great singers have done. On that song and others, his interpretations seem gentle, methodical and profoundly intentional – it’s like he’s mapping the DNA of these tunes for future generations.

The title, Triplicate, suggests old mimeograph technology, and implies that the three individual 10-song journeys are mirror images of each other. That’s not the case really, though there are a lot of ballads here, and they move in a tempo range somewhere between “stately crawl” and “stillborn rubato.” Likewise, there are more than a few medium-tempo tunes that land in that zone between “senior-center foxtrot” and the cadence jazz drummers once derisively referred to as the “businessman’s bounce.” There are, however, plenty of moments of sublime grace, and many of them are authored (or enhanced) by the guitar team of Dean Parks, Charlie Sexton and (on breathtakingly weeping steel guitar punctuation) Donnie Herron.

Given the scope of this project, some rhythmic repetition was perhaps inevitable. What’s remarkable is that things rarely bog down. Now fully inhabiting the crisp snap as well as the breathy nuances of swing, Dylan’s band hums with a serene authority, never overloading the music with showmanship. They leave enough space for the old guy to do his thing – and as he sings these mountain-scaling melodies and conjures the ghosts of vanished lovers hovering over the verses, he doesn’t just bring these songs back to life. He makes a pretty good case for why they should live forever.


Bob Dylan – Trouble No More: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 13 / 1979-1981 (Sampler) (2017)

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Bob Dylan15-song, 76-minute sampler of selections from 8CD box.
…Previous installments in the Bootleg Series have offered outtakes and lost classics, the rare curios that record geeks love. There are a few choice ones here – among the rehearsal takes are several radically different approaches to “Slow Train” and a stirring previously unreleased tune, “Making a Liar Out of Me.” But the bulk of Trouble No More comes across as a passionate argument – against closemindedness generally, and also against the oft-repeated assertion that Dylan’s conversion years yielded little of lasting musical consequence. It was not a small thing for this revered, established figure to jettison the songs that made him famous; he had to come up with a new book…

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…of material, and a sound that could enchant his old fans while accommodating the fervent spirit of his new message. Some Dylan diehards dismissed the effort entirely because they simply didn’t want to hear that message. The thrilling live takes on Trouble No More show exactly what they missed. — NPR

1. Slow Train (Live in London) (04:38)
2. Precious Angel (Live Nov. 16, 1979) (05:42)
3. Gotta Serve Somebody (Live Nov. 15, 1979) (06:32)
4. When He Returns (Take 2) (04:23)
5. Solid Rock (Live Nov. 27, 1979) (04:43)
6. Gonna Change My Way of Thinking (Live Jan. 31, 1980) (04:50)
7. Ain’t Gonna Go to Hell for Anybody (Live Apr. 24, 1980) (04:30)
8. When You Gonna Wake Up? (Live July 9, 1981) (05:30)
9. Covenant Woman (Take 3) (05:05)
10. Shot of Love (Outtake) (04:24)
11. Making a Liar Out of Me (Rehearsal) (05:45)
12. City of Gold (Live Nov. 22, 1980) (02:53)
13. Yonder Comes Sin (Rehearsal) (04:12)
14. Caribbean Wind (Rehearsal with Pedal Steel) (05:57)
15. Dead Man, Dead Man (Outtake) (07:20)

Bob Dylan – Love and Theft (2001, MFSL 2017)

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Bob DylanTime Out of Mind was a legitimate comeback, Bob Dylan’s first collection of original songs in nearly ten years and a risky rumination on mortality, but its sequel, Love and Theft, is his true return to form, not just his best album since Blood on the Tracks, but the loosest, funniest, warmest record he’s made since The Basement Tapes. There are none of the foreboding, apocalyptic warnings that permeated Time Out of Mind and even underpinned “Things Have Changed,” his Oscar-winning theme to Curtis Hanson’s 2000 film Wonder Boys. Just as important, Daniel Lanois’ deliberately arty, diffuse production has retreated into the mist, replaced by an uncluttered, resonant production that gives Dylan and his ace backing band room to breathe. And they run wild with that liberty,…

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…rocking the house with the grinding “Lonesome Day Blues” and burning it down with the fabulously swinging “Summer Days.” They’re equally captivating on the slower songs, whether it’s the breezily romantic “Bye and Bye,” the torch song “Moonlight,” or the epic reflective closer, “Sugar Baby.”

Musically, Dylan hasn’t been this natural or vital since he was with the Band, and even then, those records were never as relaxed and easy or even as hard-rocking as these. That alone would make Love and Theft a remarkable achievement, but they’re supported by a tremendous set of songs that fully synthesize all the strands in his music, from the folksinger of the early ’60s, through the absurdist storyteller of the mid-’60s, through the traditionalist of the early ’70s, to the grizzled professional of the ’90s. None of this is conscious, it’s all natural. There’s an ease to his writing and a swagger to his performance unheard in years — he’s cracking jokes and murmuring wry asides, telling stories, crooning, and swinging. It’s reminiscent of his classic records, but he’s never made a record that’s been such sheer, giddy fun as this, and it stands proudly among his very best albums.

Mastered from the original master tapes and strictly limited to 3,000 numbered copies, our hybrid SACD reveals the you-are-there immediacy of Dylan’s production and the colorful textures inherent to every passage. Experienced on this audiophile version, the songs possess a sense of swing and naturalism so sure-footed that they seem to float, with Dylan and his crack ensemble setting up as a live band taking down the house in a deep-in-the-woods Louisiana shotgun shack. Prized aural traits such as presence, imaging, separation, and soundstaging depth don’t come better. — MFSL

Bob Dylan – The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan (1963, MFSL 2017)

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Bob DylanWe are humbled to have the privilege of mastering the iconic album from the original master tapes and presenting it in its original take-notice mono sound
It’s hard to overestimate the importance of The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, the record that firmly established Bob Dylan as an unparalleled songwriter, one of considerable skill, imagination, and vision. At the time, folk had been quite popular on college campuses and bohemian circles, making headway onto the pop charts in diluted form, and while there certainly were a number of gifted songwriters, nobody had transcended the scene as Dylan did with this record. There are a couple (very good) covers, with “Corrina Corrina” and “Honey Just Allow Me One More Chance,” but they pale with the originals here. At the time, the social…

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..protests received the most attention, and deservedly so, since “Blowin’ in the Wind,” “Masters of War,” and “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” weren’t just specific in their targets; they were gracefully executed and even melodic. Although they’ve proven resilient throughout the years, if that’s all Freewheelin’ had to offer, it wouldn’t have had its seismic impact, but this also revealed a songwriter who could turn out whimsy (“Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right”), gorgeous love songs (“Girl From the North Country”), and cheerfully absurdist humor (“Bob Dylan’s Blues,” “Bob Dylan’s Dream”) with equal skill. This is rich, imaginative music, capturing the sound and spirit of America as much as that of Louis Armstrong, Hank Williams, or Elvis Presley. Dylan, in many ways, recorded music that equaled this, but he never topped it.

As the preferred mix at the time of the recording, the mono version presents Dylan as he and his producers originally intended. More intimate, focused, and direct than its stereo counterpart, the mono edition places Dylan’s vocals in the heart of the musical action and as one with the accompaniment.

Bob Dylan – The Music Which Inspired Girl from the North Country (2018)

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Bob DylanConor McPherson’s play Girl from the North Country debuted last year, with the playwright hand-picking songs from Bob Dylan’s catalogue as a means of supplementing both the dialogue and emotional weight of his work.
Showing to outstanding reviews, the play – a fine drama set in a Depression hit Duluth, Minnesota, over a decade before Dylan’s birth – expertly re-worked the Bard’s material, with a subsequent cast recording earning high praise in its own right.
So why subsequently compiled The Music Which Inspired Girl from the North Country? Well, for one thing it’s always intriguing when one noted artist curates the work of another; doubly so when their work – as in this instance – has become intertwined, interlocked.

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Spread across two discs, this compilation utilises some of Bob Dylan’s finest pearls, the songs which have kept casual fans enraptured across the years – think ‘Like A Rolling Stone’, ‘Lay Lady Lay’, ‘Jokerman’, or ‘All Along The Watchtower’.

Yet the breadth of the compilation encourages us to visit some lesser-heralded avenues, some often dismissed cul de sacs. Few Dylan fans would recommend ‘New Morning’ or ‘Empire Burlesque’ to those new to the songwriter’s work, yet both albums are both represented, while other, rather more major works, are ignored.

It’s an approach that rescues some hitherto neglected songs, while casting fresh light on others. ‘I Want You’ – the shimmering salute to romance that pursued ‘Blonde On Blonde’ – is placed next to ‘Blind Willie McTell’, that fine, otherworldly epic that Dylan himself wasn’t sure whether to release for over 15 years.

Leaping between eras, we’re able to grasp the dizzying totality of Dylan’s work, all while being presented with fresh puzzles and dazzling dioramas. Ending with ‘My Back Pages’ – “I was so much older then, I’m younger than that now” – it at times feels like a very personal playlist, like a mixtape made by one friend and gifted to another. Perhaps not a release for those idly passing by, this compilation nonetheless offers fresh insight into Girl From The North Country, while also acting as a loving salute to the ongoing enigma that is Bob Dylan.

1. Sign on the Window (03:42)
2. Went to See the Gypsy (02:48)
3. Tight Connection to My Heart (Has Anyone Seen My Love) [Remastered] (05:24)
4. Slow Train (05:58)
5. License to Kill (03:33)
6. Ballad of a Thin Man (05:57)
7. I Want You (03:04)
8. Blind Willie McTell (05:52)
9. Like a Rolling Stone (06:08)
10. Make You Feel My Love (03:31)
11. You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere (02:44)
12. Jokerman (06:14)
13. Sweetheart Like You (04:33)
14. True Love Tends to Forget (04:14)
15. Girl from the North Country (03:19)
16. Hurricane (08:32)
17. All Along the Watchtower (02:31)
18. Idiot Wind (07:47)
19. Lay Down Your Weary Tune (04:34)
20. Duquesne Whistle (05:43)
21. Señor (Tales of Yankee Power) [Remastered] (05:39)
22. Is Your Love in Vain? (Remastered) (04:31)
23. Lay, Lady, Lay (03:17)
24. Forever Young (04:56)
25. My Back Pages (04:23)

VA – Take What You Need: UK Covers of Bob Dylan Songs 1964-1969 (2017)

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Take What You NeedIn February 1965, Melody Maker asked John Lennon about his personal enthusiasm for Bob Dylan material and Dylan interpretations. “I just felt like going that way,” he said about the new acoustic guitar-based material The Beatles were then recording at Abbey Road. “If I’d not heard Dylan, it might have been that I’d written stuff and sung it like Dominic Behan, or somebody like that.” Despite the non-committal answer, Dylan’s impact on Lennon was clear – the cap he’d recently been wearing was evidence of that.
Out of the public eye, Lennon – after being hipped to the album by George Harrison – had spent summer 1964 absorbing Dylan’s Freewheelin’. All four Fabs smoked cannabis with Dylan. Lennon went further and confessed he’d…

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…written “a folky song which I try to sing in a Dylan style. I didn’t want to overdo it, but I like it. It’s not easy to write songs like Bob’s. ‘Ere, who’s seen that bloke Donovan on TV?”

Indeed, The Beatles weren’t the only British pop stars in thrall to Dylan. In openly acknowledging this, they and Donovan had been beaten to the record shops in 1964 by The Animals, whose first two singles – “Baby Let Me Take You Home” and “House of the Rising Sun” – reinterpreted material from Dylan’s first album, issued in 1962. Those were pre-existing songs covered by Dylan but when he began issuing his own compositions they were, in turn, also ripe for covering.

Any of Dylan’s songs were up for grabs and the enlightening, entertaining new 22-track compilation Take What You Need: UK Covers of Bob Dylan Songs 1964-69 charts the early days of these endeavours on this side of the Atlantic. The oldest track is The Fairies’ version of “Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright”, issued on 31 July 1964. The latest are five tracks from 1969 which range from Joe Cocker to Sandie Shaw, and Fairport Convention to the Tim Rice/Andrew Lloyd Webber-sponsored The Mixed Bag. By the end of the 1960s, the songs of Dylan were close to ubiquitous.

Britain, though, was initially resistant to Dylan’s charms. He had been in London at the end of 1962 and appeared on television, as well as live at The Troubadour and other folk clubs. As the fine liner notes say, “few on the British scene were taken with Dylan; most were at best indifferent or, in the case of arch traditionalists Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl, completely dismissive.” There was one exception: the open-minded Martin Carthy. He alone was not going to help Dylan’s recognition.

So how did Dylan become embedded in the fabric of British pop? The generalised opening of minds and ears integral to Beatlemania is one answer. Playing London in May 1964 helped push Dylan towards the pop, rather than niche folk, market. More specifically, bands like The Animals were blues fans who also liked folk and were on the lookout for material. Cover versions laid the table for the real thing – Dylan himself. Another factor was the high-profile support Dylan enjoyed in America which attracted attention in Britain. Joan Baez’s espousal did no harm and Peter, Paul and Mary’s version of “Blowin’ in the Wind” in June 1963 was a massive US hit. Handily for Dylan, the manager he shared with the latter was keen on cross-collateralisation. It all ensured 1964 became Dylan’s breakthrough year in the UK.

Take What You Need kicks off with The Fairies’ bouncy “Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright”, which features session-era Jimmy Page on guitar. It’s followed by Marianne Faithfull’s Baez-style “Blowin’ in the Wind” (on which Page probably also appears). She sings preciously, as if afraid of the song. The Fairies blast away with nary a care for the nature of the source material. This twin-track approach courses through the compilation: wholesale reinterpretation versus on-eggshells respect for what’s being recorded.

Artistically and commercially, the most successful of the Britain’s Sixties Dylan fanciers were serial Dylan interpreters Manfred Mann, whose still daisy-fresh “If You Gotta Go, Go Now” is sandwiched between the Ian Campbell Folk Group’s gloopy, portentous “The Times They Are A-Changin’” and The Cops ‘N Robbers’ tense “It’s All Over Now Baby Blue”. Next up is Chad & Jeremy’s limp “Mr Tambourine Man”.

As the decade winds on, the mostly chronologically sequenced Take What You Need scoops up some extraordinary obscurities. Alex Campbell’s superb “Tom Thumb’s Blues” balances reverence for the material with spontaneity. Best of all is The Factotums’ romp through “Absolutely Sweet Marie”. Conversely, Cocker’s clod-hopping assassination of “Just Like a Woman” – with yet more Jimmy Page – is almost impossible to listen to.

Take What You Need is a wild ride. And it should be. During the years covered, it was open season on Dylan’s songs. The smooth comes with the rough and, in acknowledging this, the true nature of British musician’s response to Dylan is revealed. — theartsdesk.com

Bob Dylan – Live 1962-1966: Rare Performances from the Copyright Collections (2018)

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Bob Dylan Sony began releasing collections of Bob Dylan rarities with the sole purpose of extending their claims to the copyright to the recordings in 2012, when they released The 50th Anniversary Collection: The Copyright Extension Collection, Vol. 1. The very title of the album made its intent plain, but Sony nevertheless decided to release it under the radar, slipping out a few copies to various territories in Europe instead of prepping the music as part of their acclaimed Bootleg Series.
As the years passed, the Copyright Extensions became bundled into the Bootleg Series – 2014’s The Basement Tapes Raw and 2015’s The Cutting Edge were copyright extensions in all but name – and the notion that labels would clear out their vaults with the explicit reason of extending…

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…the copyright became accepted. Which leads us to Live 1962-1966: Rare Performances from the Copyright Collections, a collection of highlights Sony released in 2018. The double-disc set is precisely what it claims to be: 29 live tracks that were previously released as part of big clearing houses, now packaged for easier consumption. It’s a smart move and a welcome one, too, as the copyright sets aren’t designed for listenability, yet this compilation is, moving briskly from early folk tunes to electrified rock & roll. There may not be many epochal cuts here, but there is a surplus of first-rate performances here, particularly on the second disc, which gathers highlights from 1965-1966. For any serious Dylan fan who hasn’t been willing to dive into the big copyright sets, this is an excellent way to get acquainted with the treasures that lie within.

CD1:

1. Blowin’ In The Wind (Live at Gerde’s Folk City, New York, NY – April 1962) [02:40]
2. Corrina, Corrina (Live at Gerde’s Folk City, New York, NY – April 1962) [03:54]
3. John Brown (Live at Town Hall, New York, NY – April 1963) [05:12]
4. Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right (Live at Town Hall, New York, NY – April 1963) [03:35]
5. Bob Dylan’s Dream (Live at Town Hall, New York, NY – April 1963) [04:31]
6. Seven Curses (Live at Town Hall, New York, NY – April 1963) [05:14]
7. Boots of Spanish Leather (Live at Town Hall, New York, NY – April 1963) [04:44]
8. Masters of War (Live at Carnegie Hall, New York, NY – October 1963) [02:47]
9. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll (Live at Carnegie Hall, New York, NY – October 1963) [05:14]
10. When the Ship Comes In (Live at the March on Washington, D.C. – August 1963) [03:15]
11. The Times They Are A-Changin’ (Live at Royal Festival Hall, London, UK – May 1964) [03:32]
12. Girl from the North Country (Live at Royal Festival Hall, London, UK – May 1964) [03:46]
13. Mr. Tambourine Man (Live at Royal Festival Hall, London, UK – May 1964) [06:35]
14. t Ain’t Me, Babe (Live at Royal Festival Hall, London, UK – May 1964) [04:21]
15. To Ramona (Live at the Newport Folk Festival, Newport, RI – July 1964) [04:22]
16. Chimes of Freedom (Live at Royal Festival Hall, London, UK – May 1964) [07:32]

CD 2:

1. One Too Many Mornings (Live at BBC Studios, London, UK – June 1965) [04:02]
2. It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) (Live at the Oval, City Hall, Sheffield, UK – April 1965) [08:03]
3. Love Minus Zero / No Limit (Live at the Odeon, Liverpool, UK – May 1965) [03:59]
4. Gates of Eden (Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK – May 1965) [06:50]
5. It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue (Live at the Odeon, Liverpool, UK – May 1965) [05:07]
6. She Belongs to Me (Live at Royal Albert Hall, Manchester, UK – May 1965) [04:19]
7. Maggie’s Farm (Live at the Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, CA – September 1965) [04:20]
8. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (Live at the Newport Folk Festival, Newport, RI – July 1965) [03:31]
9. Desolation Row (Live at TCN 9 TV, Sydney, Australia – April 1966) [10:36]
10. Baby Let Me Follow You Down (Live at the Capitol Theatre, Cardiff, UK – May 1966) [03:38]
11. I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) (Live at the Capitol Theatre, Cardiff, UK – May 1966) [05:52]
12. Ballad of a Thin Man (Live at the ABC Theatre, Edinburgh, Scotland – May 1966) [07:38]
13. Visions of Johanna (Live at the ABC Theatre, Belfast, Ireland – May 1966) [07:09]

Bob Dylan – More Blood, More Tracks: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 14 [Deluxe Edition] (2018)

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When can a song be considered “finished”? When, if ever, can a song written by Bob Dylan be considered finished? And what to make of tracks that were greenlit for release and then discarded – after the auteur decided they somehow didn’t quite capture the totality of what he was trying to express?
These are among the questions that hover over the multiple versions of “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go” and really everything on More Blood, More Tracks – a massive trove of outtakes that documents, in chronological order, every utterance from the New York sessions that led to Dylan’s 1975 opus Blood On the Tracks.
“You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome” is a tender, straight-up declaration of anticipatory loneliness, and when Dylan begins working on it,…

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…during the second of four days of tracking, he envisions it with full band support. He and the studio veterans of the Deliverance band settle into an easygoing, L.A. country-rock pulse, and over the course of a brief rehearsal and multiple tries, they develop a working understanding about what the song needs, when to surge forward and when to leave space for Dylan’s vocal flourishes. There are slight variations in tempo and arrangement, and unlike some early renditions of a few of Dylan’s other new tunes – notably the howlingly raw New York recording of “Idiot Wind” that was replaced by a version (with a different band) from a late-December session in Minneapolis – these renderings are solid, professional, respectable.

Something apparently still troubles Dylan, however. He revisits “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome” the next day, initially with just his guitar, piano and bass. Then, at the end of the session, he records two versions using only guitar and bass. The second of those, which has a slightly looser feel and some wild-eyed singing, is the one we know by heart. (It’s unknown if Dylan made further attempts at the song in Minneapolis; the box set’s producers were only able to locate master tapes for the five tunes from the session that appeared, with the musicians uncredited, on the original Blood On the Tracks. They are identified on this release.)

Dylan’s pursuit of the singular “truth” of this song across so many takes is not about studio perfection. He’s chasing a particular balance between narrative and background accompaniment; when there’s too much musical information flying around, the spell is broken. His holy grail isn’t to simply document the arc of a love affair: Dylan’s searching for a specific tone and temperament to enhance the scenes he’d written – scenes set in the messy aftermath of all-consuming romance, when all that’s left of a noble love is empty-room echoes and not-entirely-trustworthy memories. The six-disc box (and a single-disc sampler) shows how virtually everything that ended up on Blood On the Tracks underwent similar transformation. From typical songwriterly confession to austere, harrowing expression.

Dissected by generations of songwriters for their metric precision and structural concision, these songs had to be rendered cleanly, with little ornamentation, so that listeners couldn’t escape the nuance – or, conversely, the brute force – of the delusions and deceptions and dissolutions Dylan describes.

One protagonist confides he only knows of careless love; another follows a cold trail in vain hope of reconnecting with the woman who made things make sense. Several songs share what happens when the angry words of a former lover reach into the psyche at the cellular level, coiling around the valves of the heart until they change a man’s perspective, his sense of identity. One song is bitter and astringent; others are wistful, tender, nostalgic. Heard front to back, these pieces form an inquiry into the shifting dynamics of relationship that has no parallel anywhere in the history of popular song.

What’s more, everything on the final Blood On the Tracks – five songs cut in New York, five in Minneapolis – share one singular animating trait: This almost haunting visceral energy. These songs vibrate at an emotional pitch that’s hard to reach, let alone sustain; More Blood, More Tracks underscores this feat. The multiple takes show Dylan framing and interpreting the words to shade or alter their meanings. He conjures the corkscrew to the heart, then finds ways to turn it further.

Wound up and sometimes bursting with fury, Dylan sings with such immersion that he renders the eternal speculation about the origins of this work – “is it autobiographical?” – pretty much meaningless, at least secondary to the achievement of the art. Unspooling his detail-rich narratives differently each time, Dylan brings the abstract into focus, conjuring the taste of a sudden rejection, the chill of the wind blowing through the buttons of a coat. Each image works a particular magic that has eluded so many poets and songwriters: He’s translating the messy and mysterious into music with universal resonance.

CD 1: A&R Studios, New York City – 9/16/1974 (all solo tracks)

  1. If You See Her, Say Hello (Take 1) *
  2. If You See Her, Say Hello (Take 2)
  3. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 1)
  4. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 2) *
  5. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 1) *
  6. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 2)
  7. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 3)
  8. Up to Me (Rehearsal)
  9. Up to Me (Take 1)
  10. Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts (Take 1)
  11. Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts (Take 2) *

Track 2 previously released on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3: Rare and Unreleased (Columbia C3K 47382, 1991)
Track 11 included on Blood On The Tracks test pressing (Columbia PC 33235, 1974)

CD 2: A&R Studios, New York City – 9/16/1974 (tracks with band (1-6, 12-14, 16-20) and bass (7-11, 15))

  1. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 1A)
  2. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 2A)
  3. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 3A)
  4. Call Letter Blues (Take 1)
  5. Meet Me in the Morning (Take 1)
  6. Call Letter Blues (Take 2)
  7. Idiot Wind (Take 1)
  8. Idiot Wind (Take 1, Remake)
  9. Idiot Wind (Take 3 with Insert)
  10. Idiot Wind (Take 5)
  11. Idiot Wind (Take 6)
  12. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Rehearsal and Take 1)
  13. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 2)
  14. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 3)
  15. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 4)
  16. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 5)
  17. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 6)
  18. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 6, Remake)
  19. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 7)
  20. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 8)

Edited version of Track 5 included on Blood On The Tracks test pressing and final album (same cat. # as above, 1975)
Track 6 previously released on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3: Rare and Unreleased

Band for CD 2: Bob Dylan: vocals, guitar, harmonica; Eric Weissberg, Charles Brown III, Barry Kornfeld: guitars; Thomas McFaul: keyboards; Tony Brown: bass; Richard Crooks: drums; Buddy Cage: steel guitar (5-6)

CD 3: A&R Studios, New York City – 9/16/1974 (1) and 9/17/1974 (2-15)

  1. Tangled Up in Blue (Take 1) – with bass
  2. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 1, Remake) – with bass and organ
  3. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 2, Remake) – with bass, organ and steel guitar
  4. Tangled Up in Blue (Rehearsal) – with bass and organ
  5. Tangled Up in Blue (Take 2, Remake) – with bass and organ
  6. Spanish Is the Loving Tongue (Take 1) – with bass and piano
  7. Call Letter Blues (Rehearsal) – with bass and piano
  8. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 1, Remake) – with bass and piano *
  9. Shelter from the Storm (Take 1) – with bass and piano
  10. Buckets of Rain (Take 1) – with bass
  11. Tangled Up in Blue (Take 3, Remake) – with bass
  12. Buckets of Rain (Take 2) – with bass
  13. Shelter from the Storm (Take 2) – with bass *
  14. Shelter from the Storm (Take 3) – with bass
  15. Shelter from the Storm (Take 4) – with bass

Track 2 included on test pressing and previously released on Biograph (Columbia C5X/C3K 38830, 1985)
Track 9 previously released on Jerry Maguire: Music From The Motion Picture (Epic Soundtrax EK 67910, 1996)

Band for CD 3: Bob Dylan: vocals, guitar, harmonica; Tony Brown: bass; Paul Griffin: keyboards (2-9); Buddy Cage: steel guitar (3)

CD 4: A&R Studios, New York City – 9/17/1974 (1-2), 9/18/1974 (3-6) and 9/19/1974 (7-20) (tracks with bass (1-2, 7-20) and solo (3-6))

  1. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 1, Remake 2)
  2. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (Take 2, Remake 2)
  3. Buckets of Rain (Take 1, Remake)
  4. Buckets of Rain (Take 2, Remake) *
  5. Buckets of Rain (Take 3, Remake)
  6. Buckets of Rain (Take 4, Remake)
  7. Up to Me (Take 1, Remake)
  8. Up to Me (Take 2, Remake) *
  9. Buckets of Rain (Take 1, Remake 2)
  10. Buckets of Rain (Take 2, Remake 2)
  11. Buckets of Rain (Take 3, Remake 2)
  12. Buckets of Rain (Take 4, Remake 2)
  13. If You See Her, Say Hello (Take 1, Remake)
  14. Up to Me (Take 1, Remake 2)
  15. Up to Me (Take 2, Remake 2)
  16. Up to Me (Take 3, Remake 2)
  17. Buckets of Rain (Rehearsal)
  18. Meet Me in the Morning (Take 1, Remake) *
  19. Meet Me in the Morning (Take 2, Remake)
  20. Buckets of Rain (Take 5, Remake 2)

Tracks 2 and 12 previously released on original album
Track 13 included on test pressing
Track 18 previously released on “Duquesne Whistle” single – Columbia 88765 40533-7, 2012

Band for CD 4: Bob Dylan: vocals, guitar, harmonica; Tony Brown: bass (1-2, 7-20)

CD 5: A&R Studios, New York City – 9/19/1974 (tracks with bass)

  1. Tangled Up in Blue (Rehearsal and Take 1, Remake 2)
  2. Tangled Up in Blue (Take 2, Remake 2)
  3. Tangled Up in Blue (Take 3, Remake 2)
  4. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 2, Remake)
  5. Simple Twist of Fate (Take 3, Remake)
  6. Up to Me (Rehearsal and Take 1, Remake 3)
  7. Up to Me (Take 2, Remake 3)
  8. Idiot Wind (Rehearsal and Takes 1-3, Remake)
  9. Idiot Wind (Take 4, Remake) *
  10. Idiot Wind (Take 4, Remake with Organ Overdub)
  11. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 1, Remake 2)
  12. Meet Me in the Morning (Take 1, Remake 2)
  13. Meet Me in the Morning (Takes 2-3, Remake 2)

Tracks 3 and 10 included on test pressing and previously released on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3: Rare and Unreleased
Track 5 previously released on original album
Track 7 previously released on Biograph

Band for CD 5: Bob Dylan: vocals, guitar, harmonica; Tony Brown: bass

CD 6: A&R Studios, New York City – 9/19/1974 (1-3, tracks with bass) and Sound 80 Studio, Minneapolis – 12/27/1974 (4-5) and 12/30/1974 (6-8) (tracks with band)

  1. You’re a Big Girl Now (Takes 3-6, Remake 2)
  2. Tangled Up in Blue (Rehearsal and Takes 1-2, Remake 3)
  3. Tangled Up in Blue (Take 3, Remake 3) *
  4. Idiot Wind
  5. You’re a Big Girl Now
  6. Tangled up in Blue
  7. Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts
  8. If You See Her, Say Hello

Tracks 4-8 previously released on original album

Band for CD 6, Tracks 4-8: Bob Dylan: vocals, guitar, harmonica, organ (4-5), mandolin (8); Tony Brown: bass (1-3); Chris Weber: guitar (4-6, 8); Kevin Odegard: guitar (6); Peter Ostroushko: mandolin (8); Gregg Inhofer: keyboards (4-8); Billy Peterson: bass (4, 6-7); Bill Berg: drums (4-8)


Bob Dylan – Blood On the Tracks: Original Test Pressing (RSD 2019)

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Bob DylanAny week will bear Bob Dylan news if you dig just a little bit. But this week brought a little more than usual. For starters, Dylan apparently is launching a new distillery in Nashville called Heaven’s Door. Presumably the secret ingredient swishing through the spirits will be Katy Jurado’s tears.
But those more interested in his music than his business ventures surely know by now that an alternative version of Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks is being released as part of Record Store Day.
Last fall, Dylan released More Blood, More Tracks: The Bootleg Series Vol. 14, which offered a ton of extra recordings made in pursuit of his 1975 masterpiece Blood on the Tracks. The New Yorker’s always insightful and wonderful Alex Ross responded with muted joy at…

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…the release in his column, “Bob Dylan’s Masterpiece Is Still Hard to Find.”

Ross — like a lot of dedicated Dylanites — had hoped to hear a recording that almost was released, and instead became more a legend that circulated among bootleg collectors.

That recording was the original “Blood on the Tracks,” that Dylan recorded in Sept. 1974 in New York. The record was done, a test pressing was made, and a few were sent out to critics. Then Dylan decided to pull the record back, re-record some of it. The “Blood on the Tracks” that most folks know as a the landmark 1975 album is a mix of the New York tapes and sessions Dylan did in Minnesota in late December 1974.

Ross preferred the original. And others did, too. That said, their enthusiasm for the earlier “Blood on the Tracks” did nothing to dampen the reception of the official release.

Venerable rock critic Robert Christgau preferred the rejiggered version, writing:

The first version of this album struck me as a sellout to the memory of Dylan’s pre-electric period; this remix, utilizing unknown Minneapolis studio musicians who impose nothing beyond a certain anonymous brightness on the proceedings, recapitulates the strengths of that period. Dylan’s new stance is as disconcerting as all the previous ones, but the quickest and deepest surprise is in the music itself. By second hearing its loveliness is almost literally haunting, an aural déjà vu. There are moments of anger that seem callow, and the prevailing theme of interrupted love recalls adolescent woes, but on the whole this is the man’s most mature and assured record.

Whether it was collectors’ demand or Ross’ column, the Legacy label this weekend is releasing an LP version of the test pressing so that dedicated Dylan enthusiasts can have the earlier rejected and diced up version of “Blood on the Tracks.” (Ross also provided a track key at the end of his column for assembling a digital version of the test pressing from the box set.)

Half of the songs are unchanged. So how does the new old version sound compared to the “Tracks” that has circulated for nearly 45 years? I’d encourage all interested parties to read Ross’ analysis, because I’ve had two days with the test pressing, and he has been listening presumably for years. But a short comparison reveals more than superficial differences in tone and structure.

Well, “Idiot Wind” is the song that underwent the most change. I can’t say whether one is better or worse, just that my preference leans toward the test pressing version.

The two songs share a lot of content, but they also reveal Dylan’s approach to music, which was that of an old songster. Instead of hearing a song in one town and taking it down river and playing it differently in another town, Dylan serves as a one-man oral tradition. He takes his own work and works and reworks it. Call a commercially released studio version of a song “definitive” at your own risk, as doing so will create disappointment in concert.

In a SongTalk interview, Dylan suggested that recording the song only temporarily contained the song.

“Obviously, if you’ve heard both versions you realize, of course, that there could be a myriad of (sic) verses for the thing. It doesn’t stop . It wouldn’t stop. Where do you end? You could still be writing it, really. It’s something that could be a work continually in progress.”

The first two verses move along almost identically with stories planted in the press, the shooting of a man named Gray and the beautiful line, “I can’t help it if I’m lucky.”

The third and fourth verses have a few familiar visuals and turns of phrase: the blood on the saddle, the peace and quiet, the lone soldier. In the fifth verse the earlier version has Dylan declaring “It’s gravity which pulled us in,” which changed to “It’s gravity which pulled us down” in the officially released version; a one word difference that dramatically changes the meaning.

Later he changes “Idiot wind, from the Grand Coulee Dam to the Mardi Gras” to “from the Grand Coulee Dam to the Capitol.” The dam reference calls back to Dylan’s mentor, Woody Guthrie, and further underscores both artists’ belief in the reduce-reuse-recycle qualities found in a song: Guthrie found a way to get paid by a federal power administration to write his “Grand Coulee Dam,” and he snatched more than a little material from “Wabash Cannonball,” a song that changed dramatically for years after it’s penning and publication in the 1800s.

Regardless of history, tonally the shift from Mardi Gras to the Capitol is a dramatic one, with personal and political implications.

These lyrical changes were also reflected in the tone of the song, which went from almost wistful in its earlier New York version to sneering and more vicious in the later Minnesota recording that appeared on “Blood on the Tracks.”

…What is the value to you? Well, that depends on your music consumption habits. The word “record” was descriptive before it acquired meaning as a widget. A “record” was documentation of an artist’s work at a time and place. It was something in amber, contrasting the oft shifting plates of live music. Dylan has for years appeared uneasy with the idea of amber. Which isn’t to say he doesn’t release records, because there are a lot of them.

But each record he offers for consumption appears as a creature with multiple shadow siblings that are largely confined to darker corners. The test pressing release of this album, though, lets one of those creatures into the light fully, offering not just an isolated listening experience in and of itself, but also a different perspective on a known entity, in this case, “Blood on the Tracks.”

Bob Dylan – Oh Mercy (1989, MFSL 2019)

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Bob DylanOh Mercy was hailed as a comeback, not just because it had songs noticeably more meaningful than anything Bob Dylan had recently released, but because Daniel Lanois’ production gave it cohesion. There was cohesion on Empire Burlesque, of course, but that cohesion was a little too slick, a little too commercial, whereas this record was filled with atmospheric, hazy production — a sound as arty as most assumed the songs to be. And Dylan followed suit, giving Lanois significant songs — palpably social works, love songs, and poems — that seemed to connect with his past. And, at the time, this production made it seem like the equivalent of his ’60s records, meaning that its artiness was cutting edge, not portentous. Over the years, Oh Mercy hasn’t aged particularly well,…

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…seeming as self-conscious as such other gauzy Lanois productions as So and The Joshua Tree, even though it makes more sense than the ersatz pizzazz of Burlesque. Still, the songs make Oh Mercy noteworthy; they find Dylan quietly raging against the materialism of President Reagan and accepting maturity, albeit with a slight reluctance. So, Oh Mercy is finally more interesting for what it tries to achieve than for what it actually does achieve. At its best, this is a collection of small, shining moments, with the best songs shining brighter than their production or the album’s overall effect.

Mastered on Mobile Fidelity’s world-renowned mastering system and strictly limited to 3,000 numbered copies, Oh Mercy now takes on cinematic qualities worthy of Lanois’ production and Dylan’s performances. On SACD, the music benefits from a spaciousness, tonality, and surrealism no prior edition delivers. Each note seems to occupy its own physical dimension, allowing Oh Mercy to simultaneously immerse and surround you. Its clarity, dynamics, and extension also reach new heights throughout – whether it’s the low-end reach on the spiritual-minded “Ring Them Bells” or combination of guitar-chord treble and piano decay on “Disease of Conceit.”

Bob Dylan – Uncut: Best of The Bootleg Series (2018)

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Bob Dylan 1. Guess I’m Doing Fine (Witmark Demo-1964)
2. Dink’s Song
3. To Ramona (Live at Philharmonic Hall, New York)
4. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (Take 8) [Alternate Take]
5. One Too Many Mornings (Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK-May 17, 1966)
6. All You Have to Do Is Dream (Take 2)
7. Pretty Saro (Unreleased) [Self Portrait]
8. You’re a Big Girl Now (Take 2)
9. It Ain’t Me, Babe (Live at Harvard Square Theatre, Cambridge, MA-November 1975)
10. Slow Train (Live at Earls Court, London, 1981)
11. Blind Willie McTell (Studio Outtake 1983)
12. Born in Time (Outtake from the Oh Mercy Sessions)

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included with the December 2018 (“TAKE 259”) issue of Uncut magazine.

Track 1 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964
Track 2 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 7: No Direction Home
Track 3 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 6: Bob Dylan Live 1964, Concert At Philharmonic Hall
Track 4 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 12: The Cutting Edge 1965-1966
Track 5 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 4: Bob Dylan Live 1966, The “Royal Albert Hall” Concert
Track 6 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 11: The Basement Tapes Complete
Track 7 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 10: Another Self Portrait
Track 8 from the album, More Blood, More Tracks: The Bootleg Series, Vol 14
Track 9 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 5: Bob Dylan Live 1975
Track 10 from the album, Trouble No More: The Bootleg Series, Vol 13 1979-1981
Track 11 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991
Track 12 from the album, The Bootleg Series, Vol 8: Tell Tale Signs: Rare and Unreleased 1989-2006

Bob Dylan – Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973, MFSL 2019)

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Bob DylanOn the surface, Bob Dylan’s Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid serves as a potent soundtrack to Sam Peckinpah’s western of the same name. Dating from 1973, the Grammy-nominated set continued a rustic current Dylan explored on prior efforts such as Nashville Skyline and John Wesley Harding. It also demonstrated the singer could successfully lend his talents to a film and produce music that not only illuminated the mood, personalities, and actions on screen but exist and thrive independent of them. Yet Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid is much more, and most importantly, finally receives its just sonic due more than four decades after its initial release.
Mastered from the original master tapes on Mobile Fidelity’s world-renowned mastering…

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…system, and strictly limited to 2,500 numbered copies, this hybrid SACD features reference-level instrumental separation and full-bodied tones that allow the songs to blossom amidst soundstages whose dimensions are limited only by the breadth of your stereo system. The flinty, raw acoustic edge of Dylan and Bruce Langhorne’s guitars come into immediate relief. Booker T. Jones’ relaxed albeit taut bass, Jolly Roger’s down-home banjo, Russ Kunkel’s textured bongos, and the crucial string accompaniments similarly flourish.

Indeed, Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid remains both distinctive and intriguing for the cast Dylan assembled for its creation – and their collective performances. Echoing Ry Cooder’s adventurous, epoch-defying journeys that would soon follow, the 10-track album effortlessly breathes with country, folk, blues, and old-time pop flavors. A-list collaborators, including drummer Jim Keltner, fiddler Byron Berline, and Byrd legend Roger McGuinn, assist Dylan in making instrumental portraits such as the pensive “Catalina Theme (Working for the Law”) and the spry “Turkey Chase” teem with detail, character, and a definite sense of place. Heard anew on Mobile Fidelity’s exquisite remaster on SACD, they take on deeper meaning and convey elevated levels of enjoyment.

Of course, we should mention the other main reason why Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid remains one of Dylan’s most famous works: “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door.” Transcending the mere status of song, the Bard’s simple albeit poignant tune was ostensibly about Sheriff Colin Baker’s death in Peckinpah’s film yet has gone on to become nothing short of an anthem – a symbolic hymn whose expressiveness encompasses resilience, sorrow, forgiveness, readiness, and more. Covered by dozens of artists and, most famously, by Guns N’ Roses, who turned it into a live staple recognized by new generations of fans, the classic is here in its original form, never sounding more significant than it does now.

Dylan’s series of three “Billy” numbers, the record’s other vocal tracks, also hold up to any other fare in the vocalist’s rich catalog. There’s not a misstep here or vacant feeling on this expertly executed album, which, for Dylanologists and historians, also represented the icon’s first original material in three years – and a prelude to his reunion with the Band and, ultimately, 1975’s bracing Blood on the Tracks. In every regard, Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid reigns as a towering statement.

 

Bob Dylan – The Rolling Thunder Revue: The 1975 Live Recordings (2019)

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Bob DylanThe Rolling Thunder Revue era in Bob Dylan’s career maintains a central place apparently. The 14-disc Rolling Thunder Revue: The 1975 Live Recordings is the third release in his catalogue to document it. The first was Hard Rain, for a 1978 television special. 2002’s double-disc Bootleg Volume 5 compiled selected performances from the first leg of the tour. This box offers five complete Dylan concerts from 1975: four from Massachusetts, one from Montreal, three discs of rehearsals, and a disc of rarities. 119 of 148 tracks were previously unreleased. Shows were announced shortly in advance of bookings in small venues, including a stage at a mahjong convention. The music crisscrosses Dylan’s past and present, and features a star-studded cast: Joan Baez,…

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…Roger McGuinn, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Joni Mitchell, Allen Ginsberg, Bob Neuwirth, Scarlet Rivera, Ronee Blakley, T-Bone Burnett, Mick Ronson, Steven Soles, Rob Stoner, Howie Wyeth, and David Mansfield. Dylan’s face was covered by a mask or greasepaint, his head by an enormous gaucho hat adorned in flowers, all captured by a camera crew shooting what would become the four-hour Renaldo and Clara film. This ramble was a precursor for the ongoing Neverending Tour. It followed the release of Blood on the Tracks, and preceded Desire and Street Legal, the most musically diverse period in Dylan’s career.

Two of the three rehearsal discs from S.I.R. studios are worthy of a cursory listen, especially “Rita May,” “People Get Ready,” and incomplete takes of “Hollywood Angel,” and “Gwenevere.” The third disc is better and offers fine takes of “Easy and Slow,” “One More Cup of Coffee,” and “Hurricane.” The shows follow an equally loose format but are more kinetic. While the track list doesn’t change much night to night, arrangements do. Among the many highlights are re-visioned versions of “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll,” “I Shall Be Released,” and Blowin’ in the Wind.” Each night’s gig ended with the ensemble offering Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” as a closer — there were no encores. As concerts progress, the band gets tighter. The final two shows in Boston and Montreal deliver sometimes-revelatory performances of “Hurricane,” “Tangled Up in Blue,” “Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You,” and “Isis.” There are also true gems on the final “Rare Performances” disc: Alongside “One Too Many Mornings” (captured at Gerte’s Folk City) and “The Ballad of Ira Hayes” (from the Tuscarora Reservation) are wily covers of Hank Williams’ “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and shambolic reads of the folk song “Jesse James” and Smokey Robinson’s “Tracks of My Tears.” Some material appears in Martin Scorsese’s Netflix film Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story. The concerts all have excellent sound. While this box is only essential for hardcore Dylanophiles, it’s immeasurably valuable for the way it illuminates a wildly spontaneous period in the songwriter’s career.

Discs 1-2: October 19, 1975 – S.I.R. Rehearsals, New York, NY

  1. Rake and Ramblin’ Boy * +
  2. Romance in Durango * +
  3. Rita May *
  4. I Want You # +
  5. Love Minus Zero/No Limit * +
  6. She Belongs to Me * +
  7. Joey +
  8. Isis
  9. Hollywood Angel +
  10. People Get Ready # ~
  11. What Will You Do When Jesus Comes? #
  12. Spanish Is the Loving Tongue
  13. The Ballad of Ira Hayes
  14. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below) *
  15. Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You
  16. This Land Is Your Land
  17. Dark as a Dungeon *
  1. She Belongs to Me #
  2. A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall
  3. Isis
  4. This Wheel’s on Fire/Hurricane/All Along the Watchtower
  5. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)
  6. If You See Her, Say Hello
  7. One Too Many Mornings #
  8. Gwenevere +
  9. Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts +
  10. Patty’s Gone to Laredo #
  11. It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)

Disc 3: October 29, 1975 – Seacrest Motel Rehearsals, Falmouth, MA

  1. Tears of Rage
  2. I Shall Be Released
  3. Easy and Slow
  4. Ballad of a Thin Man
  5. Hurricane
  6. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)
  7. Just Like a Woman
  8. Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

Discs 4-5: November 19, 1975 – Memorial Auditorium, Worcester, MA

  1. When I Paint My Masterpiece
  2. It Ain’t Me, Babe
  3. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
  4. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry
  5. Romance in Durango
  6. Isis
  7. Blowin’ in the Wind
  8. Wild Mountain Thyme
  9. Mama, You Been on My Mind
  10. Dark as a Dungeon
  11. I Shall Be Released
  1. Tangled Up in Blue
  2. Oh, Sister
  3. Hurricane ^ *
  4. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)
  5. Sara
  6. Just Like a Woman
  7. Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
  8. This Land Is Your Land

Discs 6-7: November 20, 1975 – Harvard Square Theater, Cambridge, MA

  1. When I Paint My Masterpiece
  2. It Ain’t Me, Babe # ~ ^
  3. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
  4. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry *
  5. Romance in Durango ^ *
  6. Isis
  7. Blowin’ in the Wind *
  8. Wild Mountain Thyme
  9. Mama, You Been on My Mind ^
  10. Dark as a Dungeon
  11. I Shall Be Released
  1. Simple Twist of Fate ^ *
  2. Oh, Sister
  3. Hurricane
  4. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)
  5. Sara
  6. Just Like a Woman #
  7. Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door # ^
  8. This Land Is Your Land

Discs 8-9: November 21, 1975 – Afternoon – Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA

  1. When I Paint My Masterpiece
  2. It Ain’t Me, Babe
  3. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
  4. A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall
  5. Romance in Durango
  6. Isis
  7. The Times They Are a-Changin’
  8. I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine
  9. Mama, You Been on My Mind
  10. Never Let Me Go
  11. I Shall Be Released ^
  1. Mr. Tambourine Man ^
  2. Oh, Sister
  3. Hurricane
  4. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)
  5. Sara ^
  6. Just Like a Woman
  7. Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
  8. This Land Is Your Land

Discs 10-11: November 21, 1975 – Evening – Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA

  1. When I Paint My Masterpiece
  2. It Ain’t Me, Babe
  3. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll ^
  4. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry # ^
  5. Romance in Durango
  6. Isis ^
  7. Blowin’ in the Wind ^
  8. The Water Is Wide ^
  9. Mama, You Been on My Mind
  10. Dark as a Dungeon
  11. I Shall Be Released
  1. I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)
  2. Tangled Up in Blue # ^
  3. Oh, Sister ^
  4. Hurricane
  5. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below) ^
  6. Sara
  7. Just Like a Woman ^
  8. Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
  9. This Land Is Your Land

Discs 12-13: December 4, 1975 – Forum de Montreal, Montreal, Canada

  1. When I Paint My Masterpiece
  2. It Ain’t Me, Babe
  3. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll *
  4. Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You ^
  5. A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall # ^ *
  6. Romance in Durango #
  7. Isis # ~
  8. Blowin’ in the Wind
  9. Dark as a Dungeon
  10. Mama, You Been on My Mind
  11. Never Let Me Go # ~
  12. I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine *
  13. I Shall Be Released
  1. It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue ^
  2. Love Minus Zero/No Limit ^
  3. Tangled Up in Blue
  4. Oh, Sister
  5. Hurricane
  6. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below) # *
  7. Sara #
  8. Just Like a Woman
  9. Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
  10. This Land Is Your Land

Disc 14: Bonus Disc – Rare Performances

  1. One Too Many Mornings (October 24 – Gerdes Folk City, New York City, New York) *
  2. Simple Twist of Fate (October 28 – Mahjong Parlor, Falmouth, MA) *
  3. Isis (November 2 – Technical University, Lowell, MA)
  4. With God on Our Side (November 4 – Afternoon – Civic Center, Providence, RI)
  5. It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) (November 4 – Evening – Civic Center, Providence, RI)
  6. Radio advertisement for Niagara Falls, NY shows
  7. The Ballad of Ira Hayes (November 16 – Tuscarora Reservation, NY) *
  8. Your Cheatin’ Heart (November 23) *
  9. Fourth Time Around (November 26 – Civic Center, Augusta, Maine)
  10. The Tracks of My Tears (December 3 – Chateau Champlain, Montreal Canada)
  11. Jesse James (December 5 – Montreal Stables, Montreal, Canada)
  12. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (December 8 – “Night of the Hurricane,” Madison Square Garden, New York, NY)

On Discs 1-13:
Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, piano, harmonica
Joan Baez – vocals and guitar on “Tears of Rage,” “I Shall Be Released,” “Blowin’ in the Wind,” “Wild Mountain Thyme,” “Mama, You Been on My Mind,” “Dark as a Dungeon,” “The Times They Are a-Changin’,” “I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine,” “Never Let Me Go,” “The Water Is Wide,” and “This Land Is Your Land”
Roger McGuinn – guitar and vocals on “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door” and 
”This Land Is Your Land”
Guam: 
Bobby Neuwirth – guitar, vocals
; Scarlet Rivera – violin
; T Bone J. Henry Burnett – guitar, vocals; 
Steven Soles – guitar, vocals
; Mick Ronson – guitar
; David Mansfield – steel guitar, mandolin, violin, dobro; 
Rob Stoner – bass, vocals
; Howie Wyeth – drums, piano
; Luther Rix – drums, percussion, congas
; Ronee Blakley – vocals
; Ramblin’ Jack Elliott – vocals, guitar
; Allen Ginsberg – vocals, finger cymbals; 
Joni Mitchell – vocals

On Disc 14:
Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, piano, harmonica
Joan Baez – vocals (2)
Rob Stoner – bass (2)
Eric Andersen, Arlen Roth – guitars (2)
Guam (3, 10, 12)
Larry Keegan – vocals (8)
Robbie Robertson – guitar (12)

# included in the film Renaldo and Clara (1978)
~ released on 4 Songs From Renaldo and Clara EP (Columbia AS 422, 1978)
^ released on The Bootleg Series, Vol. 5: Bob Dylan Live 1975 – The Rolling Thunder Revue (Columbia C2K 87047, 2002)
* included in the film Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese (2019)
+ incomplete

Bob Dylan featuring Johnny Cash – Travelin’ Thru, 1967-1969: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 15 (2019)

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Bob DylanThe 15th volume of Bob Dylan’s Bootleg Series focuses on the recordings he made in Nashville in the waning years of the 1960s. There are outtakes from John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline, along with a pair of cuts from the Self Portrait sessions, but the fulcrum of the three-disc set is Dylan’s sessions with Johnny Cash in February 1969. Some of this is due to pure scarcity. There weren’t an extensive number of outtakes from the John Wesley Harding sessions, plus Dylan didn’t play with his arrangements in the studio; the seven alternate takes from these sessions prove this point. Then, CBS Nashville wound up not paying the fee for a storage facility, so a number of Nashville Skyline sessions were lost. The outtakes that did survive are lively and friendly,…

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…accentuating the good humor that flows through the finished product, but they’re so amiable, they’re bound to be overshadowed by the disc and a half of Dylan and Cash running through their respective songbooks while supported by Carl Perkins, who was Johnny’s guitarist at the time. The Dylan and Cash sessions happened as Bob was in the middle of recording Nashville Skyline, and it was possible that it was intended as the genesis of a duet album that never materialized. While “Girl from the North County” wound up kicking off Nashville Skyline, the rest of the recordings remained in the vaults, bootlegged heavily over the years before appearing in this official, complete form.

The additional context of Travelin’ Thru — not just the alternate takes of disc one, but a joyous epilogue of a handful of tracks cut with bluegrass banjoist Earl Scruggs in early 1970 — lends some gravity to the amiable, occasionally wobbly Dylan/Cash sessions. The looseness can be ascribed to two mutual admirers attempting to find common ground. The pair knew they shared a bond — Cash patterned his “Understand Your Man” after Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right,” a connection made apparent when producer Bob Johnston had them sing the songs simultaneously, each sticking to their own lyrics — but finding a groove takes time, and much of the appeal of Travelin’ Thru lies in how the duo finally fall into step together. They start to move in the same direction by playing oldies from Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jimmie Rodgers, and Cash himself, throwing in a few folk standards and Dylan originals — including “Wanted Man,” which Bob wrote for Johnny — along the way. If the results aren’t epochal, they’re nevertheless illuminating, revealing how these two American icons shared the same musical vocabulary. — AMG

Bob Dylan – Rough and Rowdy Ways (2020)

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Bob DylanFor 60 years, Bob Dylan has been speaking to us. Sometimes breathless, often inscrutable, occasionally prophetic, his words have formed a mythology unto themselves. But his silence holds just as much meaning. Less than a minute into his 39th album, which he has decided to call Rough and Rowdy Ways, the accompaniment seems to fade. It’s a subtle drop; there wasn’t much there in the first place—a muted string ensemble, a soft pedal steel, some funereal motifs from classical and electric guitars. It’s the same twilight atmosphere that comprised Dylan’s last three studio albums, a faithful trilogy of American standards once popularized by Frank Sinatra. But now he’s singing his own words, and about himself. He compares himself to Anne Frank and…

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…Indiana Jones, says he says he’s a painter and a poet, confesses to feeling restless, tender, and unforgiving. “I contain a-multituuudes,” he croons, to anybody who hasn’t realized by now.

The rest of the album follows this thread: furnished with more space than his words require, sung gracefully at the age of 79, speaking to things we know to be true, using proper nouns and first-hand evidence. In other words, it is the rare Dylan album that asks to be understood, that comes down to meet its audience. In these songs, death is not a heavy fog hanging over all walks of life; it is a man being murdered as the country watches, an event with a time, place, and date. And love is not a Shakespearean riddle or a lusty joke; it is a delicate pact between two people, something you make up your mind and devote yourself to. “The lyrics are the real thing, tangible, they’re not metaphors,” Dylan told the New York Times. So when he sings about crossing the Rubicon, he’s talking about a river in Italy; when he tells you he’s going down to Key West, he wants you to know he’s dressing for the weather.

Still, he is Bob Dylan, and we are trained to dig deeper. (In that same Times interview, he is asked whether the coronavirus could be seen as a biblical reckoning—a difficult question to imagine posing to any other living musician.) We have learned to come to Dylan with these types of quandaries, and more often than not, we have left satisfied. But for all his allusions to history and literature, the writing drifts toward uncertainty. In a macabre narrative called “My Own Version of You,” Dylan sings about playing god as he scavenges through morgues and cemeteries to reanimate a few notable corpses and absorb their knowledge. Among the questions he poses: “Can you tell me what it means: To be or not to be?” “Is there a light at the end of the tunnel?” We never get the answers; all we hear is the depravity: slapstick horror rendered as existential comedy.

The vaudevillian spirit that ran through 2001’s Love and Theft and 2006’s Modern Times is mostly limited to this one song. But there are other head-turners. “The size of your cock will get you nowhere,” he grumbles to a sworn enemy, who might be death itself, in “Black Rider.” “I’m the last of the best, you can bury the rest,” he boasts in “False Prophet,” summoning the gnarled lunatic who narrated most of 2012’s Tempest, the voice that seemed to be choking while cursing you for trying to help. These twists lead to some memorable lines—and welcomed moments of levity—but his biting, absurdist humor is not the focus. There are no distractions; he speaks carefully, quietly, earnestly.

It results in a gorgeous and meticulous record. The lyrics are striking—dense enough to inspire a curriculum, clever enough to quote like proverbs. Played by his touring band, with understated appearances from Fiona Apple and Blake Mills, the music is a ghostly presence. Its sound is threadbare and hypnotic, backed by small choirs and acoustic instruments, a sharp turn from the raucous blues reenactments of his 21st-century records. As depicted in Daniel Mark Epstein’s book The Ballad of Bob Dylan: A Portrait, Dylan kick-started those sessions by playing his bandmates another artist’s “prototype” track to apply to whatever batch of songs he brought to the studio. There are obvious reference points for this music as well—Billy “The Kid” Emerson in “False Prophet,” Jimmy Reed in “Goodbye Jimmy Reed”—but the performances are less formal, more impressionistic. It is blues and folk music that seem to drift in and out of consciousness, an in-between-world described in its opening lines: “Today and tomorrow and yesterday, too/The flowers are dying like all things do.”

Since 1997’s Time Out of Mind, an atmospheric return-to-form after a long period of wandering, death has been Dylan’s chief concern, to the extent that some have read it as a personal obsession. Which, of course, has only aggravated him. Yes, his recent songs deal with mortality. “But I didn’t see any one critic say: ‘It deals with my mortality’—you know, his own,” Dylan observed. It seems that he has accepted this grievance as an artistic failure and has returned with songs whose subjects cannot be misinterpreted. The last two tracks on Tempest addressed the sinking of the Titanic and the murder of John Lennon—historical events that now exist through a greater cultural consciousness. He continues and improves upon this method throughout Rough and Rowdy Ways, using notes from history to reflect something universal about our own brief, ordinary legacies. “I hope that the gods go easy with me,” he sings in “I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You.” For a minute, you forget the status of the man singing; his prayer sounds as humble, as fragile as anyone’s.

Dylan previewed this music in March by releasing “Murder Most Foul,” the longest song in his catalog and now his very first No. 1 single. The 17-minute ballad closes the record by inverting the structure of its other death songs: He begins with the ending. In concrete terms, Dylan describes the assassination of John F. Kennedy: “They blew off his head while he was still in the car,” he sings. What follows is a story of life: the world, its culture and art, that sustained without him. Through its stunning final moments, with an arrangement that sounds like a small orchestra packing up their instruments, Dylan makes a couple dozen requests to the iconic ’60s DJ Wolfman Jack: “Mystery Train,” “Moonlight Sonata,” “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood.” It’s a radio show—one of Dylan’s favorite mediums, that disembodied voice speaking to us through other people’s words. But as the music plays, it also becomes a wake, a gathering of spirits, the perfect distraction for our host to slip out into the night, alone.

“I just heard the news about Little Richard and I’m so grieved,” Dylan wrote on his social media a month ago. “He was my shining star and guiding light back when I was only a little boy.” He sounded crestfallen; after all, Dylan has repeatedly cited Little Richard with the invention of his job, his sound, even his hairstyle. This vulnerability was almost jarring. We are used to meeting Dylan from a distance—in verse or in code, somewhere just beyond our reach. Now, he was asking us to imagine him as a kid in Minnesota, listening to the radio and imagining what his future could be. In its quiet way, Rough and Rowdy Ways is another invitation. “Forge my identity from the inside out,” he sings in “Mother of Muses,” “You know what I’m talking about.” Take him at his word and it’s an outreached hand, a chance to see the world through his eyes before it crumbles into ruin. The view is beautiful; even better, it is real and it is our own.


Bob Dylan – The Best of The Bootleg Series (2020)

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Bob DylanSince 1991, Bob Dylan and his team have combed the archives for new and interesting rarities from the vault to create The Bootleg Series. Once a tightly curated affair, the series has since expanded to take on a kitchen sink, “warts-and-all” approach. Fans have savored new archival Dylan releases every fall for several years and have been speculating what would arrive this year.
While it appears likely that a new volume won’t hit shelves until next year, the Dylan team have chosen to take a look back at the series with a new compilation and the digital debut of several deluxe edition Bootleg Series volumes.
…Dylan released a 28-track collection of highlights: The Best of The Bootleg Series. This idea was explored previously on…

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Dylan: The Best of The Bootleg Series, a CD given away with a 2018 issue of the magazine Uncut. However, there are songs on that disc that aren’t present here and vice-versa.  Available only through digital platforms including Spotify, Amazon and Qobuz, the set spans the Bootleg Series with selections from nearly every volume.

The collection is effectively a sampler for a larger digital campaign as several Bootleg Series volumes have landed on digital download and streaming platforms for the first time. Up to this point they were only represented by slim “highlights” albums. So whether you haven’t had a chance to hear them before or you just want your Dylan rarities “to-go,” you’ll now find The Cutting Edge, The Basement Tapes: Complete, Another Self PortraitTrouble No More, or Tell Tale Signs (including the material from the controversial third disc) presented in their “deluxe edition” configurations across digital download and streaming providers.

  1. Up to Me – Take 1
  2. Blind Willie McTell – Studio Outtake – 1983
  3. Baby, Let Me Follow You Down – Live at Royal Albert Hall, London, UK – May 26, 1966
  4. Maggie’s Farm – Live at Newport Folk Festival, Newport, RI – July 1965
  5. The Groom’s Still Waiting at the Altar – Live at the Warfield Theatre, San Francisco, CA – November 13, 1980 (listed as 1979)
  6. Dink’s Song
  7. Pretty Saro – Unreleased from “Self Portrait” Sessions
  8. Mama, You Been On My Mind – Studio Outtake – 1964
  9. Mississippi – Outtake from “Time Out of Mind” Sessions
  10. Visions of Johanna – Take 5, Rehearsal
  11. Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues – Take 3, Rehearsal
  12. Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You – Live at Montreal Forum, Montreal, Quebec – December 1975
  13. Born In Time – Outtake from ‘Oh Mercy’ sessions
  14. You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere – Take 1
  15. All You Have to Do Is Dream – Take 2
  16. Wanted Man – Take 1
  17. Tell Me That It Isn’t True – Take 2
  18. Wallflower – Alternate Version, 1971
  19. Most of the Time – Alternate Version from ‘Oh Mercy’ sessions
  20. A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall – Live at Montreal Forum, Montreal, Quebec – December 1975
  21. Series of Dreams – Outtake from ‘Oh Mercy’ sessions
  22. Slow Train – Live at Earls Court, London, UK – June 29, 1981
  23. I Pity the Poor Immigrant – Take 4
  24. Moonshiner – Studio Outtake – 1963
  25. Seven Days – Live at the Curtis Hixon Convention Center, Tampa, FL – April 1976
  26. Tangled Up in Blue – Take 3, Remake 3
  27. Guess I’m Doing Fine – Witmark Demo – 1964
  28. Every Grain of Sand – Demo – 1980

Tracks 1 and 26 released on More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14 (Deluxe Edition), Columbia/Legacy CD 19075858962, 2018
Tracks 2, 8, 24, 25, and 28 released on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1 – 3 [Rare & Unreleased] 1961-1991, Columbia CD  C3K 47382, 1991
Tracks 3 released on The Real Royal Albert Hall 1966 Concert!, Columbia/Legacy CD 88985374342, 2016
Tracks 4 and 6 released on No Direction Home: The Soundtrack (A Martin Scorsese Picture), Columbia/Legacy CD C2K 93937, 2005
Tracks 5 and 22 released on Trouble No More: The Bootleg Series Vol.13 / 1979-1981, Columbia CD 8898545465, 2017
Tracks 7 and 18 released on Another Self Portrait (1969-1971) – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 10, Columbia/Legacy CD 8888334882, 2013
Track 9, 13, 19, and 21 released on Tell Tale Signs (Rare And Unreleased 1989-2006) – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8, Columbia/Legacy ‎CD 88697357952, 2008
Tracks 10 and 11 released on The Cutting Edge 1965 – 1966: The Bootleg Series Vol.12, Columbia/Legacy CD 88875124412, 2015
Track 12 and 20 released on Live 1975 (The Rolling Thunder Revue) – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 5, Columbia/Legacy CD COL-5101402, 2002
Tracks 14 and 15 released on The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 11, Columbia/Legacy CD88875016122, 2014
Tracks 16, 17 and 23 released on Travelin’ Thru: The Bootleg Series Vol. 15 1967-1969, Columbia/Legacy CD 19075981921, 2019
Track 27 released on The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964 – The Bootleg Series, Vol. 9, Columbia/Legacy CD 88697761782, 2010

Bob Dylan – 50th Anniversary Collection 1970 (2020)

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Bob DylanA tiny number of Bob Dylan fans scored a valuable collectible on Sunday when a three-disc collection of songs cut in 1970, including the legendary George Harrison sessions, was quietly put on sale via the U.K. store Badlands.
…This collection was released in response to a European law stipulating that recordings enter the public domain 50 years after their creation if they aren’t officially released by the copyright holder. To avoid legal Bob Dylan bootlegs from flooding the market, his camp has released yearly copyright protection releases going back to 2012 when the complete 1962 recordings came out.
Many of them contain take after take of the same song and would be of interest to…

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…nobody but the most devoted Dylan scholars, but they’re become extremely valuable due to their scarcity. They often sell on the resale market for upwards of $1,000 each.

This new one likely has a broader appeal than previous ones since it features Dylan and George Harrison’s complete May 1st, 1970 session where they casually jam on Dylan oldies like “One Too Many Mornings” and “It Ain’t Me Babe” along with the Beatles’ “Yesterday” and numerous tunes from the then-in-progress New Morning. It has circulated as a bootleg for years, but the sound quality on this is presumably a significant upgrade from anything heard before.

It is rounded out by other recordings from the New Morning sessions where Dylan is joined by session pros like organist Al Kooper, bassist Charlie Daniels, drummer Russ Kunkel, guitarist David Bromberg, bassist Stu Woods and drummer Alvin Rogers. — rollingstone.com

Disc 1:

March 3, 1970
1. I Can’t Help but Wonder Where I’m Bound
2. Universal Soldier – Take 1
3. Spanish Is the Loving Tongue – Take 1
4. Went to See the Gypsy – Take 2
5. Went to See the Gypsy – Take 3
6. Woogie Boogie

March 4, 1970
7. Went to See the Gypsy – Take 4
8. Thirsty Boots – Take 1

March 5, 1970
9. Little Moses – Take 1
10. Alberta – Take 2
11. Come All You Fair and Tender Ladies – Take 1
12. Things About Comin’ My Way – Takes 2 & 3
13. Went to See the Gypsy – Take 6
14. Untitled 1970 Instrumental #1
15. Come a Little Bit Closer – Take 2
16. Alberta ¬– Take 5

May 1, 1970
17. Sign on the Window – Take 2
18. Sign on the Window – Takes 3, 4 & 5
19. If Not for You – Take 1
20. Time Passes Slowly – Rehearsal
21. If Not for You – Take 2
22. If Not for You – Take 3
23. Song to Woody – Take 1
24. Mama, You Been on My Mind – Take 1

25. Yesterday – Take 1

Disc 2:

1. Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues – Take 1
2. I Met Him on a Sunday (Ronde-Ronde) – Take 1
3. One Too Many Mornings – Take 1
4. Ghost Riders in the Sky – Take 1
5. Cupid – Take 1
6. All I Have to Do Is Dream – Take 1
7. Gates of Eden – Take 1
8. I Threw It All Away – Take 1
9. I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) – Take 1
10. Matchbox – Take 1
11. Your True Love – Take 1
12. Telephone Wire – Take 1
13. Fishing Blues – Take 1
14. Honey, Just Allow Me One More Chance – Take 1
15. Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 – Take 1
16. It Ain’t Me Babe
17. If Not for You
18. Sign on the Window – Take 1
19. Sign on the Window – Take 2
20. Sign on the Window – Take 3

June 1, 1970
21. Alligator Man
22. Alligator Man [rock version]
23. Alligator Man [country version]
24. Day of the Locusts – Take 2
25. Sarah Jane 1
26. Sign on the Window
27. Sarah Jane 2

Disc 3:

June 2, 1970
1. If Not for You – Take 1
2. If Not for You – Take 2

June 3, 1970
3. Jamaica Farewell
4. Can’t Help Falling in Love
5. Long Black Veil
6. One More Weekend

June 4, 1970
7. Bring Me Little Water, Sylvie – Take 1
8. Three Angels
9. Tomorrow Is a Long Time – Take 1
10. Tomorrow Is a Long Time – Take 2
11. New Morning
12. Untitled 1970 Instrumental #2

June 5, 1970
13. Went to See the Gypsy
14. Sign on the Window – Stereo Mix
15. Winterlude
16. I Forgot to Remember to Forget 1
17. I Forgot to Remember to Forget 2
18. Lily of the West – Take 2
19. Father of Night – rehearsal
20. Lily of the West

August 12, 1970
21. If Not for You – Take 1
22. If Not for You – Take 2

Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, harmonica
Buzzy Feiten – guitar
Other musicians unknown

VA – Dylan… Revisited: 14 of His Greatest Songs Reinterpreted for Uncut (2021)

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Dylan Revisited“…To celebrate Bob Dylan’s 80th birthday, 14 esteemed artists – including The Flaming Lips, Low, Richard Thompson, Courtney Marie Andrews, Cowboy Junkies and The Weather Station – have recorded brand new versions of classic Dylan songs exclusively for us. What’s more, the CD also features a previously unreleased Dylan track!
To reiterate – because we’re still amazed about this ourselves – all these covers were recorded specifically for Uncut’s free CD and are currently unavailable anywhere else.
…the period from January 7, when Thurston Moore sent us the first completed track, to February 26, when Frazey Ford emailed across the final track, has been one of the most exciting during my years at Uncut. Every couple of days, yet…

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…another amazing song arrived in our inboxes. I humbly think it is one of our best ever CDs – and hymns and hosannas to Tom for pulling it all together so brilliantly.”  — uncut.co.uk

1. Bob Dylan – Too Late (Acoustic Version) (04:00)
2. Richard Thompson – This Wheel’s on Fire (03:04)
3. Courtney Marie Andrews – To Ramona (03:35)
4. The Flaming Lips – Lay Lady Lay (03:20)
5. The Weather Station – Precious Angel (03:30)
6. Cowboy Junkies – I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You (06:31)
7. Thurston Moore – Buckets of Rain (04:06)
8. Fatoumata Diawara – Blowin’ in the Wind (03:21)
9. Brigid Mae Power – One More Cup of Coffee (04:13)
10. Low – Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door (03:56)
11. Joan Shelley & Nathan Salsburg – Dark Eyes (03:42)
12. Patterson Hood & Jay Gonzalez – Blind Willie McTell (05:05)
13. Frazey Ford – The Times They Are A-Changin’ (04:16)
14. Jason Lytle – Most of the Time (04:16)
15. Weyes Blood – Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands (11:13)

Bob Dylan – Springtime in New York: The Bootleg Series vol. 16, 1980-1985 [Deluxe Edition] (2021)

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Bob DylanFrom a creative era that even Bob Dylan himself has suggested was fraught with self-doubt and a sense that all mastery of his craft was lost, we receive this remarkable treasure trove that demonstrates how hungry and impassioned he really was. It’s a journey that begins with lovely, fun covers via studio band warm-ups, and reimagined versions of his own songs, perhaps just to draw heat from the incandescent spark of his past, followed by side-trips that yielded some of the greatest songs he ever wrote, some of which never even made it on to the most uneven albums of his career. Mixed-up confusion, for sure.
After converting to Christianity in the late 1970s, Dylan’s music and infamous live shows of the time were thought to be a little judgy…

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…and hellfire-y, as the free-thinking boundary buster began to hector sinners and advocate for religious parameters. While it was generally assumed he’d created a trilogy of gospel records with Slow Train Coming (1979), Saved (1980), and Shot of Love (1981), he was purportedly perturbed that critics and fans connected Shot of Love to its predecessors, as he didn’t see things that way; Jesus Christ was certainly invoked but, in general, the album’s tone is less evangelical than the previous pair. In any case, he received the worst reviews of his life and it felt like the whole world was on his case so, fighter that he is, he went into his corner to figure out how he could dodge all of these jabs.

Springtime in New York picks up this story in the fall of 1980, chronicling Dylan’s remarkable creative process via 57 unreleased recordings of songs some of us know from other takes on previously sanctioned releases or bootlegged iterations, but most of which are fresh because they’ve been trapped in what was “cutting edge” but is now obsolete 1980s digital recording technology. The set draws from sessions for the aforementioned and maligned Shot of Love, the 1983 “comeback,” Infidels, and the 1985 “uh oh,” Empire Burlesque, and it makes each record more fascinating than some of us have given them credit for. Far from a forlorn or lost artist, we hear Dylan in full vocal command, his imagination spinning the same song around in different arrangements, and putting his mind to future classics whose only fault lies within their creator’s impulsive neglect (his confidence to make assertive decisions about album inclusions was shaky, even if his voice and mind were seemingly sure).

For fans of The Basement Tapes and also the “Rolling Thunder Revue” era of airtight looseness, the first two of these five discs are a fulfilling and bemusing romp — Dylan and his star-studded bands (in the course of this collection, we encounter contributions by Beatles, Stones, Heartbreakers, Sly & Robbie, Dire Straits, the E Street Band, and many more luminaries) playing with a kind of aimless joy during a good hang. After ramshackle-y runs on his own “Señor (Tales of Yankee Power)” and “To Ramona,” there are truly soulful and infectious takes of “Jesus Met the Woman at the Well” and “Need a Woman,” with background singers, Carolyn Dennis, Madelyn Quebec, and Clydie King, infusing such songs with character and inspiring Dylan to roar.

On covers like “Mystery Train” (featuring both Ringo Starr and Jim Keltner) and “Sweet Caroline,” Dylan replaces their respective galloping pep with a measured melancholy; indeed, this version of “Sweet Caroline” could be played at Caroline’s funeral. These takes on “Fever” and Hank Williams’ “Cold Cold Heart” draw upon the previously untapped heat and longing of their sentiments, Dylan digging deep, sounding like he’s set to explode. It’s a cool, deconstructive phase — Dylan reimagining classics and recent hits by others, like “This Night Won’t Last Forever,” “We Just Disagree,” and the haunting “Let’s Keep it Between Us,” in compelling and memorable ways.

Of course, such things will seem like larks for those clamouring for the great “lost” songs from this era, written by Dylan himself. In the excellent, invaluable liner notes, writer Damien Love traces the origins of jettisoned pieces like the raucous “Price of Love,” the Desire-y “Don’t Ever Take Yourself Away,” the down blues “Fur Slippers” (eventually covered by B.B. King in 1999), the rollicking and astounding “Borrowed Time,” the reggae-infused, low-key menace (Dylan’s mid-song chuckle notwithstanding) of “Is It Worth It?” and soft-metal of “Yes Sir, No Sir,” and why they might’ve been left behind.

The original master take of “Jokerman” from Infidels, among the great technological rescue missions here and an inarguably all-time great Dylan song, soars thanks to the rhythm section of Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, and swirling guitars by the Rolling Stones’ Mick Taylor and — one of Dylan’s key collaborators in this era — Dire Straits’ Mark Knopfler. This momentous configuration spurred Dylan to reach for the sky and he touches it.

Meanwhile, “Blind Willie McTell” continues to live this mysterious life as a forgotten child that was inexplicably banished from Infidels. After a stark, acoustic piano and guitar version appeared on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased 1961-1991), fans were left awed, angered, and baffled. Ever since 1969’s Great White Wonder, rock’s first major bootleg and a remarkable alternate history of Dylan’s recorded output began circulating, some of his more obsessive fans engage in all manner of conspiracies about just what kinds of other songs and information the Dylan camp was keeping from the world. 2021 brings us this alternate, full-band version of the monumental “Blind Willie McTell” on this collection, which is gorgeous, plus yet another version that Third Man Records has pressed as a single. It’s such a staggering, poetic song about America and racism and history, Dylan himself was shook by it, never feeling like he recorded it well enough to do it justice; with these unearthed versions, at least we’re getting closer to receiving every attempt he made.

Indeed, the Infidels sessions include some of the most intriguing “what if?” scenarios for both Dylan and his fans, with songs that didn’t make it out alive either being re-worked for its follow-up, Empire Burlesque (“Someone’s Got a Hold of My Heart,” “Clean Cut Kid”), or transforming from one auspicious thing (“Too Late”) to another that was still tossed aside (“Foot of Pride,” perhaps best-known for Lou Reed’s live version at the 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration for Dylan in 1992).

Pondering what kinds of sounds Dylan could’ve chased, Love reflects upon the Late Night with David Letterman version of “License to Kill” included here, which featured Dylan backed by members of the Plugz, an obscure L.A. punk band: “Among all the attempts people have made at creating their own ‘ideal’ Infidels, the most ambitious might be by Canadian musician Daniel Romano, who in 2020 released a cover version of the entire album done Plugz-style.”

For its part, this set also offers us an alternate tone and sound to Dylan’s 1980s than we’ve come to accept, as his most awkward, out-of-step era between decades of genius. In an age where acolytes like Bruce Springsteen were lauded for dispatching artful, multi-layered socio-political songs, Dylan released tunes like “Neighbourhood Bully” and “Union Showdown” and was stung by not-altogether-inaccurate readings that suggested they were vaguely pro-Israel and pro-America, respectively, furthering chatter that because he was older, he was both out-of-touch and cravenly seeking relevance. To clarify, if not correct the record, versions of Empire Burlesque songs like “I’ll Remember You,” “Tight Connection to My Heart (Has Anybody Seen My Love),” and “Emotionally Yours,” have been stripped of their dated production elements and are now, suddenly timeless.

That’s the greatest gift of Springtime in New York: it turns one of Bob Dylan’s most confusing sonic eras on its head, liberating all of this material from its time and place. Next to his speed freak mid-1960s snarl, Dylan’s 1980s “We Are the World” nasal voice is the one that comedians and impressionists have latched onto for the most mockery. Their source material isn’t quite at its most pronounced by 1985 but even more than that, this collection actually, and surprisingly, shows off Dylan, the singer and player, in one of his most commanding phases. The desperation of being dismissed and ridiculed in his third decade of public life propelled him to draw out the courage of his convictions and sink his teeth into, say, “New Danville Girl” and “Dark Eyes,” which close this set out and sound like a gunslinger rising to a disrespectful dare. With Springtime in New York, Dylan and his archive custodians take on his most written-off period and re-write it, capturing its lost glory. — exclaim

CD 1

  1. Señor (Tales of Yankee Power) – Rehearsal
  2. To Ramona – Rehearsal
  3. Jesus Met the Woman at the Well – Rehearsal
  4. Mary of the Wild Moor – Rehearsal
  5. Need a Woman – Rehearsal
  6. A Couple More Years – Rehearsal
  7. Mystery Train – Shot of Love outtake
  8. This Night Won’t Last Forever – Rehearsal
  9. We Just Disagree – Rehearsal
  10. Let’s Keep It Between Us – Rehearsal
  11. Sweet Caroline – Rehearsal
  12. Fever – Rehearsal
  13. Abraham, Martin and John – Rehearsal

CD 2

  1. Angelina – Shot of Love outtake
  2. Price of Love – Shot of Love outtake
  3. I Wish It Would Rain – Shot of Love outtake
  4. Let It Be Me – International 7″ Single B-side
  5. Cold, Cold Heart – Shot of Love outtake
  6. Don’t Ever Take Yourself Away – Shot of Love outtake
  7. Fur Slippers – Shot of Love outtake
  8. Borrowed Time – Shot of Love outtake
  9. Is It Worth It? – Shot of Love outtake
  10. Lenny Bruce – Shot of Love alternate mix
  11. Yes Sir, No Sir – Shot of Love outtake

CD 3

  1. Jokerman – Infidels alternate take
  2. Blind Willie McTell – Infidels outtake
  3. Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight [version 1] – Infidels alternate take
  4. Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight [version 2] – Infidels alternate take
  5. Neighborhood Bully – Infidels alternate take
  6. Someone’s Got a Hold of My Heart – Infidels outtake
  7. This Was My Love – Infidels outtake
  8. Too Late [acoustic version] – Infidels outtake
  9. Too Late [band version] – Infidels outtake
  10. Foot of Pride – Infidels outtake

CD 4

  1. Clean Cut Kid – Infidels outtake
  2. Sweetheart Like You – Infidels alternate take
  3. Baby What You Want Me to Do – Infidels outtake
  4. Tell Me – Infidels outtake
  5. Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground – Infidels outtake
  6. Julius and Ethel – Infidels outtake
  7. Green, Green Grass of Home – Infidels outtake
  8. Union Sundown – Infidels alternate take
  9. Lord Protect My Child – Infidels outtake
  10. I and I – Infidels alternate take
  11. Death is Not the End [full version] – Infidels outtake

CD 5

  1. Enough is Enough [live] – Slane Castle, Ireland
  2. License to Kill [live] – Late Night with David Letterman, March 22, 1984
  3. I’ll Remember You – Empire Burlesque alternate take
  4. Tight Connection to My Heart (Has Anybody Seen My Love) – Empire Burlesque alternate mix
  5. Seeing the Real You at Last – Empire Burlesque alternate take
  6. Emotionally Yours – Empire Burlesque alternate take
  7. Clean Cut Kid – Empire Burlesque alternate take
  8. Straight A’s in Love – Empire Burlesque outtake
  9. When the Night Comes Falling from the Sky [slow version]- Empire Burlesque alternate take
  10. When the Night Comes Falling from the Sky [fast version] – Empire Burlesque alternate take
  11. New Danville Girl – Empire Burlesque outtake
  12. Dark Eyes – Empire Burlesque alternate take

All tracks previously unreleased except for:
CD 2, Track 6 Originally released on CBS European single CBS-A-1406, 1981
CD 2, Track 7 Originally Released on Hawaii Five-O: Original Songs from the Television Series, CBS Records CD CBSR034, 2011
CD 4, Track 11 Edited version originally appeared on Down in the Groove, Columbia CD CK 40957, 1987

Bob Dylan – 14 Hidden Gems from The Bootleg Series 1963-1997 (2023)

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dylan This Month’s Covermount CD is a special event, an all-Bob Dylan spectacular featuring 14 revelatory tracks selected from the 17 Bootleg Series albums so far. Stunning versions of I Pity The Poor Immigrant, Moonshiner, Baby, Let Me Follow You Down, You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go…
This month, Mojo is Bob Dylan crazy, revisiting Time Out Of Mind, the album that saved Dylan’s career, in the light of his upcoming Bootleg 17 archive release and with help from its cast of thousands. Also in the issue: saluting Fleetwood Mac’s Christine McVie; remembering John Lee Hooker; encountering Weyes Blood; mourning Sparklehorse. Plus: Terry Hall, John Cale, Rick Rubin, Paul Simonon, Mike Oldfield…

133 MB  320 ** FLAC

…Candi Staton, Sunny War, Miles Davis, Lawrence from Felt, when Chinnichap Ruled OK, and more.

01. Dirt Road Blues (4:18)
02. You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go (5:16)
03. Shot Of Love (Outtake) (4:24)
04. It Ain’t Me, Babe (Live) (5:25)
05. 900 Miles From Home (2:13)
06. Thirsty Boots (4:06)
07. Moonshiner (5:05)
08. Sitting On A Barbed Wire Fence (3:52)
09. I Pity The Poor Immigrant (Take 4) (2:33)
10. Most Of The Time (Alternate Version) (3:34)
11. Seven Days (Live) (3:59)
12. Emotionally Yours (Alternate Take) (3:36)
13. Baby, Let Me Follow You Down (Live) (3:28)
14. Mississippi (5:13)

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