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It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" concludes Bringing It All Back Home in consistent fashion. [8] Much speculation has surrounded who or what the "Baby Blue" to whom Dylan is singing farewell is. Although Dylan himself has remained mute on the subject, Dylan scholars believe that it is probably an amalgam of personalities within Dylan's social orbit.
Bringing It All Back Home (known as Subterranean Homesick Blues in some European countries; sometimes also spelled Bringin' It All Back Home [6]) is the fifth studio album by the American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released in April 1965 by Columbia Records.
"Baby Blue" was released as a single in the US on 6 March 1972, in a blue-tinted picture sleeve and featuring a new mix. [1] Because Al Steckler, the head of Apple US, felt that it needed a stronger hook in the opening, he remixed the track with engineer Eddie Kramer in February 1972, applying heavy reverb to the snare during the first verse and middle eight. [1]
Insane Clown Posse sampled this song for their 1999 single "Another Love Song", from their album The Amazing Jeckel Brothers, but the sample was cleared with Bob Dylan, the writer of "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue", rather than Beck. [3] The track is used in an episode of the Chris Morris radio show Blue Jam.
Bob Dylan's draft lyrics for his 1965 song Mr Tambourine Man have sold at auction for $508,000 (£417,471) in the US. ... The lyrics on two yellow sheets of paper are three typewritten drafts of ...
It's All Over Now, Baby Blue [15] Antony and the Johnsons: Knockin' on Heaven's Door [16] Pressing On [17] Eddy Arnold: Blowin' in the Wind [18] Articolo 31: Like a Rolling Stone: Recorded as "Come Una Pietra Scalciata" [19] The Association: One Too Many Mornings [20] Hugues Aufray: All I Really Want to Do: Recorded as "Ce Que Je Veux Surtout ...
"It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry" is a song written by Bob Dylan, that was originally released on his album Highway 61 Revisited. It was recorded on July 29, 1965. The song was also included on an early, European Dylan compilation album entitled Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits 2.
The single was released on vinyl and compact disc in multiple countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Japan. The standard releases of the single feature "Drag" as well as a cover of Bob Dylan's "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" as B-sides. "Malibu" was one of Hole's most commercially and critically successful songs.