Global, many thanks. I am particularly enjoying the gardening list.
1000000 songs from SPOTIFY about...
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Lateralthinking1
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostGood to see Bob making an appearance on spotty these days. For example:
http://open.spotify.com/album/4rh6zo2nqj6ikzUff5i4dQ
.....I will listen to all of "Tell Tale Signs". Have just listened to the live performance of "Ring Them Bells". Interesting. One of my Top 5 Dylan songs and the most controversial choice for that position seeing that it is late eighties. It couldn't be justified rationally but everything about it just strikes the right chord. The rare sort of song which prompts the feeling that all versions must be unearthed, if necessary by spending every waking second of the next decade at far flung record fairs "just in case".
Last edited by Guest; 16-03-12, 07:15.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostAh, "Red River Shore" was intended for "Time Out of Mind" then John. Thanks for it. I hadn't heard it before and it makes sense. It has that sound. A companion piece I think for "Highlands" on what for me is in any case his best cd since the 1980s. It would have been even better had it been included on that release.
.....I will listen to all of "Tell Tale Signs". Have just listened to the live performance of "Ring Them Bells". Interesting. One of my Top 5 Dylan songs and the most controversial choice for that position seeing that it is late eighties. It couldn't be justified rationally but everything about it just strikes the right chord. The rare sort of song which prompts the feeling that all versions must be unearthed, if necessary by spending every waking second of the next decade at far flung record fairs "just in case".
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Much as I love 'Blood on the Tracks', I was astounded by the alternative versions that appeared on the Bootleg series when I first heard them. None more for me than 'Tangled up in Blue'. So when Cerys played it this morning I rushed off to the alternate version - I love the longing sparseness of this version. I'm not saying it's better, but it almost feels like Bob's singing a different song - and what a song it is.
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Paul Sherratt
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Paul Sherratt
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Originally posted by Paul Sherratt View PostOuch !
I wonder what the top three briar songs/tunes might be ?
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostMuch as I love 'Blood on the Tracks', I was astounded by the alternative versions that appeared on the Bootleg series when I first heard them. None more for me than 'Tangled up in Blue'. So when Cerys played it this morning I rushed off to the alternate version - I love the longing sparseness of this version. I'm not saying it's better, but it almost feels like Bob's singing a different song - and what a song it is.
http://open.spotify.com/track/7uGKtSWiRwO0iyo4SdQlzK
The notes are extensive. Basically, this track and others were recorded in Sep 1974 with a simple spare backing of bass, organ and steel guitar. Ten songs were pressed up on a promo disc which was sent out in very limited quantities to radio stations ahead of Blood on The Tracks. When Dylan played them over the Christmas holiday in Minnesota, he decided he was dissatisfied and re-recorded them. In the song, he experiments with changing pronouns to give ever-shifting perspectives on the song's narrative. He was inspired to do so by a painting and philosophy teacher Norman Raeben with whom he studied. Some quotes:
"The songs have the break-up of time, where there is no time, trying to make the focus as strong as a magnifying glass under the sun. To do that consciously is a trick.....I actually had a teacher for it."
"I was just trying to make it like a painting where you can see the different parts but then you can also see the whole of it. With that particular song, that's what I was trying to do.....with the concept of time, and the way the characters change from the first person to the third person, and you're never quite sure if the third person is talking or the first person is talking. But as you look at the whole thing it doesn't matter."
Rain features in the lyrics on Blood on the Tracks. I always felt that he got that exactly right musically with the guitar. It is a fundamental part of its magic. Make that alchemy. In this earlier version, it is much more dusty and of the desert as in, say, "If Not For You". So it is really interesting in that way. I approached it with apprehension but what a lovely surprise. I feel fortunate to have lived at the same time as someone who for me is better than Shakespeare. His work is so rich. At every point of my life I have heard something in it that is new. There will always be that ring of truth to what he does. It is impossible ever to be bored by it.Last edited by Guest; 19-03-12, 12:33.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostWell, that is really wonderful John. I just love it and could listen to it all day. And as I've reminded myself this morning, I've got it on cd - the Bootleg Sessions volume 1-3 - although I've always concentrated on the main albums.
The notes are extensive. Basically, this track and others were recorded in Sep 1974 with a simple spare backing of bass, organ and steel guitar. Ten songs were pressed up on a promo disc which was sent out in very limited quantities to radio stations ahead of Blood on The Tracks. When Dylan played them over the Christmas holiday in Minnesota, he decided he was dissatisfied and re-recorded them. In the song, he experiments with changing pronouns to give ever-shifting perspectives on the song's narrative. He was inspired to do so by a painting and philosophy teacher Norman Raeben with whom he studied. Some quotes:
"The songs have the break-up of time, where there is no time, trying to make the focus as strong as a magnifying glass under the sun. To do that consciously is a trick.....I actually had a teacher for it."
"I was just trying to make it like a painting where you can see the different parts but then you can also see the whole of it. With that particular song, that's what I was trying to do.....with the concept of time, and the way the characters change from the first person to the third person, and you're never quite sure if the third person is talking or the first person is talking. But as you look at the whole thing it doesn't matter."
Rain features in the lyrics on Blood on the Tracks. I always felt that he got that exactly right musically with the guitar. It is a fundamental part of its magic. Make that alchemy. In this earlier version, it is much more dusty and of the desert as in, say, "If Not For You". So it is really interesting in that way. I approached it with apprehension but what a lovely surprise. I feel fortunate to have lived at the same time as someone who for me is better than Shakespeare. His work is so rich. At every point of my life I have heard something in it that is new. There will always be that ring of truth to what he does. It is impossible ever to be bored by it.
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handsomefortune
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Originally posted by Globaltruth View PostHmm - you chaps need to watch out -
However Lat, it's funny you should say it, but I had the Bootleg on tape when I first heard it and played TUIB and Idiot Wind for a few days on end in the car. I try to be more careful these days but sometimes when Venus and Jupiter are dancing with each other in the night sky, I revert to some of them old half-forgotten ways.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Globaltruth View PostSome people try and identify too closely with that feller....over-obsessed
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI don't think so. Just because I have decided that I must have been conceived on the day his first album was released. That says nothing. It's funny because up until tonight, I was absolutely sure that it happened on my mother's birthday.
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/ne...album-20120319
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