Category Archives: live

So, Would You Want the Newport Guitar or Bob Dylan’s ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ Lyrics?

Bob Dylan at the Newport Folk Festival performing “Like A Rolling Stone.”

In response to my post yesterday, “Bob Dylan’s ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ Manuscript Sells for $2 Million But Dylan’s Secrets Remain Secret,” Mike Jones commented:

The LARS lyrics went for more than I thought they would…how are a few pieces of paper worth more than the Newport guitar? I don’t get the whole ephemera thing. I guess people like to have historical stuff, just to look at or whatever. But I would much rather have the Newport guitar, which sold for like half as much. That seems very strange to me.

I understand why some folks, especially musicians, would want the guitar Bob Dylan played at the Newport Folk Festival gig that drew the line between the old Dylan, and the new.

For me though — and I’m not saying paying $2 mil makes any kind of sense — between the guitar and the manuscript, I’d go for the manuscript.

Guitar:

Bob Dylan’s Newport guitar sold for $965,000.

Here’s why.

Certainly the guitar is an iconic object, symbolic of Dylan’s rejection of so-called ‘folk music’ for rock ‘n’ roll, but he could have played any Strat that day and made the same music, made the same impact. Dylan’s art and his creativity didn’t hinge on that particular guitar. In fact, he played many guitars over the years. It’s always been Dylan, not his instruments, that makes the difference.

But that manuscript.

That’s the artist at work. That’s the artist in the throes of the creative process.

On those pages we see the song take shape. Words crossed out and other words written in. The chorus forming before our eyes from page to page.

And those cryptic notes to the side of the lyrics. “Al Capone,” “On the Road,” “Pony Blues,” “Butcher Boy.”

From these pages and the ones for “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” we get the curtain pulled back a little on Dylan’s creative process.

And when one combines what’s on these pages, with what he reveals in “Chronicles: Volume One” and elsewhere, we do get a vague sense of the Dylan mind at work.

We’ll never get to the bottom of it, and it’s probably better that way, but still.

So Bob Dylan’s ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ lyrics are very different from the Newport guitar. They’re a time machine that takes us back to that day (s) when Bob Dylan put the ideas that were in his head down on hotel stationary, and created a timeless song, a song that, nearly 50 years after he wrote it, stands tall.

But what do you think?

Would you opt for the Newport guitar, or the “Like A Rolling Stone” manuscript pages?

Manuscript:

Bob Dylan’s ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ lyrics: The four pages went for half a million a page.

Or is there something else that you’d go for instead. If you had the money, and if you could afford to spend it in this way.

Bob Dylan at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 singing “Like A Rolling Stone”:


Bob Dylan – Like a Rolling Stone (Live… by toma-uno

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blot post —

Bob Dylan Live, Videos from Thessaloniki Harbor, Greece – June 22, 2014 — ‘All Along The Watchtower’ & More

Bob Dylan live in Greece.

Bob Dylan live at Thessaloniki Harbor in Thessaloniki, Greece last night.

Dylan sounds quite good based on these clips and the band is really swinging. I’m very impressed with Dylan’s band. Shows last year and this show what a killer performing unit they are. Based on the shows in Japan, Ireland, Turkey and now Greece, this is going to be a great year for Dylan in concert. Hopefully we’ll have a new album before the end of the year, and then I’m hoping another bootleg series set in 2015.

It’s going to be very interesting to see what Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone” manuscript sells for at auction tomorrow. I’ve seen an estimate that it could sell for as much as $2 million. Crazy. Well we’ll know soon enough.

Meanwhile, I hope you enjoy the videos of Bob Dylan live at Thessaloniki Harbor below.

Dylan and band:

Bob Dylan – vocal, piano, harp
Charlie Sexton on lead guitar
Donnie Herron – banjo, viola, violin, electric mandolin, pedal steel, lap steel
Stu Kimball – rhythm guita
Tony Garnier – bass
George Recile – drums

Bob Dylan live at Thessaloniki Harbor:

Things Have Changed plus all of “She Belongs To Me”:

“She Belongs to Me”:

Excerpt:

“Beyond Here Lies Nothin'”
“What Good Am I?”
“Duquesne Whistle”
“Pay in Blood”
“Tangled Up in Blue”

“Love Sick”:

“High Water (For Charley Patton)”
“Simple Twist of Fate”
“Early Roman Kings”

“Forgetful Heart”:

“Summer Days”:

“A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall”:

“Soon after Midnight”
“Long and Wasted Years”

Encore:

“All Along the Watchtower”:

Another view:

“All Along the Watchtower” & “Blowin’ in the Wind”:

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —

Audio: Bob Dylan Performs ‘Duquesne Whistle’ & ‘Forgetful Heart’ at the Black Box, Istanbul, June 20, 2014

Bob Dylan performs “Duquesne Whistle” at the Black Box, Istanbul, Turkey on June 20, 2014.

“Forgetful Heart”:

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Audio: Bob Dylan Sings ‘Love Sick’ at The O2, Dublin, June 17, 2014 + ‘Simple Twist Of Fate’

Bob Dylan singing “Love Sick” at his The O2 performance in Dublin, just posted today.

Good sound!

Dig it.

“Simple Twist Of Fate”:

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Audio: Bob Dylan Live At The Hammersmith Apollo, London – Nov. 20, 2011 – Full Set

Bob Dylan’s complete set from his Nov. 20, 2011 appearance at the Hammersmith Apollo in London.

Setlist

Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat
All Over Now, Baby Blue
Things Have Changed
Trying To Get To Heaven
Honest With Me
Tangled Up In Blue
Summer Days
Blind Willie McTell
Highway 61 Revisited
Desolation Row
Thunder On The Mountain
Ballad Of A Thin Man
All Along The Watchtower
Like A Rolling Stone

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Audio: Download Jack White’s Smokin’ 26-Song Bonnaroo Set Right Now

Download and listen to Jack White’s entire 26-song Nonnaroo set.

Available for free — at least for now.

Here.

Plus:

And more:

Setlist:

Icky Thump (The White Stripes)
High Ball Stepper (Solo)
Lazaretto (Solo)
Hotel Yorba (The White Stripes)
Temporary Ground (Solo)
Missing Pieces (Solo)
Steady, As She Goes (The Raconteurs)
Top Yourself (The Raconteurs)
I’m Slowly Turning Into You (The White Stripes)
Freedom at 21 (Solo)
Three Women (Solo)
You Don’t Know What Love Is (You Just Do As You’re Told) (The White Stripes)
We’re Going to Be Friends (The White Stripes)
Alone in My Home (Solo)
Ball and Biscuit (The White Stripes)
The Lemon Song (Led Zeppelin cover)

Encore:
The Hardest Button to Button (The White Stripes)
Hello Operator (The White Stripes)
Misirlou (Dick Dale and His Del-Tones cover)
Sixteen Saltines (Solo)
Cannon (The White Stripes)
Blue Blood Blues (The Dead Weather)
Astro (The White Stripes)
Love Interruption (Solo)
Little Bird (The White Stripes)
Seven Nation Army (The White Stripes)

Thanks Consequence Of Sound!

– A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Video: Bob Dylan Sings ‘Forgetful Heart,’ ‘Blowin’ In The Wind’ & More in Dublin – June 17, 2014

More from the June 17, 2014 Dublin show at The O2.

The sound is quite good for these clips so I have included a few songs I posted yesterday. I think the quality is uniformly better today.

If you missed my previous post with clips from this show, here is is.

“High Water” (For Charley Patton)”:

“Simple Twist Of Fate”:

“Forgetful Heart”:

“Long And Wasted Years”:

“All Along The Watchtower”:

“Blowin’ In The Wind”:

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Video: Angel Olsen’s ‘Hi-Five’ Live On ‘Letterman’

20140617-092142-33702204.jpg

Angel Olsen delivered the goods last night when she performed “Hi-Five” on Late Show With David Letterman.

Watch it now.

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Video: Bob Dylan, Neil Young Cover Late ’50s Rocker, ‘Everybody’s Movin” – June 10, 1988

The other day I did post with tracks from Bob Dylan’s show at the Greek Theater In Berkeley on June 10, 1988.

Neil Young joined Dylan for some songs.

This version of the late ’50d Glen Glenn non-hit, “Everybody’s Movin’,” is really cool.

Glen Glenn’s original:

— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —