Showing posts with label Bob Dylan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Dylan. Show all posts

Friday, December 25, 2020

W.O.C.K on Vinyl: Bob Dylan - Christmas In The Heart (2009)

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Before things get too serious here at Rock On Vinyl, I thought it might be fun to post a song / album at the end of each month, that could be categorized as being either Weird, Obscure, Crazy or just plain Korny..

Using his own excellent band and a group of singers whose mellifluous responses to his own rheumy growl hark back to the sounds of the Andrews Sisters, Dylan finds an appropriate setting for each of these Christmas chestnuts, from the reverent to the jovial. The blend of idioms is familiar from Love and Theft and Modern Times, in which he brought together elements of country, bluegrass and a sort of genteel salon music to provide a background to his renewed fondness for old-fashioned crooning.

The result is polished without being glib, and a sympathetic listener may find it addictive. The musicians Dylan brought to Britain in 2009, augmented by David Hildalgo of Los Lobos on accordion, mandolin, violin and guitar, and the great Chicago session guitarist Phil Upchurch, whose earliest successes predate Dylan's own, distinguish themselves on even the most unpromising material. 

According to Hildalgo, quoted in the current issue of Uncut magazine, the sessions were both impromptu and highly concentrated: Dylan and the musicians listened to various recordings of each of the selections, and then decided on the best approach. It seems safe to say, however, that no one has ever tackled O Come All Ye Faithful quite like this.

Is he sincere? Does he mean it? You can only chuckle at his ability to keep us guessing when you turn past the conventional cover painting of a horse-drawn carriage speeding through snowdrifts to find a photograph of Bettie Page (see above), the famous cheesecake model, dressed up in a Santa outfit complete with suspenders and bulging bra. [review by Richard Williams, The Guardian]

For me, I think Dylan enjoyed making this album, and at times sounds more like Tom Waits  than the young troubadour we grew up with, who sang anti-establishment songs and dared to trade his acoustic guitar in for an electric one.  

So, with out any further Christmas jingles and O Come All Ye Faithfuls, I'd like to wish you all a joy filled Christmas and a New Year that provides quantious amounts of new and rare music.

Thanks to Deutros for the Rip (Taken from CD / MP3)

Tracklist
01 Here Comes Santa Claus
02 Do You Hear What I Hear?
03 Winter Wonderland
04 Hark The Herald Angels Sing
05 I'll Be Home For Christmas
06 Little Drummer Boy
07 The Christmas Blues
08 O' Come All Ye Faithful (Adeste Fideles)
09 Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
10 Must Be Santa
11 Silver Bells
12 The First Noel
13 Christmas Island
14 The Christmas Song
15 O' Little Town Of Bethlehem

New Link 17/11/2024

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Bob Dylan With The Grateful Dead - Unauthorised Live Vol.2 (1993) Bootleg

(U.S  1961 - Present)
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The Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead 1987 Tour was a concert tour by Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead taking place in the summer of 1987 and consisting of six concerts. Each concert began with one or two lengthy sets by the Grateful Dead of their own material (sometime broken into a first and second set, per the Dead's usual practice), followed by a roughly 90 minute set of the Dead acting as Dylan's backup band.

This bootleg is a recording of one of these six concerts, the venue being the Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Oregon and took place on July 19, 1987.  The day before the concert there was a record rainfall. Concert day was a record high heat day. . . Humid and Hot.  It was amazing that the Dead could even play in such conditions. The atmosphere was festive and sweaty, the portable showers set up near the back of the stadium got a fair amount of use.  A skywriter wrote 'IMPEACH REAGAN' during The Grateful Dead's concert bracket, which got the crowd going.

This concert has been released as a bootleg under many titles: 'Bridget's Album' (Pharting Pharoao Records), 'In The Heart Of Oregon'. (Flamingo Records), 'Mad Mystic Hammering' (B & W Records) and 'Together We’re Strong'  (Archive Series); and also officially as 'Dylan & The Dead' in 1989.

The sound on this 70+ minute CD is pretty good, maybe a 8/10 (although Dylan's vocals on the first 3-4 tracks are a little faint), and if it was any better it would be as good as the official release 'Dylan & The Dead'. The audience applause in between songs has been expertly edited to allow the full show to be presented. It is a shame that Dylan doesn't like to banter with the audience but I guess he's too focused on remembering the lyrics to his songs. This CD, along with companion Vol. 1 (does anyone have this?), was manufactured in Australia.

In the early 1990's there was a loophole in  the copyright law there that allowed such pieces to be distributed, as long as the pieces were clearly identified as not being authorised by the Label who owned the controlling rights. Joker went overboard with the statement, and created this incredibly ugly, nameless title. The spelling of unauthorised is the Aussie spelling. The titles were sold at discount prices at grocery stores and the like. Dylan shows little to no emotion in his singing of these songs, but at least the sound quality is there.
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Concert Review (by Augy)
I remember and from my recordings I have in storage, this was the most interesting of the three west coast Dylan/Dead performances, although Oakland was probably best overall. I was particularly enthused about the rare numbers they played at each show, but this one especially!
Namely, "Heart of Mine" I just love that tune ! It has just a beautiful, although repetitive chord progression.
Autzen Stadium Eugene 1987
Also, "Watchin' the River Flow" which, although only a blues, it has a is a maybe not completely unique, but a very elegant or novel, for lack of more appropriate adjectives, (I probably sound like I'm writing a scientific journal paper with words like that), approach to the turnaround; which was perfect for Garcia, in the same way Anaheim's "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" was, since I always referred to Jerry as the "king of the turnaroud" ! I say that because he could throw in a turn around virtually anyway, I mean in places that were anything but blues or folk; so given "Rainy Day Women"'s obvious repetitive turnaround who more appropriate to play it but Garcia. So the same goes for "Watchin' the River Flow".

Dylan & Garcia
There are other things I like about that tine as well in the lyric, etc. but of course as most of you probably know if one doesn't already know the words from the studio release, it is difficult at a live Dylan performance to understand the lyrics often because Dylan deliberately accents or inflects his words differently on different beats and/or holds a syllable for a a different length of time as a way of improvising from one performance to another.

Dylan & The Grateful Dead, 1987
Moreover, "The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest" is another rare tune that I like, although kind of creepy but so are some Grateful Dead tunes, to which perhaps some may take exception to, in the same way I take exception to the person who though this Dead/Dylan performance was "uninteresting". Furthermore, they did a great version of "Tangled up in Blue" in Garcia's usual rousing approach to that tune, but not quite the same style as Garcia Band show ! The rest of it was more or less the same as the other two west coast shows.


This post consists of MP3's (320kps) ripped from my JOKER CD bootleg and includes full album artwork.  The track listing for this concert indicates that they played 2 songs for their encore  "Touch of Grey" and "All Along The Watchtower".
For some reason "Touch Of Grey" is missing from this bootleg which is strange, as there would have been room on the CD for its inclusion.
Nevertheless, the other 14 tracks are all here for your enjoyment.
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Tracks
01 Maggie's Farm 
02 Dead Man Dead Man 
03 Watching the River Flow 
04 Simple Twist Of Fate 
05 Ballad Of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest
06 Stuck Inside Of Mobile 
07 Heart Of Mine 
08 It's All Over Now Baby Blue 
09 Rainy Day Women # 12 & 35 
10 Queen Jane Approximately 
11 Ballad Of A Thin Man 
12 Highway 61 Revisited 
13 Tangled Up In Blue 
14 All Along The Watchtower 

Personnel:
Bob Dylan — vocals, guitar
Jerry Garcia — lead guitar, backing vocals
Bob Weir — guitar, backing vocals
Brent Mydland — keyboards, backing vocals
Phil Lesh — bass
Mickey Hart — drums
Bill Kreutzmann —drums

Bob Dylan & The Grateful Dead Live Link (141Mb)
New Link 03/09/2025

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Bob Dylan - Live Unlicensed (1995) Bootleg

(U.S 1961 - Present)
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Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester 1966
Bob Dylan (born Robert Allen Zimmerman May 24, 1941) is an American musician, singer-songwriter, music producer, artist, and writer. He has been an influential figure in popular music and culture for more than five decades. Much of his most celebrated work dates from the 1960s when he was an informal chronicler and a seemingly reluctant figurehead of social unrest. A number of Dylan's early songs, such as "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are a-Changin'", became anthems for the US civil rights and anti-war movements. Leaving his initial base in the culture of folk music behind, Dylan's six-minute single "Like a Rolling Stone" radically altered the parameters of popular music in 1965. His recordings employing electric instruments attracted denunciation and criticism from others in the folk movement, and this Bootleg recording comes from this era in his career.
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Dylan playing at Free Trade Hall, Manchester
This bootleg has since been officially released as 'Live 1966'. Only for the completist. This is a guasi-legit release, as a loophole in the Australian copyright law allowed such releases as long as they were printed in plain view that they were not licensed by the controlling Label. This title went a little overboard.
Long thought to have come from the Royal Albert Hall (RAH) show, it has now seen official release as Live 1966. Though the recording is now known to have come from the Free Trade Hall in Manchester, even the official release is subtitled the RAH concert in a nod to the most famous mis-named bootleg of all time. This Label was the premier boot manufacturer in the mid to late 1980's, and simultaneously released this title on vinyl as well. The incredible cover artwork on RAH is from one of the most sought after posters among Dylan collectors... the 1960's Martin Sharp poster. The recording is as crisp and clear (Excellent mono) as any that had been released to date. As this has become a retro-active pirate, it should be left for the completeist [source: Bobsboots.com]

The Swingin' Pig Vinyl Release
The Swingin' Pig released this album in 1989 on vinyl and on CD.  Although it has been released to death, you can't fault this incredible package.  The front cover is the rare Martin Sharp sixties poster.  The back cover lists lots of historical information.  Genuine piggy gold foil sticker on front.  Nice full printed labels (as was standard with this company in the late 80's) best feature # one: incredible looking white marble vinyl.  Best feature # two: great sound mastered from all new plates.  Of course, the source is the Manchester show; but in a testament to the longevity of the myth created by that handful of bootleg pioneers 30 years earlier, even the official Sony release of 1998 would be sub-titled - The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert.
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Note: During the end of the May 17, 1966 concert at the Manchester Free Trade Hall, Dylan was called "Judas!" by audience member Keith Butler, between the songs "Ballad of a Thin Man" and "Like a Rolling Stone". Dylan answered back, and told the man that "I don't believe you . . . you're a liar!", before he shouted to the members of the band to "Play it fuckin' loud!", where they then finished off the set with "Like a Rolling Stone"
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In more detail, the story is as follows:
The incident occurred during Bob Dylan and The Hawks (later The Band) notorious UK tour in May 1966. It was on these dates that Bob first appeared in Britain with an electric band. (His tour the previous spring, immortalised in the film Don't Look Back, was still solo Dylan, in protest mode, with just an acoustic guitar.)

The 1966 bootleg was not only of first-rate sound quality; it was also the most dramatic, confrontational concert I'd ever heard - and I was a regular at Clash gigs at the time. It remains, for me, the most exciting live album of all. Dylan, on that tour, split his audiences straight down the middle. Many were thrilled by his new psychedelic songs and the massive onslaught of The Hawks roaring through the biggest PA system that had, at that point, been assembled in the UK. It had flown in with the band from Los Angeles.

But many others in those staid, municipal concert halls were outraged and betrayed by their darling acoustic minstrel plugging into the mains. (It was, though no one realised it at the time, the birth of rock music as opposed to pop music). No matter that Dylan had released five electric singles - notably, "Like a Rolling Stone" - and one electric album in the previous 12 months: British audiences were still getting up to speed on his earlier records and they wanted back the Woody Guthrie protégé they'd seen in 1965.
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This tension between artist and audience snapped in an almighty confrontation on the bootleg. Slow hand-clapping and jeering throughout Dylan's electric half of the show - which was later properly identified as his concert at Manchester's Free Trade Hall on 17 May 1966 and finally given official release by Columbia Records in 1998 - climaxes with one betrayed folkie letting fly with a long yell of "Judas!" It became the most famous heckle in rock'n'roll history.

Dylan is rattled, and for an awkward second the audience is stunned - until a yelp of solidarity with the heckler goes up. It is still a genuinely shocking moment. (Concert-goers in those days were routinely reverential. They still stood for the national anthem at the end). Dylan eventually composes himself and leers: "I don't believe you. You're a liar!" And then, off mic: "You fucking liar!" (some claim he said: "Play fucking loud!") before he and the band kick into the most majestic, terrifying version of "Like a Rolling Stone", their final number - a performance of Gothic immensity surely drawn from Dylan by his anger at that single shout.
The heckler was identified some 33 years later as 'Keith Butler' when he spoke with Chris Nelson in an indepth interview. He wasn't proud of what he had said, as he states "The 'Judas!' shout, that's something that I hadn't talked about barely at all....It was embarrassing. It wasn't something you felt particularly proud of. That had been buried away."
To read the full interview, see here. Note too, that I have included a podcast documentary of the concert produced by BBC Radio, that discusses this famous concert at length.

The post is an MP3 rip (320kps) taken from from CD bootleg and includes full album artwork, along with the alternative (and famous) artwork for the RAH release (see below). The quality of the recording is quite astonishing considering it was done in 1966.
Note that the original CD is a single music file, however, I have broken the recording into 8 separate audio files (using Audiodacity), according to the track listing. Also note that I have removed about 30 secs of inaudible banter by Dylan at the start of "One Too Many Mornings" to improve your listening experience.
Standout tracks for me on this album are "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" and "Like A Rolling Stone".
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Track Listing
01 - Tell Me Momma

02 - I Don't Believe You
03 - Baby Let Me Follow You Down
04 - Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
05 - Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat
06 - One Too Many Mornings
07 - Ballad Of A Thin Man
08 - Like A Rolling Stone

09 - Podcast Documentary of the Concert

Dylan is backed by The Hawks (aka The Band)
Rick Danko – bass guitar, vocal

Garth Hudson – organ
Mickey Jones – drums
Richard Manuel – piano
Robbie Robertson – electric guitar

Bob Dylan Link (177Mb)  New Link 05/08/2016
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