Bob Dylan - Bob Dylan
Facts
| Artist(s) | Bob Dylan |
| Studio | Sony |
| Release Date | June 21, 2005 |
| UPC Code | 827969423929 |
| Buy this item | $10.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 14 22:49 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- You're No Good - Bob Dylan, Fuller, James
- Talkin' New York - Bob Dylan, Dylan, Bob
- In My Time of Dyin' - Bob Dylan, Traditional
- Man of Constant Sorrow - Bob Dylan, Traditional
- Fixin' to Die - Bob Dylan, White, Booker T. Wa
- Pretty Peggy-O - Bob Dylan, Traditional
- Highway 51 Blues - Bob Dylan, Jones, Curtis
- Gospel Plow - Bob Dylan,
- Baby, Let Me Follow You Down - Bob Dylan, Davis, Gary [1]
- House of the Risin' Sun - Bob Dylan, Holmes, Terry
- Freight Train Blues - Bob Dylan, McDowell, Mississip
- Song to Woody - Bob Dylan, Dylan, Bob
- See That My Grave Is Kept Clean - Bob Dylan, Jefferson, Blind Le
Similar CDs
| The Times They Are A-Changin' | The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan | Bringing It All Back Home | Highway 61 Revisited | Another Side of Bob Dylan |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Plays Guthrie but the real Dylan pokes through. |
| On Inventing Bob Dylan |
Others have, endlessly, gone on about Bob Dylan's role as the voice of his generation (and mine), his lyrics and what they do or do not mean and his place in the rock or folk pantheons, or both. Here we are going back to the early days when there was no dispute that he had earned a place in the folk pantheon. The only real difference between the early stuff and the later electric stuff though is- the electricity. Dylan's extraordinary sense of words, language and word play has been a constant throughout his career. If much later (in the 1990's) he gets a bit repetitious and a little gimmicky in order to stay "relevant" that is only much later after he had done more than his share to add to the language of music.
In this selection we have some outright folk classics that Dylan covered as well as a couple of his own that will endure for the ages like those of his early hero Woody Guthrie's have endured. In fact this album is as much a tribute to Woody as it is a wake up call that a new folk talent has come on the scene. Dylan gets better in latter albums as he develops his own voice but this mainly cover debut album shows his raw talent coming out of the gate. We have the traditional House of the Rising Sun, Pretty Peggy-o, Man of Constant Sorrow, Elizabeth Cotton's Freight Train and a very good cover of Blind Lemon Jefferson's See That My Grave is Kept Clean. Song to Woody though kind of expresses what Dylan is trying to do as he first hits the New York folk scene and see if he can stay in Woody's company. We know the answer was eventually yes.
June 19, 2008
| Historically Important, Musically Not So Much |
| He was great from the beginning! |
| Outstanding Music by The Minnesota Kid Who Helped Wake Up a Country |
I fell in love with Bob Dylan's voice and even though my dad told me he stole the composition of "House of the Rising Sun" from Dave Van Ronk, I didn't care. My dad, a long time Frank Sinatra fan was into music big time, all kinds. He knew stuff and one of the things he knew was that this kid from Minnesota was going places. My dad was from Minnesota.
When I listen to this record, I try to take myself back to the world the way it was then. Lots of people think things were better back in the day. Life was simpler. Well, no it wasn't and one of the people who was going to help wake us all up to the fact that there were plenty of things wrong in the land of the free and the home of the brave was going to be this Minnesota kid.
All of the songs on this record stand out, but that maybe somewhat controversial version of "House of the Rising Sun" really shines, as does my personal favorite, "Song to Woody." That wasn't always my favorite track on this record, but when I heard Dylan's live performance of it on the Tribute Record I went back and listened to this record with a fresh ear. It had been awhile. This record still takes me back. Life was good. It was hard, it wasn't fair, but it was good nevertheless. April 10, 2008
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