Tag Archives: One Too Many Mornings

Audio: Stream More Tracks From Bob Dylan’s ‘Basement Tapes Complete’ – ‘Edge Of The Ocean,’ ‘I Shall Be Released’ & Ten More

Photo by Elliott Landy.

Listen to 12 songs off Bob Dylan’s soon to be released The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 at NPR “First Listen.” The 6-CD box set is out November 4, 2014.

The songs:

Edge Of The Ocean (Disc 1, Track 1)

You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere (Take 1) (Disc 3, Track 17)

I Shall Be Released (Take 1) (Disc 3, Track 19)

Quinn The Eskimo (Take 1) (Disc 4, Track 4)

This Wheel’s On Fire (Disc 3, Track 21)

Johnny Todd (Disc 2, Track 1)

Don’t Ya Tell Henry (Disc 4, Track 21)

I Don’t Hurt Anymore (Disc 2, Track 19)

Silent Weekend (Disc 5, Track 12)

Crash On The Levee (Take 1) (Disc 3, Track 10)

One Too Many Mornings (Disc 5, Track 2)

I’m Your Teenage Prayer (Disc 2, Track 8)

[I just published my rock ‘n’ roll novel, True Love Scars.” Rolling Stone has a great review of my book in the new issue. Read it here. There’s info about True Love Scars here.]

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Audio/Video: Bob Dylan, Tom Petty in Hartford, CT – 1986 – ‘Knocking On Heaven’s Door,’ ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ & More

Bob Dylan backed by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers at the Civic Center Auditorium in Hartford, CT, July 11, 1986.

These are all audio except for the last which is a great video clip of “Knocking On Heaven’s Door” from another show on the tour.

“Across The Boarderline”:

“Blowin’ In The Wind”:

“When the Night Comes Falling From The Sky”:

“I and I”:

“One Too Many Mornings”:

“Ballad Of A Thin Man”:

“Like A Rolling Stone”:

“Lay Lady Lay”:

“Knocking On Heaven’s Door”:

Plus a video of “Knocking On Heaven’s Door” from the tour with Petty:

And I don’t know what this is from:

“The Man In Me”:

[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.

Or watch an arty video with audio of me reading from the novel here.

–- A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Audio: Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash’s ‘Nashville Skyline’ Session – Feb. 18, 1969

Photo via LastFM.

Yesterday I did a post about the first Nashville Skyline session to produce music that ended up on the album. (There was an unproductive session the previous day but no information about what was recorded has surfaced.)

Aside from the resulting album, Nashville Skyline, a country gem that is as peculiar as it is enjoyable, what is most interesting about the making of the album has to do with a guest artist who joined Dylan in the studio on February 18, 1969.

Johnny Cash!

Previously Dylan hadn’t had much luck working with other big stars. Things were awkward with John Lennon, and he didn’t care for Andy Warhol at all, according to those who were at the Factory when Dylan met Warhol.

But with Johnny Cash Dylan hit pay dirt. Their recording of “Girl From the North Country” is terrific, and some of other others are wonderful.

So today I’m posting a bunch of songs from the Dylan/Cash session plus an alternative take of “Country Pie” from the February 14, 1968 session.

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “One Too Many Mornings” take 1:

One Too Many Morninigs #1 by Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “One Too Many Mornings” version 2:

One Too Many Mornigs #2 by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash, “I Still Miss Someone”:

I Still Miss Someone by Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Careless Love”:

Careless Love by Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “That’s Alright Mama”:

That's Alright Mama by Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash, “Big River”:

Big River by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Girl From the North Country,” this is on Nashville Skyline but it’s awesome so I couldn’t leave it out:

Girl Of The North Country by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “I Walk the Line”:

I Walk The Line by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Ring of Fire”:

Ring Of Fire by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Guess Things Happen That Way”:

Guess Things Happen That Way by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Just A Closer Walk With Thee”:

Just A Closer Walk With Thee by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Blue Yodel” version 1:

Blues Yodel #1 by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash, “Blue Yodel” version 2:

Blues Yodel #5 by Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Country Pie,” alternative version with steel guitar:

Country Pie by Bob Dylan & Johnny Cash on Grooveshark

Audio: Bob Dylan Kicks Off Landmark 1966 Electric Rock ‘n’ Roll Tour – Feb. 4, 1966

Forty-eight years ago, on February 4, 1966, Bob Dylan and the Hawks kicked off their unprecedented 1966 world tour.

Unprecedented because never before had a popular artist so radically altered their art.

Less than a year earlier, in May of 1965, Dylan had completed a tour of England at the Royal Albert Hall. That tour was documented in “Don’t Look Back,” and during it Dylan remained the folk singer — playing harp and an acoustic guitar.

Dylan was known throughout the world in early 1965 as a folksinger. His first four albums found him playing guitar, harp and piano.

But 17 days after 1965 English tour tour ended, on May 27, 1965, Dylan released Bringing It All Back Home, an album whose first half was a new kind of rock ‘n’ roll, one that mixed caustic poetry with bluesy rock and Dylan’s unique vocals.

Two months later the single “Like a Rolling Stone” was released, and Dylan was a full-fledged rock star.

“Like A Rolling Stone” was a hit, reaching #2 in the U.S. and charting in the Top 10 in a number of other countries including England.

Dylan blew minds when he performed electric rock ‘n’ roll at Newport on July 24, 1965. Dylan and the Hawks played Forest Hills Tennis Stadium in New York on August 28, and then Highway 61 Revisited, Dylan’s first total rock ‘n’ roll album, was released on August 30.

October, November and December found Dylan and the Hawks barnstorming through America.

The 1966 World Tour began in the U.S., but eventually hit Australia and then England, and it was in England, where fans had last seen Dylan with an acoustic guitar, that fans reacted with fury to Dylan going electric.

“They absolutely hated us,” Robbie Robertson said of a tour in which audiences didn’t comprehend some of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll every played.

As Greil Marcus wrote in his book “Invisible Republic – Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes”: “In America, this music was, in a way, prophetic. At the very least the sound and its reception prefigured an America that, soon enough, for everyone, would be all too familiar: a country split in half over race and war, with battles in the streets, guns fired on college campuses, ghastly riots in cities across the nation, leaders falling to assassins as if on a schedule set by public fantasy, screamers driven from meeting halls with clubs, common citizens driven from their streets with gas and bullets.

“But in the United Kingdom, where after eight months on the road the ensemble had likely reached the limits of their capacities, and reveled at the fact, the hatred for Dylan’s new music and for what he had become was somehow more abstract than in the United States, and more impersonal — uglier.

“It was as if he had betrayed not simply the Freedom Sinfgers, or Woody Guthrie, or the fan who was now shouting, but the Folk immemorial, the mystic chords of memory. The very instinct that history contained identity and one could claim it. In any case the response now made the controversies of the past seasons fade into their own abstraction. In the music Dylan and the Hawks sent off stages in May of 1966, absurdity wars with terror, terror with exultation, exultation with loathing. It was all too much, it couldn’t last and it didn’t.”

Below are live performances from the 1966 World Tour.

“Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues,” April 13 1966, Sydney:

“I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Have Never Met),” APril 13, 1966:

“Positively 4th Street,” April 13 1966, Sydney:

“Tell Me, Momma,” May 14, 1966, Liverpool:

“Like A Rolling Stone,” May 14, 1966, Liverpool:

“One Too Many Mornings,” May 16, 1966, Sheffield:

“Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat,” May 26, 1966, Royal Albert Hall, London:

“Ballad Of A Thin Man,” May 26, 1966, Royal Albert Hall, London:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-