Forty-eight years ago, on May 10, 1966, Bob Dylan and the Hawks played Colson Hall in Bristol, England.
Among the songs they performed was this devastating version of “Ballad of a Thin Man.”
And this is from a different show in England:
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
The Arctic Monkeys participated in the Australian radio network Triple J’s “Like A Version” cover series, covering the Arctic Monkey’s “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards.”
The Arctic Monkeys’ acoustic version is quite good.
Arctic Monkeys, “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards”:
And the original.
Tame Impala, “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards”:
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Fifty-three years ago, in May of 1961, Bob Dylan performed somewhere in Minnesota and played a bunch of classic folk and blues songs.
His set was recorded and has been circulating as a bootleg for years.
Below is the only recording of Dylan playing the Reverend Gary Davis’ “Death Don’t Have No Mercy.”
On his website Dylan expert Olof Björner wrote:
In an interview Jaharana Romney, formerly Bonnie Beecher (interview by Markus Wittman, May 1989) talks about the song Why’d You Cut My Hair?:
“He came to my apartment and said, ‘It’s an emergency! I need your help! I gotta go home an’ see my mother!’ He was talking in the strangest Woody Guthrie-Oklahoma accent. I don’t know if she was sick, but it was an unexpected trip he had to make up to Hibbing and he wanted me to cut his hair.” He kept saying, ‘Shorter! Shorter! Get rid of the sideburns!’ So I did my very best to do what he wanted and then in the door come Dave Morton, Johnny Koerner and Harvey Abrams. They looked at him and said, ‘Oh my God, you look terrible! What did you do?’ And Dylan immediately said, ‘She did it! I told her just to trim it up a little bit but she cut it all off. I wasn’t looking in a mirror!’ And then he went and wrote that song, ‘Bonnie, why’d you cut my hair? Now I can’t go nowhere!’ He played it that night in a coffeehouse and somebody told me recently that they had been to Minnesota and somebody was still playing that song, ‘Bonnie, Why’d You Cut My Hair?’ It’s like a Minnesota classic! And so I’ve gone down in history!”
This tape may therefore come from a coffeehouse performance. The circulating tape is known as Minnesota Party Tape 1961.
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
On May 5, 2014, Dave Grohl and his band, Foo Fighters, played a secret show at Washington, DC’s 9:30 Club to celebrate Big Tony Fisher of Trouble Funk’s birthday.
Here are clips that a number of fans shot. Some of the footage is fantastic, some so-so.
“Times Like These”:
“Times Like These” (alternative view):
“Pretender”:
“There Goes My Hero”:
“Generator”:
“Cold Day In The Sun”:
“Monkey Wrench”
“Monkey Wrench” (another view):
“All My Life”:
“Foo Fighters:”
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
In 1974 Patti Smith performed at Max’s Kansas City backed by Lenny Kaye and Richard Sohl.
These videos find Smith performing songs that she soon dropped from her set, including “Picture Hanging Blues” and “We Three.”
The video was shot by photogrpaher Bob Gruen.
Although the quality is crude, this is amazing and if you dig Patti Smith you’ve got to see it.
“Paint It Black”:
“Land”:
“Hey Joe”:
“I’m Wild About That Thing”:
“Picture Hanging Blues”:
“Piss Factory”:
“The Hunter Gets Captured By The Game”:
“We Three”:
“We’re Gonna Have A Real Good Time Together”:
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Bruce Springsteen, John Fogerty at the New Orleans Jazz Fest.
Terrific version of “Green River” performed by Bruce Springsteen, John Fogerty and the E Street Band at the New Orleans Jazz Festival on May 3, 2014.
Plus an excerpt of “Proud Mary”:
Springsteen, “The Promised Land”:
Here’s better video of a portion of “The Promised Land”:
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
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Sharon Van Etten’s Are We There is due out May 27, 2014. It just got a mindblowing review in the New Yorker.
While we wait for it we can watch Van Etten cover Bruce Springsteen’s “Drive All Night” at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, NJ.
Plus here she talks about her connection to Springsteen.
[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]
– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Page two of “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall.” I’ve manipulated the contrast to make the words more legible.
In 1963, when Studs Terkel spoke about “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” during a radio interview with Bob Dylan, he made a comment to Dylan about how the song had come out of his feelings about “atomic rain.”
“No, no,” Dylan said. “It’s not atomic rain, it’s just a hard rain. It isn’t the fallout rain. I mean some sort of end that’s just gotta happen … In the last verse, when I say, ‘the pellets of poison are flooding the waters’, that means all the lies that people get told on their radios and in their newspapers.”
Now it turns out Dylan was telling stories, and not being frank with Terkel.
Two pages of the working manuscript for “A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall” will be auctioned by Sotheby’s on June 24, 2014 in New York.
In examining photos of the manuscript pages that appeared in a New York Times story about the auction of this manuscript and the one for “Like A Rolling Stone,” it’s clear that Dylan meant the song to refer, at least in the chorus, to nuclear annihilation.
Right on the manuscript maybe two inches to the right of the line “It’s A Hard Rain’s A Gonna Fall” Dylan wrote “Hiroshima” and under that, “Nagasaki” — the two Japanese cities the U.S. bombed during World War II. A uranium gun-type atomic bomb (Little Boy) was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, followed by a plutonium implosion-type bomb (Fat Man) on the city of Nagasaki on August 9. according to Wikipedia.
Clearly Dylan was being Dylan when he spoke to Terkel.
Unlike the manuscript for “Like A Rolling Stone,” where that song was a work in progress, “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” is finished. But what’s interesting about these two manuscript pages are other things that Dylan has written on the pages.
For instance, near the right edge of the second page it says “Robert Houdin book,” which likely refers to a book about the French magician Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin, who is considered the father of modern conjuring.
On that same page Dylan wrote “Black is the color of my true love’s hair,” which is the title of an Appalachian folk song that Joan Baez recorded in 1962; on the manuscript, below the name of that song, Dylan has written “Baez Club 47.” Club 47 was a Cambridge, Massachusetts folk music venue where Dylan performed.
Joan Baez, “Black is the Color (Of My True Love’s Hair)”:
Also written at the side of the manuscript is “Railroad Boy,” which was the name Dylan and Baez used for a song that was variously called “The Butcher’s Boy,” “Go Bring Me Back My Blue-Eyed Boy” and “London City.” Dylan heard a 1928 recording of “The Butcher’s Boy” by Buell Kazee on Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music. Below “Railroad Boy” is a line from the song: “She went upstairs to make her bed.”
Dylan wrote “Doctor Strange.” near the bottom of the page and “Miss Masque” and “Bullet Girl,” all names of comic book super heroes, although the third super hero was actually called “Bulletgirl.”
Miss Masque.
Dylan quoted from Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Black Cat,” writing down the phrase “solitary eye of fire.” The short story is about “a murderer [who] carefully conceals his crime and believes himself unassailable, but eventually breaks down and reveals himself, impelled by a nagging reminder of his guilt,” according to Wikipedia.
And he wrote “Have Mercy Baby,” and “Dominoes,” referring of course to The Dominoes’ “Have Mercy Baby,” an R&B hit in 1952.
The Dominoes,” Have Mercy Baby”:
Clearly even in 1962 when Dylan wrote “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall,” he was already a master collage artist, utilizing bits and pieces of culture from the past to craft his own unique art.
The two manuscript pages are expected to sell for between $400,000 and $600,000 according to the New York Times.
“A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” (Town Hall, New York, April 12, 1963):
Page one.
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