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Monday, February 15, 2016

DIY Playlist Corner: Studio Essentials, 1979 - 1988


DIY Playlist
Studio Essentials: 1979 - 1988

Volume One

Gotta Serve Somebody - Slow Train Coming - 1979
Got My Mind Made Up - Knocked Out Loaded - 1986
I & I - Infidels - 1983
Trouble In Mind - Slow Train Coming, Outtake - 1979
Jokerman - Infidels - 1983
Saved - Saved - 1980
Blind Willie McTell - Infidels, Outtake - 1983
Trouble - Shot Of Love - 1981
Ninety Miles An Hour (Down A Dead End Street) - Down In The Groove - 1988
Property Of Jesus - Shot Of Love - 1981
When He Returns - Slow Train Coming - 1979
Solid Rock - Saved - 1980
Lord Protect My Child - Infidels, Outtake - 1983
Man Of Peace - Infidels - 1983
Brownsville Girl - Knocked Out Loaded - 1986

Volume Two

Shot Of Love - Shot Of Love - 1981
Someone's Got A Hold Of My Heart - Infidels - 1983
Let's Stick Together - Down In The Groove - 1988
I Believe In You - Slow Train Coming - 1979
You Changed My Life - Shot Of Love, Outtake - 1981
Something's Burning Baby - Empire Burlesque - 1985
Union Sundown - Infidels - 1983
Angelina - Shot Of Love, Outtake - 1981
Slow Train - Slow Train Coming - 1979
Caribbean Wind - Shot Of Love, Outtake - 1981
Foot Of Pride - Infidels, Outtake - 1983
Pressing On - Saved - 1980
Are You Ready? - Saved - 1980
The Groom's Still Waiting At The Altar - Shot Of Love - 1981
Every Grain Of Sand - Shot Of Love - 1981

Welcome to the second installment of A Thousand Highways DIY Playlist project! As with the earlier edition, these are officially released recordings, so you'll have to purchase them and assemble the playlist yourself; I'm just offering guidance.

This iteration will be dedicated to a much-maligned era, 1979 to 1988. It was originally intended to cover the 1980s, but I found that Slow Train Coming had much in common with the records that followed, and that Oh Mercy represented a pretty clear break with the past; as such, the beautiful songs of Oh Mercy will be covered in a future entry.

As for the earlier years of the 1980s, I find that there's a unity of sound in spite of the radically different recording conditions. From 1979 to 1985, Dylan was produced by no fewer than six people: Jerry Wexler, Barry Beckett, Bumps Blackwell, Chuck Plotkin, Mark Knopfler, Arthur Baker. From 1986 to 1988, the details get a bit hazier, but Dylan did quite a bit of the production himself. With this melange, and particularly the scattershot method of recording for Knocked Out Loaded and Down In The Groove, one could wrongly assume that the resulting recordings would lack any sense of coherence.

There is something to that theory, but the overall tone is surprisingly consistent - Dylan sings with full band and chorus accompaniment on the subject of high-minded themes of faith, world politics, and corruption of the physical world. A handful of relationship-oriented tracks round out the bunch, but they serve more as additions than anything else. The popular narrative, that the writer's talents were steadily diminishing from the late 1960s on, can be disproven with even a cursory listen to this set. If anything, to my ears, Dylan's writing has steadily improved throughout his career, as he moved from basic concerns to relationship matters, to surrealism, and then on into much broader thematic content, including faith, family, and the relationship of the individual and his or her society to their history.

In any case, I'm getting carried away. Let's review the recordings:

Volume One

01. Gotta Serve Somebody - Slow Train Coming - 1979

Here is the first track from the record that started Bob Dylan's 1980s era. From the start, it's clearly very different from his 1970s recordings. Jerry Wexler and the team at Muscle Shoals studio had been employed, after the sonic disaster of the Street Legal sessions, to give Dylan's music a significantly more professional sound; a quick listen to this recording makes the listener aware that Wexler was successful. The song sets out something of an ideological mission statement that divides Dylan's work into two periods, too - the era prior to 1979, and the era after it. While the tone of the message would broaden and become more complex, particularly after 1989's Oh Mercy, the idea that a person is either working for good or working for evil is present from the chorus of "Gotta Serve Somebody" up to Dylan's most recent output. Concerning the lyrics and sound, I hear echoes of Memphis Slim's "Mother Earth," though you might not feel the same way.

02. Got My Mind Made Up - Knocked Out Loaded - 1986

To be clear, Knocked Out Loaded is not a great record. It resulted from a variety of recording sessions held between 1983 and 1986, and the record suffers for this lack of focus. With that said, Knocked Out Loaded has some great tracks. The first on this compilation is "Got My Mind Made Up," about which I don't have a lot to say. It includes the only reference to Libya in Bob Dylan's recordings, as far as I know, and the music has something of a 1950s Bo Diddley sound. One of my favorite modern bands, Langhorne Slim, recorded a rocking version in 2014 for A Tribute To Bob Dylan in the '80s.

03. I & I - Infidels - 1983

Bob Dylan's 1983 album, Infidels, was considered to be something of a return to form at the time of its release, but to my ears it's just another of the singer's excellent 1980s records. In full disclosure, Shot Of Love is a personal favorite, but regardless, I understand why the general public took to Infidels - it was a distinct move away from the sermonizing of Bob Dylan's albums recorded between 1979 and 1981. Listening to "I & I," you can hear that shift, but the lyricist is clearly still quite preoccupied with spiritual matters. The rough cut of this song is a little stronger, but the overdubs do little to harm its powerful darkness.

04. Trouble In Mind - Slow Train Coming, Outtake - 1979

Labeling this song as an outtake is a tad misleading, since it was officially released as the b-side to "Gotta Serve Somebody" in 1979, but it was not released on the album itself. That's a shame, because I'd say it's one of the strongest tracks from those sessions. It sounds like a reflection on the singer's life before his conversion, as would be heard again in a more melancholy later song, "Every Grain Of Sand." While this song is something of a rarity in Dylan's catalog, you can find a beautiful remastered version it on Pure Dylan: Intimate Look At Bob Dylan, a compilation released by Rolling Stone in Germany in 2011. If you would not like to go so far afield, you can replace this song with "Seeing The Real You At Last," another excellent 1980s mid-tempo rocker.

05. Jokerman - Infidels - 1983

"Jokerman" is the lead song off of Bob Dylan's 1983 Infidels record, and it's evident why it was picked to start the album. The song is one of the singer's visionary tales, in the vein of "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall," "Sad-Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands" and "Changing Of The Guards." I'm not fully sure what the lyrics are getting at, but there's quite a bit to take in. It was inspired by journeys around the Caribbean in the early 1980s - these are the same inspirations for "Caribbean Wind" and "I & I," among others. Moreover, as is typical for the album, the production and instrumentation are superb. An outtake exists, but I think the released version is superior. This track was accompanied by a music video, and would go on to be performed extraordinarily well in a live setting on the David Letterman show, as well as on tour in 1994, 1995, and 2003.

06. Saved - Saved - 1980

Though Saved was recorded at the same studio as its predecessor, Slow Train Coming, it had an appreciably rougher sound. With a minimum of overdubs, it is effectively a live recordings. Unfortunately, Dylan and his road band had trouble replicating the sound from their concerts, and the album is not as strong as it could have been. Happily, the title track suffered little from this process; I'd make the case that it is a major exception, being performed more tightly here than it generally was on tour. The piano riff in the middle of the song is especially groovy.

07. Blind Willie McTell - Infidels, Outtake - 1983

This is one of Bob Dylan's indisputably towering, classic recordings. Strangely, it was not included in Infidels final track list, though that didn't keep it from folks who sought out bootleg recordings. Finally released on the first installment of Sony's Bootleg Series, it immediately attained a status appropriate for its stature. The central figure, Blind Willie McTell, seems to have been chosen primarily for the meter of the song rather than any specific blues-singing abilities; he's an excellent performer, but you'd be hard-pressed to make the case that he's an extraordinarily noteworthy blues singer. This is more an excuse for the writer to explore themes of his nation's complex, dark history. Using the melody from "St. James Infirmary," to which he makes explicit reference in the final verse, he weaves through fleeting images of plantations burning, whips cracking, and tribes moaning. Mark Knopfler's guitar acts as a stirring counterpoint for Dylan's piano, and the acoustic version here is even more potent than the alternative electric cut recorded at the same sessions.

08. Trouble - Shot Of Love - 1981

Another song about which I have little to say. The lyrics are not particularly compelling, but the overall sound and effect are powerful. The band strikes a brooding blues riff, and the singer explores his preoccupation with what he perceives as the world's corruption.

09. Ninety Miles An Hour (Down A Dead End Street) - Down In The Groove - 1988

As with Knocked Out Loaded, Down In The Groove is an assembly of songs recorded at various sessions. Together, the two comprise something of a sequel to Self-Portrait. Concerning this song, I was primarily familiar with it from Hank Snow's delightful country version. It was quite a surprise to hear Bob Dylan play it in a gospel style, reminiscent of Saved's "Satisfied Mind." The harmonizing is especially interesting here, as the singer employs some male singers in contradiction of his typical dependence on a female chorus.

10. Property Of Jesus - Saved - 1981

This is a pretty cool gospel meditation that reflects the same concerns found on Dylan's two previous records, Slow Train Coming and Saved. In particular, it concerns the narrator's feeling of being set apart from his contemporaries, who have a more secular character and have little time for his spiritual mindset. Musically, it's great, with a live-in-the-room sound accentuated by someone going to town on a cowbell. The rhythm section is top-notch. It is notable for being the only song from Shot Of Love to never be performed live, though it would take almost ten years for "Trouble" to get a live airing. I'm of the opinion that this song, along with "Slow Train Coming," represents one of the first instances of the writer arguing against globalization - he rails against "Olympic Games" for reasons not explicated - a theme that would be more fully explored on Infidels.

11. When He Returns - Slow Train Coming - 1979

"When He Returns" is the closing track of 1979's Slow Train Coming, and with good reason: it's hard to follow this song up. It's a stark statement of expectation for the second coming of Christ, sung with only piano accompaniment. Interestingly, the song was almost not sung by Dylan at all - he originally intended to have one of his backing singers record the song. Luckily, an engineer recorded the demo and Dylan liked it enough to sing the song himself on the record. Apparently, the studio recording sheets indicate that an alternative version was recorded with the band, but it does not circulate. One more reason to keep hoping for a gospel-era Bootleg Series release, I guess!

12. Solid Rock - Saved - 1980

One of the standout tracks from Saved, "Solid Rock" is also one of only a couple that were played on the Never-Ending Tour, having been revived in 2002. It's not hard to hear why - Dylan's band gets a muscular looping groove going, and even his typically reserved lead guitarist gets a chance to shine. The song was well-received on the road, and had a few arrangements tried out from 1979 to 1981. Lyrically, it's quite similar to "Trouble" or "Slow Train Coming," as the singer reflects on the world's flaws, but it carries with it a more hopeful attitude for redemption.

13. Lord Protect My Child - Infidels, Outtake - 1983

Here is a brief, somewhat slight song recorded for, but not released on Infidels. It is superior to that album's "Sweetheart Like You" and "License To Kill," but may have rung as overly confessional for the singer. In any case, it was eventually released alongside "Blind Willie McTell" on The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3. The narrator expresses concern over the state of the world that his child will grow up in, which is a fairly common theme for Bob Dylan in this period (albeit with an uncharacteristically personal touch). Most intriguing is the way that the vocals, strong as ever, present something of a counterpoint to the musical backing. Not having a musical education myself, I would find it difficult to express this in words, but the vocal melody does not proceed in quite the way the listener would expect it to. Whatever the case, it's a pretty great little track.

14. Man Of Peace - Infidels - 1983

This is another marvelous song from Bob Dylan's 1983 album, and it outspokenly puts the lie to any claims that the singer abandoned his focus on the Bible. Someone plays a blazing slide guitar on this song, and while it's been performed excellently in live incarnations over the years, the original is still among the best outings. Evidently, it was recorded in only a single take!

15. Brownsville Girl - Knocked Out Loaded - 1986

"Brownsville Girl" is often regarded as the masterpiece of Knocked Out Loaded, and with good reason. Despite some unsympathetic production that de-emphasized the lead vocals, this is one of Bob Dylan's low-key epics in the vein of "Highlands." He recounts a relationship intertwined with his memories of several films starring Gregory Peck. The song has some great non-sequiturs, but they don't distract from the central theme of American cinema and lost love. In terms of background, the song was originally recorded during the Empire Burlesque sessions as "New Danville Girl." The version I recommend is the one from 2007's Dylan compilation, as the song was remastered to present a cleaner overall sound, though I've not heard the one on Amazon's 2013 Complete Album Collection - The '80's, which I tended to depend on for these songs. As a fun side-note, comedian Reggie Watts recorded a very entertaining cover of this song, which you can find on 2014's A Tribute To Bob Dylan in the '80s.

Volume Two

01. Shot Of Love - Shot Of Love - 1981

The title track from Shot Of Love also happens to be one of that record's strongest performances. Surprisingly, it was not produced by Chuck Plotkin, who recorded the rest of the album - this one was produced by Bumps Blackwell, who had an excellent reputation for having recorded Ray Charles, among others. Here he achieved a raw sound that is significantly more impressive than the circulating alternate take of the song.

02. Someone's Got A Hold Of My Heart - Infidels, Outtake - 1983

"Someone's Got A Hold of My Heart" is fascinating as a rough draft of Empire Burlesque's "Tight Connection To My Heart." Melodically identical, the song would transition from a fairly basic, emotive song to a heavily produced, largely opaque final version. Part of this is down to rewrites - the original version is full of Biblical allusions and original writing, which the Empire Burlesque version trades for cinema references. These are interesting, but hardly as powerful as the earlier draft. Luckily, the originally circulates both in this version, released officially on The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3, as well as an unreleased version from the same sessions.

03. Let's Stick Together - Down In The Groove - 1988

This song, originally released in 1962 by Wilbert Harrison, was a memorable hit for the band Canned Heat in 1970. Bob Dylan opened his 1988 album with the cover, which is quite effective as a bluesy rock song. The harmonica playing, in particular, is outstanding.

04. I Believe In You - Slow Train Coming - 1979

More than most of the songs on Slow Train Coming, "I Believe In You" bears the mark of guitarist Mark Knopfler. His clean sound allows Dylan's deeply passionate vocals to shine, and his sympathetic accompaniment emphasizes the bright, optimistic theme of the song. The song would go on to be performed regularly in concert, both during the gospel tours of 1979 to 1981 as well as semi-regularly on the Never-Ending Tour.

05. You Changed My Life - Shot of Love, Outtake - 1981

"You Changed My Life" is one of my favorite songs from this era, as it's just so hard not to love. The rhythm section is especially strong, propelling the song forwarded with a rollicking sound that would later be employed on live renditions of "Early Morning Rain" and "Series Of Dreams." Lyrically, the song is interesting as a counterpoint to other tracks chronicling the narrator's feeling of being pulled from a corrupt world, like "Trouble In Mind," "Property Of Jesus," and "Solid Rock" - this one dwells on the narrator's optimism rather than the feeling of being above an evil material existence. In that way, it is more closely connected with one of the writer's masterpieces, "Every Grain Of Sand." Perhaps those two songs' similar thematic content is what kept this recording from being included on the album upon release in 1981. Whatever the reason, I'm grateful that Sony opted to release it on The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3.

06. Something's Burning Baby - Empire Burlesque - 1985

Here we have this compilation's only track from 1985's Empire Burlesque. It's not necessarily a bad record, but most of its songs were later performed in much more effective live renditions. Unfortunately, "Something's Burning Baby" has never been played in concert. The production threatens to overwhelm most of the songs on this album, but there are two notable exceptions - "Something's Burning Baby" and "Dark Eyes." The first of these circulates in an alternate take, but it went through a couple of lyrical improvements before the final release; in particular, the rewrites served to emphasis the apocalyptic nature of the narrative, placing the song in a context similar to "Caribbean Wind," "The Groom's Still Waiting At The Altar," and "Angelina," among others. Arthur Baker's production here also manages to enhance the song, rather than detract from it, as the sound on the final release is a distinct improvement on the outtake. The best aspect of the song, though, is Dylan's vocals - he really gives it his all. As for the second song from Empire Burlesque referenced above, "Dark Eyes," it will appear on a later all-acoustic DIY Playlist, where it fits much more comfortably.

07. Union Sundown - Infidels - 1983

This song is a reminder that the writer never really moved away from secular social causes, even though he hadn't written such an avowed "protest" song since 1975. Between 1975 and 1983, however, Bob Dylan's writing had become much more focused on faith, so this new protest anthem carried with it a spiritual dimension. As noted by Clinton Heylin in his book, Still On The Road, "Union Sundown" echoes Dylan's earlier song, "North Country Blues," updated to reflect the significant globalization that had occurred since the 1960s. While the outtake is quite remarkable in its own right, with many lyrics that wouldn't survive to the final draft, the bluesy guitar and reverberated vocals make the version on Infidels an excellent addition to Dylan's 1980s catalog.

08. Angelina - Shot Of Love, Outtake - 1981

"Angelina" is part of a core group of song from Bob Dylan's Shot Of Love sessions to dwell powerfully on apocalyptic and redemptive imagery. Along with the other tracks, "The Groom's Still Waiting At The Alter" and "Caribbean Wind," "Angelina" would have formed a poetic backbone to the record if it had been released on the album in 1981; as it stands, the song would have to wait until The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3 to be heard by the public. This song has sparer instrumentation than most of the songs on Shot Of Love, so perhaps it was found to be too different from the surrounding recordings. The backing vocals are put to excellent use here as a chorus to strengthen the song's single-word chorus. Unfortunately, unlike its sister songs, "Angelina" has never been performed live.

09. Slow Train - Slow Train Coming - 1979

I'm not sure if this can be called a title track. It's quite similar to the title of the album, but a word seems to have been omitted... Whatever the proper nomenclature, "Slow Train" is one of the most effective songs on Dylan's 1979 album. It would be echoed by an excellent 1991 Buddy Guy record, Damn Right I've Got The Blues, and it represents Dylan in his most effective R & B mode. He rails against earthly corruption with righteous anger, and the sound is enhanced powerfully with a horn section. In a rather amusing story of what might have been, the singer had to choose whether to take this horn section or his backing singers on the road in 1979 - budgetary restrictions - and he opted for the singers. One wonders how his live sets might have sounded over the following decade with horn accompaniment.

10. Caribbean Wind - Shot Of Love, Outtake - 1981

It's been referred to several times in the notes above, and with good cause - "Caribbean Wind" is one of Bob Dylan's best songs of the 1980s, though it occupies a peculiar place in the singer's catalog. Like "She's Your Lover Now" in the 1960s, the singer apparently tried this song many times without ever quite nailing it down. The gulf between the single live version, the circulating outtake, and the version released on Biograph (the one on this compilation) make the mercurial nature of the song quite clear. The song's story is a compelling one, as the singer confronts not only his weakness when confronted with the possibility of carnal lust, but also the world's general corruption. It was inspired by Dylan's travels in the Caribbean, as he evidently dreamed the song up while sailing that region. If ever there was a song for which I'd love to hear the complete recording sessions, this is the one.

11. Foot Of Pride - Infidels, Outtake - 1983

This track was the subject of some deeply contentious recording sessions, having been played an alleged 43 times in the studio, including a bossa nova and reggae version! It was almost included in the final release of Infidels, but was sadly left on the cutting room floor. Given its stream-of-consciousness lyrics, putting across a scathing critique of contemporary culture, this is really quite a loss. The song was finally released in 1991 on The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3, and it is one of the greatest gems of that collection. Surprisingly, it was actually covered by Lou Reed at 1992's tribute concert.

12. Pressing On - Saved - 1980

"Pressing On" is one of my favorite Bob Dylan songs, because it's just so inspiring. Rather than looking at the world's failures, the singer emphasizes his own experience in moving past worldly weakness. It's hard not to be moved by such a powerful performance, which was luckily caught effectively on tape at the Saved recording sessions. Interestingly, a third verse was originally present, but was either cut before recording or cut in the editing process; you can hear that verse on some live performances of the song.

13. Are You Ready? - Saved - 1980

1980's Saved ends with this confrontational track, which harkens back to the more fire-and-brimstone Dylan of Slow Train Coming. With a beautiful harmonica solo and a fiery band performance, the singer describes Armageddon and asks the listener if he or she is ready for that inevitable occurrence if it was to occur today. Intriguingly, this was the only song from Saved that had not been written prior to the singer's 1979 tour in support of Slow Train Coming.

14. The Groom's Still Waiting At The Altar - Shot Of Love - 1981

Though it was not included on the released record in 1981, this has luckily been included in editions published since 1985. Thank goodness, since it represents one of Bob Dylan's peaks as a blues performer. Here he marries a muscular blues performance with lyrics about the sorry state of the world. In particular, I like the ambition of the couplet "Don't know what I can saw about Claudette, ain't seen her since January / She could be respectably married or running a whorehouse in Buenos Aires." Incidentally, this is one of the strangely numerous reference to Argentina in Dylan's early 1980s output; other such songs include "Angelina" and "Union Sundown." The live performances from 1980's Musical Retrospective Tour represent an earlier draft, with lyrics that would be improved by the time the song was recorded for Shot Of Love.

15. Every Grain Of Sand - Shot Of Love - 1981

Along with "Blind Willie McTell," this song represents the height of the writer's lyrical prowess in the 1980s. "Every Grain Of Sand" was originally composed as a poem, shared with the writer Paul Williams backstage at a concert in 1980, but was eventually set to music. A demo, released on The Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3, documents that the song was effectively in its final lyrical form from early in the process, but the beautiful accompaniment found on the final release had yet to be added. This is one of Bob Dylan's most moving songs, as he uses classic poetic language, Biblical allusion, and confessional honesty to convey the experience of the person who has found redemption in something greater than himself.

I hope you enjoy the compilation. It's quite easy to compile, as you can find virtually all of the tracks on Amazon's Complete Collections - '70's and '80's. The one challenge will be locating "Trouble In Mind," though if you are willing to purchase the German Pure Dylan album, you won't regret it. As far as production tweaks go, the songs from Biograph need to be raised in volume. Similarly, "Something's Burning Baby" also needs its volume raised, as the vocals are a bit buried when juxtaposed with surrounding songs. Otherwise, you've got yourself a pretty representative collection here. I find it's surprisingly good to work out with, though your mileage may vary.

Come on back next month for another installment of the DIY Playlist. Until then, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes.

-CS

Monday, February 1, 2016

From New Orleans To New Jerusalem: Unreleased Live Recordings, 1997



From New Orleans To New Jerusalem
Live Recordings - 1997

Shooting Star - Live - Fukuoka - February 14, 1997
I & I - Live - Fredericton - April 7, 1997
Maggie's Farm - Live - Lincoln - August 3, 1997
One Of Us Must Know (Sooner Or Later) - Live - Scranton - August 12, 1997
Obviously 5 Believers - Live - Waltham - April 12, 1997
Blind Willie McTell - Live - Montreal - August 5, 1997
Can't Wait - Live - Starkville - October 24, 1997
Long Black Veil - Live - Wheeling - April 28, 1997
Cold Irons Bound - Live - Lisle - November 11, 1997
Pretty Peggy-O - Live - Albany - April 18, 1997
Don't Think Twice, It's Alright - Live - Los Angeles - December 20, 1997
Shelter From The Storm - Live - Tokyo - February 10, 1997
God Knows - Live - Bournemouth - October 2, 1997


This was a deeply challenging collection to assemble, because 1997 is one of the best years of Bob Dylan's Never-Ending Tour.

As a bit of history, this was the year that Dylan released his notable comeback record, Time Out Of Mind. That album, possibly influenced by the preceding half-decade of performing and recording songs from the traditions of North America and the British Isles, offered a unique and forward-looking interpretation of the singer's past. While rooted in history, Dylan had enlisted the help of Daniel Lanois to produce a lush modern sound. He soon took these songs on the road, and turned increasingly away from the earlier songs that had characterized much of his 1990s live show.

To that end, this compilation includes two new songs from Time Out Of Mind, along with some traditional songs, some recently introduced songs from Dylan's 1960s catalog, and some intriguing songs from his past handful of releases.

The first track, "Shooting Star," is admittedly a peculiar start. It's a slow, tentative rendition that picks up steam as it rolls along. The portrait feels like an artist performing, as he would describe on-stage the following year, for himself rather than an audience of adoring fans; the results are transcendent.

"I & I" is one of Dylan's more successful songs of the preceding decade, though it had a tendency to get mired in lengthy jams throughout much of the 1990s. The version here was already excellent, but I slimmed it down just a touch through the editing process. This is the first song on the set emphasizing two sounds that would dominate the band's profile throughout the year - jagged, distorted guitar and resonant drums.

"Maggie's Farm" is among the best arrangements of this song performed in the half century since its conception. It gets the full Time Out Of Mind treatment, pulling back from what can some times be a bombastic approach to instead be represented by a slick beat and snaky guitars.

The next song, "One Of Us Must Know," is a very rare outing for this Blonde On Blonde classic. After one or two performances in 1976, and a strong showing in 1978, it only appeared again at a handful of dates in 1997 before disappearing permanently (as of 2015). The listener may take issue with the occasionally less than perfect lyrical recall, but the passion of the vocals, both primary and backup in the final chorus, put the song across with feeling.

"Obviously 5 Believers" is another Blonde On Blonde song that has been played only rarely outside the studio. Though it was played with some regularity in 1995, it only appeared briefly in 1996 and 1997 before fading away entirely. One suspects that it was part and parcel with Dylan's refocus on sparse, riff-oriented rhythmic blues tracks in the mid-1990s; this was the same impulse that produced much of the comparatively sparse, focused record referred to above. While his session players had evidently struggled with the rhythm in 1966, his 1997 band proves more than up to the challenge of producing the scathing blues track here.

The sixth performance, "Blind Willie McTell," is an exciting first. The song, which had only grown in stature since its release on 1991's The Bootleg Series, Volume 1-3, has often been declared one of the writer's masterpieces. Its sudden appearance in 1997 was not a coincidence though - apparently Dylan had heard The Band performing this song earlier in the decade and decided he could do it better than them onstage. This friendly rivalry would produce wonderful results for fans, as the singer would go on to play the song beautifully throughout the next two decades.

"Can't Wait" is one of the two songs from the recently released Time Out Of Mind, and it does not stray distantly from its studio incarnation. For better or for worse, though fans generally hew to the former assessment, it is rendered here in a cleaner sound than would be possible under Daniel Lanois' style of production. Many of the songs from those sessions would see release in the late 1990s on semi-obscure Sony/Columbia releases in live form, reinforcing the impression that Dylan had not necessarily been happy with the overwhelming swampy presence of the producer on his most recent record.

The next track, "Long Black Veil," is one of a variety of songs that many fans had long wished Bob Dylan to cover in performance. Having done justice to so many American, Scottish, British and Irish songs over the previous thirty years, listeners were delighted when the singer finally unveiled his deeply atmospheric rendering of this beloved ballad. Though many of his Americana covers in the 1999 - 2002 era would be produced in acoustic arrangements (and indeed you can find a later performance of this song on the Thousand Highways compilation Keep Humming), this rendition is in a slow, brooding electric style.

"Cold Irons Bound" is one of the highlights of this compilation, and it would go on to be one of the highlights of the next ten years. David Kemper's addition to the band is nowhere more valued than in his drumming contributions to this powerfully rhythmic experience.

Though "Pretty Peggy-O" already appeared on the One More Night overview compilations, I couldn't bear to leave it off of my 1997-focused collection. Since its appearance on a noted bootleg compilation, Bathed In A Stream Of Pure Heat, this recording from Albany, New York has long been considered one of the gems of the Never-Ending Tour, and I'd be inclined to agree.

"Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" represents a song that was really starting to come into its own. This may seem to be a bit absurd as a remark about a song originally recorded in 1962, but Bob Dylan had avoided performing the track for a fair amount of his middle period. After he "went electric" in 1965, the song would go on to appear with regularity in 1974 and 1978 alone before becoming something of a standard in 1986 and later. Outside of an inventive reggae arrangement in 1978, it had often been performed either solo or with minimal accompaniment, so the song hadn't really been able to evolve past its simplest form; this began to change in the mid-1990s, though, as the song rapidly transitioned into something of a bluegrass stomper. Sometimes it was more relaxed, while other times it was more reflective, as it appears here; either way, it soon became one of the most reliable songs in the singer's songbook.

The penultimate performance, a Tokyo rendition of "Shelter From The Storm," was both an early and a late addition to the compilation. I love this unique, bouncy arrangement, but it went by the wayside as I came to emphasize the darker side to Dylan's 1997 performance catalog; only in the last few days before publishing did the song come back to its place in the setlist. It's admittedly a bit meandering, but the overall tone of the recording is remarkable - the song evolves dramatically from its relaxed early minutes to an intense conclusion. My recommendation is to just get into the groove and go with it. One intriguing note about this one - the inventive arrangement of "Shelter From The Storm" that appeared on One More Night: Volume Four would also originate in Tokyo. I wonder what it is about that city that inspires such remarkable, bizarre versions of this song?

"God Knows" is a song that I'm drawn to, and this version is an exemplary one. Beginning with an almost solo vocal and guitar performance, the song grows into a powerful electric fervor before slowing to an elegant closure. Again, Kemper's drumming pulls the track together from start to finish.

Listeners may find a couple of omissions to take issue with here: other Time Out Of Mind songs are absent, including "Love Sick," "'Til I Fell In Love With You," "Make You Feel My Love," and "Not Dark Yet" were played in 1997 but are not represented on this release. The first three of those are likely to appear on next month's 1998 compilation, After Hours; while "Not Dark Yet" would go on to attain extraordinary stature by 1999 and demonstrate that quality time and again over the following decade, it was still evolving in its earliest performances. One other notable performance from this year, "When I Paint My Masterpiece," from the singer's December El Rey residency, is not present here - I don't agree with the common consensus, and find it a bit rushed. You might want to seek it out, since your take could very well differ from my own.

Whatever you take away from this release, I hope you find something to enjoy. 1997 was a remarkable year for the evolution of Bob Dylan's performance art, and I'm happy to finally add it to the Thousand Highways Collection.

Next month will feature another long-awaited compilation: 1998. A handful of songs from that year are featured on the overview set, One More Night, but this one will be a keeper you don't want to miss.

As always, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes. Thanks for listening!

-CS

February 3, 2016 Update: I've been informed that the date on the rear art is incorrect for "Blind Willie McTell" - it should read August 5 instead of April 5. I'll try to get new art up as soon as possible.

Sunday, January 17, 2016

DIY Playlist Corner: The Cutting Edge


Good morning/afternoon/evening folks,

In the spirit of keeping the blog alive between posts during these cold winter months (people in the Southern Hemisphere can use their imagination), I've decided to start up a new section called DIY Playlist Corner. DIY, of course, is short for "Do It Yourself," and that spirit is necessary here since what we'll be covering are officially released recordings. I'll do my best to supply links to popular retailers where these tracks can be bought, though there may be some obscurities as the series continues.

For the first iteration, however, I will only be concerned with a single release - the mammoth Cutting Edge: Bootleg Series Volume 12. Be aware that some of the tracks may only exist on certain editions of the set; if you got the 6 CD version, you'll have the vast majority of these. In the notes below, I'll recommend alternatives for the handful that only exist on the 18 CD Collector's Edition (which feature an asterisk in the tracklist).

Volume One

It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry - Take 3 Incomplete (July 29, 1965)
I'll Keep It With Mine - Take 1
I Wanna Be Your Lover - Take 6 (Mis-Slate) *
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues - Take 3 Complete
On The Road Again - Take 1 Complete
Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window - Take 17
Sitting On A Barbed-Wire Fence - Take 2
Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again - Take 13 Breakdown
Visions Of Johanna - Take 5 Complete
Bob Dylan's 115th Dream - Take 2 Complete (Solo Acoustic Complete)
Absolutely Sweet Marie - Take 1 Complete
She's Your Lover Now - Take 6 Complete
Tombstone Blues - Take 2 Complete (Vocal Overdub) *
Positively 4th Street - Take 4 Complete
Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat - Take 8 Complete
Sad-Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands - Take 1 Complete

Volume Two

Instrumental - Take 2 Complete
Visions Of Johanna - Take 14 Complete
Outlaw Blues - Take 2 Remake Complete
Queen Jane Approximately - Take 5 Complete
If You Gotta Go, Go Now - Take 2 Complete
Pledging My Time - Take 1 Breakdown
She Belongs To Me - Take 1
I Wanna Be Your Lover - Take 1
Just Like A Woman - Take 4 Complete
Temporary Like Achilles - Take 3 Complete
Love Minus Zero/No Limit - Take 3 Remake Complete
It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry - Take 8 Complete
She's Your Lover Now - Take 16 Complete
One Of Us Must Now (Sooner Or Later) - Take 19 Complete
Highway 61 Revisited - Take 3 Complete
Desolation Row - Take 5 Remake Complete

Since I won't be providing links or artwork for this one, I'd like to elaborate a bit more on the tracks, one by one:

Volume One

1. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry - Take 3 Incomplete

This is a version of the song in transition, recorded just four days after the live debut of the song at the Newport Folk Festival. As such, the atmosphere is fairly jubilant. Mike Bloomfield gets some hot guitar licks in, and Dylan comments "Rockefeller Center calling!" The track breaks down after Dylan mistakenly (?) repeats a verse he's already sung before commenting "I'll sing it again, I don't care." This is an appropriately playful way to begin our behind-the-scenes look at Bob Dylan's 1965 - 1966 studio sessions.

2. I'll Keep It With Mine - Take 1

Sadly, this is the only extant recording of this song from the Bringing It All Back Home sessions. It would also be recorded in a less effective arrangement for Blonde On Blonde, but most of those recordings are instrumental. There is some playful studio banter with Tom Wilson at the start of the track, which was sliced off for its earlier appearance on Biograph, that shows what may be a growing (if low-key) tension between the producer and the artist.

3. I Wanna Be Your Lover - Take 6 (Mis-slate)

While this rendition of the song does not appear on the 6 CD version of The Cutting Edge, you can find it on Biograph and Side Tracks, though the mix is truly excellent on its 2015 release. It's very similar to Take 6, so you could happily substitute that version; the mis-slated cut is just a touch more intense. This is perhaps the most surprising outtake to me, since the song was clearly worked up very well in the studio. The singer's comments in the Biograph liner notes confirm this assessment, as he himself wonders why it never made it onto a studio record before the 1985 career overview.

4. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues - Take 3

I'm not sure this one rises above the version released on Highway 61 Revisited, but if not, it's very close. As was typical in that album's sessions, the piano player pulls the track together. In this case, he adds some delightful Southwestern flourishes, appropriate for the Mexican context. The song would go on to grow outrageously on the road, being played excellently in almost every one of Dylan's live outfits, but this version is a laid back rough blueprint for what was to come.

5. On The Road Again - Take 1

No other performance on the 6 CD was more unjustly culled from the 2 CD Best-Of edition. While the full-band version of this song released on that collection is still interesting, this solo rendition is really something else. From the background audio of Dylan playing around at the piano before he's interrupted by Tom Wilson to the foot-stomp rhythm, this performance is one of my favorites from the sessions.

6. Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window - Take 17

In much the same way as "On The Road Again," this version is a bit superior to the one picked for the 2 CD edition. Unlike that, though, this performance is very similar to the one on the reduced set. Take 17 had circulated for years on bootlegs - it was actually found on this very website before the release of a much-improved mix on The Cutting Edge - so perhaps Sony/Columbia wanted to include an unheard version for the most affordable version of the collection. Whatever the reason, I would recommend using Take 17 for your playlist, since it's one of the singer's most effective vocal performances from the 1965 recordings. His pronunciation of each line, particularly "come on out, the dark is beginning," could send chills down your spine. Again, Paul Griffin's piano playing is gorgeous. The song would re-appear as something of a more jocular take in the earliest Blonde On Blonde sessions, one performance of which you can find on Biograph, but it was strongest in its earlier arrangement.

7. Sitting On A Barbed-Wire Fence - Take 2

This song is present in two different edits on the 18 CD set, but the one found on the 6 CD edition is perfect. I'd originally heard this as a promotion for the new Bootleg Series release, and was underwhelmed, but it really grows on you. For whatever reason, positioning it directly after the epic "Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window" enhances its power, as it is something of a sigh of relief after that emotional ride. This take includes the delightful riffing on a "woman in LA" not being as good as "this guitar player I got right now," leading Mike Bloomfield into a hilarious shout and solo. Clearly the most realized version of this song, which I assume evolved into "It Takes A Lot To Laugh," given their proximity in studio sessions.

8. Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again - Take 13

Take 13 was one of the songs chosen to represent The Cutting Edge in pre-release material, and you can hear why. It's groovy, has a unique inter-verse classical-sounding guitar fill, and is very different from take released on Blonde On Blonde. It is still in transition from the earlier chorus, "I just need a friend," to the chorus we've all come to know and love. In one chorus, Dylan even describes himself as "stuck inside of Nashville with the Memphis blues again"! The cut breaks down at the end, but the song is basically complete.

9. Visions Of Johanna - Take 5

This is described as "Complete" in the 18 CD notes and "Rehearsal" in the 6 CD notes, but whichever way you describe it, it's one of the finest performances of this song that was recorded. I like this one and Take 14 a bit more than the one picked for Blonde On Blonde, but can see why that one was chosen for the 1966 release; it clearly came much easier in the studio, as only a brief period of time was needed to record the song with the session players assembled for that record. Dylan struggled quite a bit more when recording it in New York ahead of the Nashville sessions, so it likely left a bitter memory. In fact, it presents one of the most interesting experiences on The Cutting Edge - Collector's Edition, as he tries to get the band to slow it down and present a more mellow atmosphere; this is largely unsuccessful, but the listener has luckily been left with a few very different variations on the theme. Take 5 presents the song as an up-tempo rocker, a vibe it would shed entirely until a live one-off performance in 1988, after which the rocking version of the song would be permanently retired.

10. Bob Dylan's 115th Dream - Take 2 (Solo Acoustic)

The version of this released on Bringing It All Back Home was also a Take 2, but the one on my playlist is the one performed solo. This one's got a couple of flubbed lines, but otherwise would have been fit for release on the acoustic half of the album for which it was recorded. It's chief advantage over the one that was eventually chosen for the 1965 record is the emphasis placed on the surreal narrative. It wouldn't have been out of place in one of Dylan's 1964 or 1965 live sets, though it was never performed in that setting.

11. Absolutely Sweet Marie - Take 1

"Absolutely Sweet Marie," like many of the later tracks on Blonde On Blonde, only had one complete outtake. The lyrics are still in flux here, and would pass through one more revision before the final take. Perhaps the chief improvement on this alternate performance is the band's playing the chorus.

12. She's Your Lover Now - Take 6

Though the solo piano performance and an uptempo rendition of this lost masterpiece had surfaced previously, on a bootleg and on The Bootleg Series, respectively, Take 6 had not been heard by the public before 2015. Like the two other (mostly) complete takes, this one presents only one angle of the story. The lyrics vary in specifics from performance to performance, but this take has one of the more amusing aspects, as Dylan asks one of the two targets of his derision "what are you, some kind of moose?" Much ink has been spilled on this song, and I won't be able to do it justice here, but I recommend seeking out the writings of Paul Williams, Clinton Heylin and Michael Gray. I'll write a bit more about it later in these notes, but for the moment it's worth noting how much the band struggles to transition in this take from the verse to the pseudo-chorus. They would improve dramatically on the road, but the session for "She's Your Lover Now" make it plain to see why the singer chose to work primarily with Nashville session players for the remainder of the Blonde On Blonde sessions.

13. Tombstone Blues - Take 2 (Vocal Overdub)

I could be wrong, but this version sounds to me like the album version with an overdub on the chorus. It is not present on the 6 CD version, but you could pretty well just substitute in the excellent Take 1 from that edition. Take 2 preserves the scathing guitar and tempo from the one selected for Highway 61 Revisited, but also includes a group of backing singers on the chorus that complement the song marvelously. Humorously, they miss their cue on one chorus and you can hear the smiles creep into their voices! Take 1, which appears on the 2 CD edition of The Cutting Edge, is a more laid-back performance that lacks the intensity of the final take but makes up for it with some cool lyrical variants, including "John the blacksmith" instead of "John the Baptist." Weird, huh? For an extra treat, I recommend seeking out the live acoustic performance from the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, finally having seen the light of day as bonus material on The Cutting Edge Collector's Edition. It sounds almost like "It's Alright Ma," and lacks the chorus that would come to define the song. Without the band and Mike Bloomfield's guitar, it is a plainly inferior version, but it remains a captivating curiosity nonetheless.

14. Positively 4th Street - Take 4

Here is one of the gems of The Cutting Edge, a performance that is (in my opinion) superior to the one chosen for official release in 1965. It lacks some of the artificiality that necessarily edges into a song through repeated performances, and instead gives the song a gentler quality. The mournfulness that would later appear in live performances is present in this version, and enhances it dramatically. On a related note, the session for "Positively 4th Street" is one of the highlights from the Collector's Edition, as the song breaks down a few takes from its conclusion; there's even a brief, tense confrontation between Dylan and Bob Johnston over whether the singer needs a lyric sheet. Luckily, the song had already been cut in several releasable takes by that point anyway.

15. Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat - Take 8

This could be something of a love-it-or-hate-it affair, but I've eventually come down on the side of loving it. The call/response opening and the car horn chorus are certainly oddities, but they represent some of the freewheeling nature of the sessions. More importantly, the verses have a hard-driving quality that was not felt elsewhere in the recording of this song. Perhaps most interesting is the fact that the heavy groove of the verses resembles rather closely the song "Tell Me, Momma," which would open each one of Dylan's fabled 1966 concerts; this may be the closest we'll ever be to hearing a studio performance of that song.

16. Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands - Take 1

Commentators have written quite a bit about this performance since the release of The Cutting Edge, and rightly so. The close listener, depending upon his or her inclination, may hear the singer say "Sara" a couple of times throughout the song, drawing an even closer connection between this track and the 1975 recording that references it, Desire's "Sara". I'm not completely sold, since it sounds like an accidentally uttered slurring of "sad-eyed," but to each his/her own. Regardless, I find this take to be, like "Positively 4th Street," an improvement upon the one that was originally released. It evokes more perfectly the dreamlike nature of the song, and benefits from a lack of repetition.

Volume Two

1. Instrumental - Take 2

Some of you may find the inclusion of an instrumental track a bit questionable, but I think you'll find it pretty compelling in the context of the full CD. It manages to subtly evoke "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" and "One Of Us Must Know" through its four minute run-time. It settles the listener in for what will be a somewhat more evocative and strange experience than the first volume. It also represents something of a prophetic indicator of how cohesive Dylan and The Band would sound over the next few years.

2. Visions Of Johanna - Take 14

This rendition of "Visions Of Johanna" had circulated on bootlegs over the years, but as is usually the case, the version released by Sony/Columbia is vastly improved in terms of its mix. Dylan's voice cuts you to the core on this one, nowhere more than the final imprecise moaning at the end of the track. This may be the most fully realized studio performance of the song, though of course you may feel differently.

3. Outlaw Blues - Take 2 Remake

Bob Dylan's studio band provides its best Bo Diddley backing for this performance. After attempting the song in a different guise as "California" and in an unsatisfactory acoustic arrangement, Dylan and the assembled players tried a variety of electric arrangement. This one is my favorite, though a drummer would have enhanced it further. Interestingly, the vocals are not quite in line with the rhythm during the first verse, but they and the band all come together for the remainder of the track. This is also one of the rare occasions when someone besides Bob Dylan plays harmonica on one of his recordings!

4. Queen Jane Approximately - Take 5

The piano playing at the start of this may be Paul Griffin's finest contribution to the Highway 61 Revisited sessions, though we happily now have a vast group of recordings to debate that point over. Otherwise, this hews pretty closely to the model established for this song - it is not significantly different from the one selected for the final record.

5. If You Gotta Go, Go Now - Take 2

Here is one of the lost gems of Bob Dylan's 1964 - 1965 era, as it never managed to make it onto a released record at the time it was recorded, much like "Mama You Been On My Mind" or "Farewell Angelina." It ended up being fully worked out, but was left off of Bringing It All Back Home for one reason or another. While several of the versions recorded are very nice, the backing vocals by Angelina Butler send this one over the top; one of the best aspects of the liner notes for The Cutting Edge is a brief behind-the-scenes look by Butler at the recording session for this track. It was never performed live with a band, but it was played quite frequently from 1964 to 1965, and seems to have been something of a fan favorite. You can find live performances on The Cutting Edge bonus live content or on The Bootleg Series Volume 6.

6. Pledging My Time - Take 1

This is said to be a breakdown recording, but it captures the entirety of the song, including a previously unheard verse about playing wigwam. Wacky! That aside, the jaunty tempo of this is in stark contrast to the slower groove found on its Blonde On Blonde iteration. Bob Dylan's harmonica playing is one of his best efforts at that instrument during these sessions. I'm very glad that this performance finally got released, since it's been rumored for years.

7. She Belongs To Me - Take 1

While I generally prefer Dylan's band-backed recordings, this is an excellent example of what the singer can pull off when playing on his own. He puts on the warmest voice possible and tells the evergreen tale of an artist who's clearly on something of a higher plane than the narrator. Given that this song has been played effectively in so many arrangements over the following decades, it's impressive to hear that it could work so well with just a man and his guitar. On a side note, I had originally had a different take for this song, realizing only shortly before posting this that my chosen version was the one that made it onto Bringing It All Back Home.

8. I Wanna Be Your Lover - Take 1

Two versions of this exist on The Cutting Edge Collector's Edition, though only one is present on the 6 CD edition; you can take your pick, though I prefer the longer edit for obvious reasons. Though others may see "She's Your Lover Now" as the lost masterpiece of these years, I might make the case for this early arrangement of "I Wanna Be Your Lover." It lacks the fully formed chorus that would later anchor the song, and features the alternate lyrics "I wanna be your partner,"but the primary difference is in its musical environment. This is probably the hottest, coolest groove that Dylan and The Band played in 1965, and it's disappointing that it got lost along the way to the (also great) final recordings of the song. Still, I'm grateful that this fragment exists. It would be cool to hear remixed into a full length song by some ambitious DJ, that's for sure.

9. Just Like A Woman - Take 4

Here again is one of the highlights of The Cutting Edge. Bob Dylan and his Nashville studio players play one of his most popular 1960s song to "one hell of a beat," as Bob Johnston described it at the end of the recording. It's hard to imagine this having been the version released on Blonde On Blonde, and while they made the right decision in the end, this functions as a window into a much funkier parallel universe. While the lyrics haven't been quite set down as they would be in later takes, the hesitance in Dylan's voice actually contributes to the vulnerability of this songs narrator. We are quite lucky that the tape was running for this one.

10. Temporary Like Achilles - Take 3

We've finally reached another of the songs that may have been more fully realized in a previously unreleased performance. For one reason or another, I felt like I hadn't really gotten to the essence of this song until hearing this take. The album version is a bit too harsh, and Take 3 preserves the darkness of the outcast narrator more effectively. The harmonica remains a bit piercing, but the mix is otherwise immaculate.

11. Love Minus Zero/No Limit - Take 3 Remake

I'm not sure if this is the version of the song that had circulated on bootlegs, but it's a pretty nice alternative to the one featured on Bringing It All Back Home. After the songs had been played acoustically and then with a full band, Dylan played a few of the album's songs with a small backing combo, resulting in some of the finest takes of the sessions. The bass, in particular, stands out as a beautiful complement to the guitar-oriented arrangement; it reminds this listener of the sound that Dylan would later achieve on some of the Blood On The Tracks recordings. The vocals are not as effective as the one chosen for the album, but it's a cool alternative rendition nonetheless.

12. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, it Takes A Train To Cry - Take 8

This performance of the song actually predates the 1965 Newport Folk Festival and the version found on the first volume of this playlist, so it would more accurately be called "Phantom Engineer." It also likewise preserves a notable verse about the engineer and the compasses that would be excised from later recordings. While I almost selected one of the alternative slow versions of the song that resemble the album version, I found that this uptempo performance provided a more unique vision. Similarly, it lacks the somewhat disruptive harmonica found on the slower recordings.

13. She's Your Lover Now - Take 16

Take 16 of "She's Your Lover Now" is one of Bob Dylan's greatest studio achievements, and I'm glad it's finally been properly mixed and released by Sony/Columbia. From the melancholy humming over its introduction to the scathing final verse, this is the most fully realized of the song's three complete recordings. It was also the final one recorded, after the singer had gotten burned out trying to record it with his backing band. Listening to the full session, it's unclear why the song never quite came together, but we should be grateful that the three complete takes present three rather different perspectives on the central theme of a man's complex relationship with his ex-lover and her new flame. The song is one of the writer's most fascinating tales, and is eminently understandable to anyone who has been in a similar situation. It also includes one of Dylan's most beautifully scathing and melancholy passages: "Your mouth used to be so naked, your eyes used to be so blue, your hurts used to be so nameless, your tears used to be so few; now your eyes cry wolf while your mouth cries 'I'm not scared of animals like you.'"

14. One Of Us Must Know (Sooner Or Later) - Take 19

Their juxtaposition on The Cutting Edge makes the similarities of "She's Your Lover Now" and "One Of Us Most Know" more evident than ever before, and I've sought to preserve that with the playlist here. One can speculate that the former evolved into the latter, losing some of its complexity in the transition but gaining a much stronger musical structure. Paul Griffin remains something of an MVP, as he provides lovely piano flourishes between the verses of this Blonde On Blonde outtake. Given the time and effort dedicated to this song in the studio, it's a shame that it never achieved a greater position in the singer's catalog; it went on to be played live only a handful of times outside of 1978, though it was at least realized beautifully on that year's World Tour.

15. Highway 61 Revisited - Take 3

Many listeners love the police whistle on the performance of this song found on Highway 61 Revisited, but I don't count myself among their number. Happily for malcontents like me, this take of the song was recorded before Al Kooper introduced that instrument to the session. A later take also included some excellent harmonica, but this one had the finest vocal performance. You can hear Dylan being rather amused at the surrealist masterpiece he'd painted.

16. Desolation Row - Take 5 Remake

This song seems to have proven a bit difficult to record, though the lyrics are fairly uniform throughout. A number of complete recordings are extant on The Cutting Edge, so it seems that it was a matter of getting several arrangements down on tape, from which the best could be chosen. This has luckily resulted in us having five distinct versions to pick from for a playlist - the fragmentary solo piano version, the solo guitar version, the somewhat baroque classical guitar version (Highway 61 Revisited), the strangely dark electrical guitar version (No Direction Home), and the full-band version I've picked for this playlist. It was something of a toss-up between this and the one originally released on No Direction Home, but this one's uniqueness and the dynamism provided by the keyboard backing made the decision  a bit easier. It's also nice that this one appears on the 6 CD edition, while the alternative appears only on the 18 CD version, and of course No Direction Home. This performance, while not quite up to the standard of the one selected for Highway 61 Revisited, is still quite effective at demonstrating the central narrative's mysterious beauty.

So there you have it. Assemble these yourselves and I'm sure you won't be disappointed. As for what's not included, the most conspicuous tracks missing are:

(A) The fragmentary songs, including "You Don't Have To Do That," "Medicine Sunday," "Jet Pilot," and "Lunatic Princess." Given their incomplete nature, I don't think you'd be missing out much by losing these.

(B) "Mr. Tambourine Man" backed by a band. This is a curiosity, but is ultimately significantly less effective than the solo version released on Bringing It All Back Home. It's worth hearing for Dylan's commentary, but is sadly incomplete.

(C) "Like A Rolling Stone". This song ended up so perfected on Highway 61 Revisited that none of the alternate recordings felt very strong. If you really wanted it included, I'd remove the instrumental track from Volume Two and find a place for its solo piano rendition (Take 4 Rehearsal) on there.

(D) The solo piano "Desolation Row." While this is one of the more fascinating revelations of The Cutting Edge, it ends up feeling a bit fragmentary. Additionally, the harmonica is too piercing, and goes some way to reducing the ethereal quality of the recording.

(E) A bunch of Blonde On Blonde songs, including "Obviously 5 Believers," "Most Likely You'll Go Your Way," "4th Time Around," and "I Want You." While outtakes were present for all of these songs, they were nothing notable. The version of "Obviously 5 Believers" that appears on Blonde  seems to have been something of a minor miracle, as the session demonstrates that the band struggled with its tempo. The versions of "4 Time Around" hew very closely to the album version, while the outtakes of "Most Likely You'll Go Your Way" simply feel unfinished. Finally, there is a reasonably attractive and harmonica-less performance of "I Want You" on The Cutting Edge, but it's similar enough to to the album version to feel a bit superfluous. Like (C) above, if you'd like it included, I suggest swapping it with "Instrumental - Take 2" on Volume Two.

I hope you enjoy the playlist. It was originally designed around Volume One as a daytime experience and Volume Two as a nighttime experience, but I don't think either volume must be listened to in such a rigid fashion. Enjoy it however you'd like, and post you thoughts in the space below. I've listened to the whole 18 CD set, and found that these stand out as the best recordings on there - hopefully you'll feel the same.

Future iterations of this playlist feature will include The Basement Tapes, live performances from the 1970s, live performances from the 1990s, studio recordings from the 1980s, studio recordings from the 1990s, and more! You all seem to enjoy my curation, so this seems like a nice way to incorporate the artist's vast body of officially released content into the context of this playlist website. Until next time, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes.

Cheers,
CS

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Roadhouse Hymns: Unreleased Live Recordings, 1996



Bob Dylan
Roadhouse Hymns: Live 1996

Drifter's Escape - Live - Berlin - June 17, 1996
Shake Sugaree - Live - Berlin - June 17, 1996
Watching The River Flow - Live - Liverpool - June 26, 1996
She Belongs To Me - Live - Cleveland - May 17, 1996
Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I Go Mine) - Live - Burgettstown - May 18, 1996
Love Minus Zero/No Limit - Live - Orono - April 23, 1996
Ballad Of Hollis Brown - Live - Mannheim - July 2, 1996
Visions Of Johanna - Live - Differdange - June 24, 1996
Tombstone Blues - Live - Copenhagen - July 23, 1996
Seven Days - Live - Burgettstown - May 18, 1996
Disease Of Conceit - Live - Buffalo - May 11, 1996
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 - Live - Konstanz - July 3, 1996
The Times They Are A-Changin' - Live - Konstanz - July 3, 1996


Welcome back to the first Thousand Highways compilation of 2016!

1996 was not an especially noteworthy year of performances for Bob Dylan, though it would be the last full year of touring before Dylan shifted towards performing new and traditional material with his 1997 release of Time Out Of Mind. In the interim, he and his band stuck to the sound they had established over the past two years.

One significant difference was a country sound beginning to creep in, replacing some of the hard rock sound of the previous year. The first electric set on Roadhouse Hymns emphasizes this aspect of the band, particularly in the early My Morning Jacket/Johnny Cash fusion of "Watching The River Flow" (my favorite rendition of the song) and a version of "She Belongs To Me" that sounds like it could have been played by Buck Owens.

The acoustic set is a bit different, with "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" and "Visions Of Johanna" getting across the mystical presence of Dylan's 1966 style, albeit in a more precise fashion. "Ballad Of Hollis Brown" is as good a performance of this harrowing song as you're ever likely to hear, with Dylan improvising a new line or two in the middle of the recording. It is in some ways reminiscent of the version he'd recorded with Mike Seeger that saw release on Seeger's Third Annual Farewell Reunion LP, though the song would have to wait until the following decade to have a banjo arrangement played live.

The second electric set is less countrified. "Tombstone Blues" and "Seven Days" rock hard, and wouldn't have been out of place in the previous year's tours. "Disease Of Conceit," as ever, brings out some of Dylan's most committed vocals. It's interesting that this song regularly inspires its singer to some breathtaking performances, though it is one of the least impressive recordings from its original studio release.

I would like to draw special attention to the final two tracks, which feature members of the Dave Matthews Band on saxophone and violin. Andrew Muir's definitive telling of the Never-Ending Tour, One More Night, discusses this Konstanz show in some detail, leading me to seek out the performances. They do not disappoint! "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" is raucous, and "The Times They Are A-Changin'" is as moving as ever, perhaps moreso given the dramatic violin and harmonica duet at the end of the song.

As an important production note, "She Belongs To Me" is slightly shortened here; the edit is not intrusive. I hope you don't mind, and I suggest seeking out the original tape if you'd like to hear the full track.

1996 has not generally been high on my list of Never-Ending Tour years, but compiling this CD gave me a new perspective. If you've not previously enjoyed the year's recordings, I encourage you to listen to this with an open mind. You might find something you hadn't heard before.

Next month brings us a compilation of the best recordings from 1997. This is an extremely fascinating and impressive year for Bob Dylan's performance art, so don't you dare miss it.

Until then, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes.

Cheers,
CS

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Melancholy Mood: Unreleased Live Recordings, Fall 2015



Melancholy Mood
Fall Tour of Europe - 2015

Melancholy Mood - Live - Basel - November 13, 2015
Where Are You - Live - Copenhagen - October 8, 2015
The Night We Called It A Day - Live - Hamburg - November 9, 2015
Why Try To Change Me Now - Live - Hamburg - November 9, 2015
Full Moon & Empty Arms - Live - London - October 22, 2015
All Or Nothing At All - Live - Saarbrucken - October 17, 2015
Come Rain Or Come Shine - Live - Basel - November 14, 2015
I'm A Fool To Want You - Live - Bregenz - November 16, 2015
What'll I Do - Live - Copenhagen - October 8, 2015
Autumn Leaves - Live - Oslo - October 1, 2015


Welcome to a special installment of the Thousand Highways Collection. By special request, I turned my attention to Bob Dylan's covers on his 2015 Fall Tour of Europe. There was quite a bit to pick through, since he and the band performed about seven of these each night, and most nights were recorded.

Choosing the best recordings was the greatest challenge. As can sometimes be taken for granted, the excellent tapers were out with their recording gear throughout the tour. Bach, Spot, RCM, JOY, hhtfp, and Hide presented the songs in lovely sound quality, though the specific sonic landscape changed from night to night. I sought to capture the best tracks in terms of performance, which required significant effort from the singer, and the warmest audio presence. While supremely clean, digital recording does not always present a warm landscape naturally, so some tweaking was necessary at times. I hope I have not caused any harm to the recordings, but for the purest form, as ever, listeners should seek out the source tapes.

One of the greatest obstacles for this set was a cold that Dylan seems to have developed in mid-October. In person, and on the harder-rocking songs, the effect would likely be fairly unnoticeable. On the crystal-clear recordings of these ballads, however, the illness could detract from the singer's central role. Most of the tapes from the middle of the tour, then, were taken out of consideration. This eliminated an otherwise excellent rendition of the title track, "Melancholy Mood," from the Paris show on October 19th, among others. By early November, happily, Dylan's voice had again cleared.

The most intriguing songs are those that had not yet been released on Bob Dylan's wonderful 2015 LP, Shadows In The Night. Three such songs were played: "Melancholy Mood," "Come Rain Or Come Shine," and "All Or Nothing At All." Each was rumored to have been recorded for that record, and studio renditions may yet surface in the coming years. Until then, these great live performances will need to tide us over. Unfortunately, three songs recorded for the aforementioned record were not played: "Stay With Me," "Some Enchanted Evening," and "Lucky Old Sun." You can find live renditions of the first and last of these on Things Have Changed - 2014 and Shadows & Rust - Summer 2015, respectively. "Some Enchanted Evening" has not yet been played live as of December, 2015. Though I endeavor not to tip my personal preferences too much, my favorite tracks are likely the last two. This recording of "What'll I Do" epitomizes the warm sound I was seeking, and the final track, "Autumn Leaves," may be Bob Dylan's finest and most committed vocals on the set.

While I hope everyone enjoys this new, abbreviated collection, I especially hope that I have lived up to the expectations of the listeners who requested the album. I've dedicated quite a bit of time to this project, and would like to submit it to you all as something of a Christmas gift. Thanks for visiting A Thousand Highways in 2015, and I look forward to presenting more content to you in the coming year.

Until then, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes.

Thanks,
CS

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

The Thundering Sky: Unreleased Live Recordings, 1995






The Thundering Sky: Live 1995

Volume One

Down In The Flood - Live - Bethlehem - December 13, 1995
When I Paint My Masterpiece - Live - Bloomington - October 26, 1995
Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues - Live - New York City - December 13, 1995
Under The Red Sky - Live - Philadelphia - December 15, 1995
West LA Fadeaway - Live - Philadelphia - December 17, 1995
Jokerman - Live - London - March 30, 1995
Joey - Live - London - March 31, 1995
Dignity - Live - Brussels - March 23, 1995
What Good Am I? - Live - Philadelphia - June 22, 1995
Highway 61 Revisited - Live - London - March 31, 1995

Volume Two

Visions Of Johanna - Live - Philadelphia - June 21, 1995
Mama, You Been On My Mind - Live - Philadelphia - December 15, 1995
A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall - Live - Philadelphia - December 16, 1995
One Too Many Mornings - Live - Philadelphia - June 22, 1995
Tangled Up In Blue - Live - Philadelphia - June 21, 1995
Mr Tambourine Man - Live - Manchester - April 3, 1995
Dark Eyes - Live - Philadelphia - December 15, 1995
Desolation Row - Live - Bethlehem - December 13, 1995


I hope listeners are ready for some powerful electric performances and some deeply meditative acoustic renditions, because this collection has those in spades.

The Never-Ending Tour rolled steadily through the 1990s, but after shifting from a garage rock sound to a jazz-like aesthetic by 1992, it evolved once again into a heavy rock sound by the middle of the decade. It would change again before 2000, but the only documentation of this ‘heavy’ period in the Thousand Highways Collection so far has been a compilation of the Prague residency in March, 1995. While that residency was a high point of the year, so many more were still to come.

In the electric set, the most notable performances are likely “West LA Fadeaway,” “Dignity,” and “Joey.” The first was a Grateful Dead song that Bob Dylan had been playing at his concerts from the early 1990s, but it really came into its own in 1995. While it was also performed in a semi-acoustic arrangement at Dylan’s unique Fort Lauderdale covers show earlier in 1995, this rendition from the winter tour presents the song at its most elemental. The central riff is in place, and loops throughout the painted picture of Los Angeles’ seedy underbelly. “Dignity,” which was something of a minor hit due to its inclusion on Greatest Hits Volume Three and the MTV Unplugged show, was played intermittently on the 1995 tours. It took some time to find its footing, and would only achieve its full potential a decade later in 2004, but this performance from Brussels is a beautiful, smooth treatment of the song. It’s a little more lively than its studio arrangement, and benefits from the looser style. Finally, this version of “Joey” from London is one of the most stirring performances of the Desire centerpiece. Dylan really lays into the vocals, and though he’s not word-perfect, the passion of the singing and the crunch of the guitars carries you fully into this contentious mobster ballad.

The acoustic set is anchored by “Visions Of Johanna,” “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall,” “Dark Eyes,” and “Desolation Row.” The first is often spoken of as one of the song’s best outings during the 1990s. The singer’s fully committed, and presents the song with the precision he afforded it back in 1966; his unique way of singing the iconic lines “the ghost of electricity / howls in the bones of her face” is one highlight among many. “Hard Rain” is provided one of the more fascinating arrangement I’ve heard - while the song starts in a typical style, a baroque guitar riff becomes more present as the song continues, spurring Dylan into more curious vocal styles. It has to be heard to be believed, and gives the long song an evolving dynamic to pull the listener in. “Dark Eyes” had previously been played live only once, in a truncated fashion, on Bob Dylan’s 1986 tour. Patti Smith, for whom Dylan had arranged his rare December tour, requested the song specifically, and it was played as a duet throughout the brief stint. It was performed to varying degrees of success, but this rendition from Philadelphia stands out as the best of the recordings available. At last, “Desolation Row” acts as an apt conclusion to the compilation. I’ve heard that author Clinton Heylin has claimed this as the best performance of the song, and you’d be hard-pressed to better it. It really is something of a journey, and the listener will no doubt be compelled to stick with the narrator clear through to the end.

Normally, as the consistent visitor will know, I don’t like to present a tour’s acoustic and electric portions separately. In this case, though, I made an exception. I found that including three acoustic performances on the electric disc truncated the set conspicuously, and it seemed to diminish the power of both styles. In the end, I settled on a full-running electric disc and a briefer acoustic disc, which would be suitable for different occasions. The electric set rocks, ideal for a commute, a workout, or some other kind of activity; the acoustic set, soft and confessional, would be preferable for an evening’s drive in the country or relaxing with a glass of wine after a long day. However you choose to enjoy these songs, I have no doubt you’ll enjoy them quite a bit.

On a humorous, informal note, did anyone notice that the first four songs on Volume Two are from different dates in Philadelphia? Shows from that city make up a full 75% of the songs on the acoustic set! I wonder what was going on in Philadelphia that year that added up to excellent recordings married to excellent performances.

Next month will see the appearance of a long-overlooked year on this website. By popular demand, 1996 will finally be getting its due. It gave us Bob Dylan's spectacular reading of "Shake Sugaree," but it really gave so much more. Check in on January 1 for the full exploration of this content. Until then, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes.

Thanks,
CS

Sunday, November 1, 2015

SC93: Live At The Supper Club



SC93
Live at the Supper Club

Ragged & Dirty - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Early)
One Too Many Mornings - Live - New York City - November 16, 1993 (Late)
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight - Live - New York City - November 16, 1993 (Late)
Jim Jones - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Late)
Weeping Willow - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Late)
Ring Them Bells - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Early)
Has Anybody Seen My Love - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Late)
Disease Of Conceit - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Early)
Blood In My Eyes - Live - New York City - November 16, 1993 (Early)
Delia - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Early)
I Want You - Live - New York City - November 16, 1993 (Early)
Queen Jane Approximately - Live - New York City - November 17, 1993 (Early)
Jack-a-Roe - Live - New York City - November 16, 1993 (Late)
Forever Young - Live - New York City - November 16, 1993 (Late)


Bob Dylan’s performance at New York City’s Supper Club in November 1993 has gone down in legend as one of his more notable series of concerts. This is due largely to the very unique setlists, acoustic arrangements, and the circulation of excellent soundboard recordings.

I’ve collected the best of these here, and applied a bit of reverb to sweeten the sound, giving it a less harsh aural environment. The vocals are still mixed to the front, and the rhythm section is still crisp. In particular, dig the bass on “Jim Jones.” Spectacular stuff.

A handful of tracks here have appeared on previous Thousand Highways compilations, but they still represent the finest performances from this four night residency. Including them in one place presents a very pleasant listening experience from beginning to end, and I’d encourage the wine-drinking listeners to pour themselves a glass to accompany this collection.

As a word of warning, this is not the best era for Dylan’s voice, and it can come across a bit shrill. There were also a variety of digital flaws present on the soundboard tapes, which I’ve done my best to eliminate with a minimum of intrusion. I think you’ll be happy with the results, as they are an improvement on my earlier efforts with this material.

Highlights of the set include any of the unique songs - audiences of these four shows were lucky to catch the only live performances of “Ragged & Dirty,” “Blood In My Eyes,” “Jack-a-Roe,” and “Weeping Willow.” The Good As I Been To You and World Gone Wrong songs are noteworthy for being played in acoustic band arrangements, even though they appear as solo performances on their original recordings. The singer’s look back into his older catalog is successful as well, with moving renditions of “Ring Them Bells,” “Has Anybody Seen My Love,” “Disease of Conceit,” “Queen Jane Approximately,” and “Forever Young.” “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight” and “I Want You” receive light but spirited readings, and serve to quicken the tempo of the set. In one of the more interesting arrangements, “One Too Many Mornings” includes a banjo!

I hope you enjoy the collection. It’s been requested often, and I think it will live up to expectations.

Next month, we'll move on to 1995! That was an excellent year for Dylan's acoustic and electric performances, as he played to the strengths of both styles. This website previously covered only the Prague Residency from March, 1995, so December will bring a welcome expansion. Until next time, keep yourself healthy and listen to some good tunes.

-CS

Note: The artwork incorrectly assigns "Ring Them Bells" to the late show on November 17. In fact, I believe it originates at the early show on the same day. Nothing on this compilation has been officially released. Kudos to commenter Yama for making me aware of this issue.