Bob Dylan:
If Tomorrow Wasn’t Such a Long TimeFrom the Witmark Tapes
No More Auction BlockAvailable on the
Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3FarewellFrom the Witmark Tapes
I Was Young When I Left HomeAvailable on the
soundtrack to No Direction HomeAll Over YouFrom the Witmark Tapes
MoonshinerAvailable on the
Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3Mama, You’ve Been on My MindAvailable on the
Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3Ballad in Plain DAvailable on
Another Side of Bob Dylan* * * * *
Since I’ve already
apologized for posting popular music, I feel no reason to do it now. Likewise, since I’ve had to apologize for my strong fondness for Bob Dylan from the time I was a sophomore in High School, I feel no reason to do it here. In these lines I find it interesting that over the years I’ve had to argue for my fondness of Bob Dylan less and less and, more interesting, how I’ve practically always won and made many “Dylan-converts.”
In my (I’m not going to say giddy) anticipation of the new Bob Dylan album
Modern Times that comes out next Tuesday, I’ve decided to post a few Dylan mp3 comps. A few years ago I tried a similar task and, because I tried to fit in all my Dylan favorites and “essentials,” I failed miserably. This time I’m keeping it much simpler and concentrating primarily on including some of my personal favorite songs that are not well known.
This first collection of songs concentrates on the early years before Bob Dylan first went electric. All but one of the songs I’ve selected are not on the
three classic acoustic albums. I chose two songs,
No More Auction Block and
Moonshiner, to illustrate the strength of early Dylan as a traditional folk-singer performing traditional songs. I chose
If Tomorrow Wasn’t Such a Long Time,
I Was Young When I Left Home, and
Mama, You’ve Been on Mind to show the quality of songs that Bob Dylan left off his first few albums. I chose
Farewell and
All Over You, well let’s just say, “for kicks.”
The last song
Ballad in Plain D comes off of what has become my favorite acoustic Dylan album,
Another Side of Bob Dylan. It is an illusively complex song about fragile and proud characters and reflections on a failed romance. The song ends with what I consider to be one of the most cryptic lines Bob Dylan ever wrote. I spent nearly ten years trying to unravel it until one night – after spending a day struggling to understand some compositional materials – it became a clear description of the relationship between our limitations and freedoms.
Labels: Bob Dylan, folk music, singer/songwriters, songs
posted by Jacob Sudol