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Live at The Gaslight 1962 is a live album including ten songs from early Bob Dylan performances recorded in October 1962 at The Gaslight Cafe in New York City's Greenwich Village. Released in 2005 by Columbia Records , it was originally distributed through an exclusive 18-month deal with Starbucks , after which it was released to the general ...
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Gaslight Cafe, New York City (time unknown) [5] "Barbara Allen" (Traditional) – Live recording released on Live at The Gaslight 1962 "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" – Live recording released on Live at The Gaslight 1962 "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" – Live recording released on Live at The Gaslight 1962
The Gaslight Cafe was a coffeehouse in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York. Also called The Village Gaslight, it opened in 1958 and became a venue for folk music and other musical acts.
Several tapes of Dylan performing at the Gaslight have long been circulating among collectors, although it is not known when the first bootlegs containing them were produced. However, in 2005, Columbia Records released Live at the Gaslight 1962 , which contained ten of the seventeen songs from one of these tapes.
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In 2010, the Gaslight Anthem released their third album and last for SideOne Dummy, American Slang. The album reached number sixteen in the US and eighteen in the UK. The album's title track was one of three singles released and had minor success in Canada but failed to chart in the US.
In the Vancouver Sun in 1970, the critic Al Rudis referred to "John Brown" as "one of the best yet least known Dylan protest songs", calling the Broadside Ballads version "chilling", and comparing it to the screenwriter Dalton Trumbo's 1939 novel Johnny Got His Gun; [16] [17] both works give a severely-injured soldier's perspective.