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In spite of the song's title, it is not a blues but rather a folk song that uses the same chord pattern as Pachelbel's Canon. [1] Dylan scholar and musicologist Eyolf Ostrem notes that "[m]usically, it is a close cousin of "'Cross the Green Mountain" with which it shares the ever-descending bass line and some of the chord shadings that never manage to decide whether they're major or minor (and ...
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan: 1963: 2010 Blues Club (Playback) Dylan Unreleased 2010 Instrumental from the film My Own Love Song: 1963 Blues Jam Dylan The 50th Anniversary Collection - 1963 2013 1964 Bob and Eric Blues #1 Dylan, Eric Von Schmidt: The 50th Anniversary Collection - 1964 1965: Bob Dylan's 115th Dream: Dylan: Bringing It All Back ...
Bob Dylan: Behind the Shades Revisited. Perennial Currents. ISBN 0-06-052569-X; Heylin, Clinton (2009). Revolution in the Air: The Songs of Bob Dylan, 1957-1973. Cappella Books. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-1556528439. Marqusee, Mike (2005). Wicked Messenger: Bob Dylan And the 1960s. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1583226865.
"Slow Train" has an earlier genesis than most of the songs on Slow Train Coming.It began life as an instrumental Dylan used to warm up with on tour in late 1978. [3] A recording of the song with some lyrics exists from a soundcheck of a December 2, 1978 show in Nashville, Tennessee, although only the chorus and a few lines from that version were retained on the ultimate recording. [4]
[3] [unreliable source] [2] Sixteen artists collaborated to compile the album, which was released on October 5, 2010, by Reimagine Music. [4] [5] The first eleven songs of the compilation appeared on Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home. The twelfth song was released only as a single, while the final four songs appeared on Dylan's official ...
An article accompanying the list described the album: "Not bound by genre or style, Dylan digs through a plethora of blues, country and rock songs, offering his audience the chance to hear the indigenous stories behind the music. Dylan spins the songs into a thread far more modern but is still able to weave them into the tapestry of the country ...
Fourteen basement tape songs appeared in 1968 on a demo privately circulated by Dylan's publishing company, Dwarf Music. [2] Public awareness of the basement recordings increased with the release of the first bootleg, Great White Wonder, in 1969. [3] In 1975 CBS officially released The Basement Tapes, but only sixteen of the twenty-four songs ...
Dylan has performed the song live 294 times, from its debut in 1976 to his most recent live rendition in 2005. It was presented in the style of a torch song during his 1978 World Tour, as heard on Bob Dylan at Budokan (1978). Dylan also revisited the song in 1987 on a co-tour with the Grateful Dead; their version was released on Dylan & the ...