Everything started in a cold, dark New York, in smoky cafes, dusty libraries and small apartments. The rest is history. Bob is the greatest writer of our times. I got no doubt about it.
I think Dylan is the best songwriter of all time, and might likely keep that title. The same way The Beatles may never be overtaken as the most popular band. It's just a different world now. Seems so unlikely for anything to come that way again. 60s from a historical point is just the perfect storm for music to evolve. I think Inside Llewyn Davis did such a good job of showing where Bob came from. And also the movie No Direction Home, but everyone knows that if they're listening to this song, probably.
Saw this 20 year old kid play the other day and he's still got it. The feeling of listening to this song and knowing how 60 years later after changing music forever that he's still on stage playing for all of us, is utterly beautiful.
@@paddyshIf you had really been a long time fan then you would know he has changed song melody and done very little audience interaction his entire career and people like you still don’t get it. The only one you should be disgusted at is yourself for going in with false expectations out of your own ignorance.
I love this song's honesty and simplicity. You do not need to guess how much Bob admires Woody Guthrie for his positive impact on music and the world. I tear up sometimes when I listen.
I got so emotional listening to this again, after many years that have gone by. I had a large group of friends that would go to hippie festivals, gatherings, camping, partying... All the great adventures we had and the tunes we listened to and often played ourselves, singing together at times. I've put many miles behind me since those days, 20 - 30 years worth. I miss the good people I once knew, most moved, some are still moving, and a few have left this state of being for the energy ether of the great beyond. I don't know who I was, but I was something, and now I'm not. I've changed, as time passes, and more miles under my feet, and passing behind me. I love you, and miss you, all of you.... JT🗻
Sixty years ago, “Song to Woody” was the first of the two songs (by now they number over 600) composed by Dylan for his debut album. He was just a kid, probably 21 years old, or a 200-year old man well-disguised. Can anyone think of a poet or songwriter who began his career with a first composition so stunningly simple, intimate, honest, and casually skilled? A composition that remains among the best of a huge body of supreme work created over a lifetime? I first listened to “Song to Woody” in 1965, three years after its release. I’ve heard it at least a hundred times since. Still, to this day, when I put on headphones to listen to my MP3’s shuffled Dylan playlist, and “Song to Woody” begins to sound in my ears, I become freshly re-wakened--as if to first breath, first bell, first beep, first blare, first bird note, first bark.
I was a few decades from being able to enjoy the nostalgia that you do, but I've gone back and learned so much about the music I couldn't catch the first time around, and this man... His poetic music and the history he's documented within it would have gripped me immediately. I always appreciate another that really listens to music, so thanks because I don't see many in my day to day.
The way he writes his lyrics like "I'm seeing your world of people and things, your pauperrs and peasants and prince's and Kings"... "here's to the hearts and the hands of the men, that comeee with the dust and are gone with the wind"..... I feel like alot of people don't fully appreciate his delivery or his way of wording, he paints a picture in your mind and he does it with almost every single song hes ever wrote its never a fluke, its honestly Mindblowingly incredible.... For example that line "come with the dust and are gone with the wind" to break that down it has soo many layers and it's just on single line... A metaphor for life and death, or star to end, then the idea that wind carries the dust in the first place so they come as dust with the wind which is the start of another end then are blown away again for the dust to be carried elsewere to repeat the cycle of another life/time..... I'm gushing here badly but this man blows my mind
Also "come with the dust" could be an allusion to the 'dust bowl' era/Great Depression that the men he's singing about (Woody, Cisco, Leadbelly) were a part of... And "gone with the wind" is a movie! I could gush all day
I totally agree! It’s like he invented how a song should make you think and feel, when I was younger I’d listen to his albums and couldn’t believe, and still can’t, that he would phrase the words how he did, god I love Dylan
@@penguinproductions7014 YES totally, I feel bad for those who don't understand/appreciate his work, if I could give them my brain and they understand his music how I understand it I think people would be in awe, some people see music as just some background noise or a beat as oppose to a feeling and an emotion
@@penguinproductions7014 I've actually never heard of seven curses before, I will be giving it a listen as soon as possible, it amazes me how many Bob Dylan songs in still not aware of when I know so many. Thanks for the recommendation
It must’ve been very comforting for Guthrie. The war against fascism was over but the battle for America’s soul continued. And out of the wilderness comes a scrawny kid from Duluth, taking his first real breaths as Guthrie draws his last, knowing that there’ll still be freaks and geeks to make the world take a long pause to just think. He probably knew Robert Zimmerman would be a once-in-a-lifetime deal, and that was fine, because the master should be what the student grows beyond.
First song Bob ever wrote. He said he couldn't find anything more he wanted to cover, so he had to write this song to his hero, Woody Guthrie, who had opened up his eyes to a whole new world.
Man, I wish he would release the other Chronicles. The story where he visits Woody in the hospital...walks through a swamp and all kinds of crazy things to tell him what he meant to him...Amazing.
I'm out here, thousand miles from my home Walkin' a road other men have gone down I'm seein' your world of people and things Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings Hey, hey Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song About a funny ol' world that's a-comin' along Seems sick an' it's hungry, it's tired an' it's torn It looks like it's a-dyin' an' it's hardly been born Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know All the things that I'm a-sayin' an' a-many times more I'm a-singin' you this song, but I can't sing enough 'Cause there's not many men that done the things that you've done Here's to Cisco and Sonny and Leadbelly too An' to all the good people that traveled with you Here's to the hearts and the hands of the men That come with the dust and are gone with the wind I'm a-leavin' tomorrow, but I could leave today Somewhere down the road someday The very last thing that I'd want to do Is to say I've been hittin' some hard travelin' too
*_"Here's to the hearts and the hands of the men_* *_That come with the dust and are gone with the wind"_* *_My best loved lines / lyrics of this beautiful song ..._*
Omg. Such an evocative song. Poet of the century. A friend came back to London from the Village, NY in 65 with his 1st albums, yes vinyl. We abt wore them out. This was all while hanging with the Stones, Yardbirds etc, etc of the emerging innovative British music scene. Later ended up living up the road from him in Malibu. Pure coincidence. His artwork & metal sculpture is also masterful. He so deserved the Nobel prize. Even tho he was reluctant to accept it! A creative genius of our lifetime.
Yes, and it's not just a work of genius, it also shows that Bobby is a great singer. That wasn't understood at the time. He had a tremendous range. He once compared himself to Caruso. People thought he was joking. No way. He's been the greatest influence in my long life.
Happy birthday, Bobby! Thank you for sharing your thoughts and bold spirit with us! May you always feel God's love for you and never give up. You are my shining star!
My Grandson attended a Bob Dylan Concert a few years ago and said Bob Dylan couldn’t sing. I referred him to this song. P,us Don McClean’s “ American Pie” I identified the characters in the song, Buddy Hollie, Elvis, Janis Joplin, and the Jester who is Bob Dylan. And the lyrics “from a voice that came from you and me”. It’s the beauty of the lyrics with the voice of a common every day guy.
as the train roared with woody on board many people were frightened as he played guitar with his harmonica a chorus rang out thank you, my friend, for doing kind things a stature of you is becoming
"Here's to hearts and the hands of the men"... I see a N. Rockwell painting every time... Sun-baked sinewy sharecropper, Tom Joad, soup lines, furrowed brows and worried faces...
Woody sister Nora loved young Bob Dylan .can you blame her .probably brought soo much happiness to Woody in the end.what a talent loved Bob Dylan my whole live,
What a man, what a most brilliant humbling Bob is, He wrote a song for dear Woody Guthrie, Bob wrote a song for everyone, he wrote songs that fit into everybody's life, he wrote a song for all the people of this world. This busy man Bob Dylan also wrote me a letter today, I am going to frame this then I will hang this high on the wall in my shack way out in the mountains of Connemara, I will let people look and ready but very few will be allowed to take down and touch this letter that I received the most blessed Bob who happens to be Gods prophet in this earth
My brother-in-law gave me this album for my birthday my 20th birthday when I was having a big party at my apartment and they said there you go build happy birthday I love that guy anyway
Thanks Robert Allen Zimmerman, Mr Tambourine man. I’m out here a thousand miles from my home Walking a road other men have gone down I’m seeing your world of people and things Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings Hey, hey, Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song About a funny old world that’s a-coming along Seems sick and it’s hungry, it’s tired and it’s torn It looks like it’s a-dying and it’s hardly been born Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know All the things that I’m a-saying an a-many times more I’m a-singing you the song, but I can’t sing enough Because there’s not many men that done the things that you’ve done Here’s to Cisco and Sonny and Leadbelly too And to all the good people that traveled with you Here’s to the hearts and the hands of the men That come with the dust and are gone with the wind I’m a-leaving tomorrow, but I could leave today Somewhere down the road someday The very last thing that I’d want to do Is to say I’ve been hitting some hard traveling too
Dylan wrote this song to express his admiration for his idol Woody Guthrie who influenced young Bob as a folk singer and a song writer. He used to sing this song to Guthrie in the hospital
I am nobody in music. Just a hobby I just started to take more serious. But I wrote Song to Bob thinking about his life and how he wrote to Woody. People may like him more or less but he is a beacon for the XX Century popular culture, and that is a fact
I’m out here a thousand miles from my home Walking a road other men have gone down I’m seeing your world of people and things Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings Hey, hey, Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song About a funny old world that’s a-coming along Seems sick and it’s hungry, it’s tired and it’s torn It looks like it’s a-dying and it’s hardly been born Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know All the things that I’m a-saying an a-many times more I’m a-singing you the song, but I can’t sing enough Because there’s not many men that done the things that you’ve done Here’s to Cisco and Sonny and Leadbelly too And to all the good people that traveled with you Here’s to the hearts and the hands of the men That come with the dust and are gone with the wind I’m a-leaving tomorrow, but I could leave today Somewhere down the road someday The very last thing that I’d want to do Is to say I’ve been hitting some hard traveling too
Thanks 🙏 for the lyrics. Johnny BikeSanooK. From THAILAND. Triumph Bonneville. Did Bob Dylan once ride a Bonneville? ua-cam.com/video/k-cEH4Peekg/v-deo.html
He is the best , no DOUBT about that, especially his stuff in 65 and 66 Bringing ......... and Blonde ......... No two better pop, rock, folk and love music on the planet. But that's not what Bob Dylan should be remebered for, as Jimi Hendrix, The Stones and Beatles COULD also lay claim to that. No, Dylan should be immortalised for not allowing BLACK MUSIC to dictate the origins of his music, like Elvis, Jagger/Richards, Clapton, Lennon and all the British bands of the 60s. Hey, nothing wrong with Black folks giving white folks their mojo, immitation is , after all, the BEST form of flattery, but maybe his Jewish background, and Americas flair for individuality and entertainmentality, gave Bob his form of mojo. What an amazing man.
makes me so happy to get a notification from this channel, I love you so much Bob, thank you :) I'll be listening to all these songs that were just posted the rest of the evening
My brother-in-law has been there through thick and thin he's helped me through a lot of hard times my life and deduced me through a lot of music my sister has passed away almost 2 years now I got family that has been very good to me nephews nieces cousins and I've lost a lot of family members have a way out and I've lost so many friends and accidents and drugs and all kinds of stuff so I've been a lucky guy I feel like I've been to war even though I'm a civilian I tried to join the airforce I try to join the army but my education would let me in because I was in a lot of trouble and Leon days and I'm happy I'm here doing well today thank God Amen name of the Father the son and the holy Spirit amen
It'll be interesting to see how well Timothee Chalomet portrays Bob in the recently to be released film about Bob's early life and career. If anyone can do it, then Chalomet can.
Te amo Bob Dylan! Obrigada por existir! Nasci em 1959, desde então faz parte da minha vida e desejo isso por muitos anos ainda. És um presente de Deus para mim... Desejo que Jesus esteja cuidando sempre de ti. Beijão!
"You can't be dead and walking around. Unless you, inless you die and it just takes it's sweet time cause you were bitter about anything for to or so long." ,dan'
Nobody knows my secrets nobody knows what I've done nobody knows what I've been through nobody has any idea who I am nobody really knows me only me and nobody knows you only you that's the way life is so here you go here is my song to you enjoy it
Mad Men, Season 3, Episode 6: "Guy Walks into an Advertising Agency", Don and Sally sitting in the dark, staring at baby Eugene, not knowing who is or what he's going to be and this plays...pretty cool
No other person has done what you've done and still are doing. Congratulations Bob.
Was soll der Bockmist,das sind alles gerngehörte Songs von Robert !!!
Everything started in a cold, dark New York, in smoky cafes, dusty libraries and small apartments. The rest is history. Bob is the greatest writer of our times. I got no doubt about it.
Excuse me Samuele but Woody Guthrie got his start in Oklahoma, not New York.
@@robertrieger8743 He meant Dylan
I think Dylan is the best songwriter of all time, and might likely keep that title. The same way The Beatles may never be overtaken as the most popular band. It's just a different world now. Seems so unlikely for anything to come that way again. 60s from a historical point is just the perfect storm for music to evolve. I think Inside Llewyn Davis did such a good job of showing where Bob came from. And also the movie No Direction Home, but everyone knows that if they're listening to this song, probably.
@@robertrieger8743 he's talking about dylan
I'm surely not arguing.
Saw this 20 year old kid play the other day and he's still got it. The feeling of listening to this song and knowing how 60 years later after changing music forever that he's still on stage playing for all of us, is utterly beautiful.
I absolutely agree with you man!
I saw him a couple of years ago. The songs were not recognizable, he ignored the audience. I have been a long term fan, from 1966 and I was disgusted.
@@paddysh
...sooo what....
@@paddyshIf you had really been a long time fan then you would know he has changed song melody and done very little audience interaction his entire career and people like you still don’t get it. The only one you should be disgusted at is yourself for going in with false expectations out of your own ignorance.
I love this song's honesty and simplicity. You do not need to guess how much Bob admires Woody Guthrie for his positive impact on music and the world. I tear up sometimes when I listen.
This young man may have a future in music....
What are you talking about? Eh?
Yes!
He’s been apart of the music industry for since the late 50s
Issa joke
This young boy will conquer the world of music and become the best songwriter in the history of the world.
Oh, Woody. ♥️
What a tribute from Bob. I cried through this. I love these men.
❤
I got so emotional listening to this again, after many years that have gone by. I had a large group of friends that would go to hippie festivals, gatherings, camping, partying... All the great adventures we had and the tunes we listened to and often played ourselves, singing together at times.
I've put many miles behind me since those days, 20 - 30 years worth. I miss the good people I once knew, most moved, some are still moving, and a few have left this state of being for the energy ether of the great beyond. I don't know who I was, but I was something, and now I'm not. I've changed, as time passes, and more miles under my feet, and passing behind me. I love you, and miss you, all of you.... JT🗻
Did you make the OMF in 74?
Sixty years ago, “Song to Woody” was the first of the two songs (by now they number over 600) composed by Dylan for his debut album. He was just a kid, probably 21 years old, or a 200-year old man well-disguised. Can anyone think of a poet or songwriter who began his career with a first composition so stunningly simple, intimate, honest, and casually skilled? A composition that remains among the best of a huge body of supreme work created over a lifetime? I first listened to “Song to Woody” in 1965, three years after its release. I’ve heard it at least a hundred times since. Still, to this day, when I put on headphones to listen to my MP3’s shuffled Dylan playlist, and “Song to Woody” begins to sound in my ears, I become freshly re-wakened--as if to first breath, first bell, first beep, first blare, first bird note, first bark.
Sometime genius can be spotted in the very young. So it goes with Dylan.
I was a few decades from being able to enjoy the nostalgia that you do, but I've gone back and learned so much about the music I couldn't catch the first time around, and this man... His poetic music and the history he's documented within it would have gripped me immediately.
I always appreciate another that really listens to music, so thanks because I don't see many in my day to day.
I think it's over 1000 now
The way he writes his lyrics like "I'm seeing your world of people and things, your pauperrs and peasants and prince's and Kings"... "here's to the hearts and the hands of the men, that comeee with the dust and are gone with the wind".....
I feel like alot of people don't fully appreciate his delivery or his way of wording, he paints a picture in your mind and he does it with almost every single song hes ever wrote its never a fluke, its honestly Mindblowingly incredible.... For example that line "come with the dust and are gone with the wind" to break that down it has soo many layers and it's just on single line... A metaphor for life and death, or star to end, then the idea that wind carries the dust in the first place so they come as dust with the wind which is the start of another end then are blown away again for the dust to be carried elsewere to repeat the cycle of another life/time..... I'm gushing here badly but this man blows my mind
Also "come with the dust" could be an allusion to the 'dust bowl' era/Great Depression that the men he's singing about (Woody, Cisco, Leadbelly) were a part of... And "gone with the wind" is a movie! I could gush all day
I totally agree! It’s like he invented how a song should make you think and feel, when I was younger I’d listen to his albums and couldn’t believe, and still can’t, that he would phrase the words how he did, god I love Dylan
@@penguinproductions7014 YES totally, I feel bad for those who don't understand/appreciate his work, if I could give them my brain and they understand his music how I understand it I think people would be in awe, some people see music as just some background noise or a beat as oppose to a feeling and an emotion
You ever listened to bootleg sessions? 7 curses is one of his best recordings in my opinion ❤️👍👍👍
@@penguinproductions7014 I've actually never heard of seven curses before, I will be giving it a listen as soon as possible, it amazes me how many Bob Dylan songs in still not aware of when I know so many. Thanks for the recommendation
His line at the end: The very last thing that I'd want to do, is to say I've been hitting some hard travelling too. Beautifully put.
This song is just as eloquent and powerful today as it was when I first heard it 6 decades ago. Seems like a very different world gone by.
God bless mr Guthrie for inspiring such beauty in the heart of bob dylan
He actually sang this to Woody Guthrie in 1961 while visiting him in hospital, cute story
Rest in Pieces Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital...
OfficialJohnSutton rip to a legend, to a weary hobo
He sure did. It was Woody Guthrie who stated ( after Bob sang him this song)' Pete Seeger is a singer of folk songs... Bob Dylan is a Folksinger!'
you lie he sang this to the guy from toy story dip assd
It must’ve been very comforting for Guthrie. The war against fascism was over but the battle for America’s soul continued. And out of the wilderness comes a scrawny kid from Duluth, taking his first real breaths as Guthrie draws his last, knowing that there’ll still be freaks and geeks to make the world take a long pause to just think. He probably knew Robert Zimmerman would be a once-in-a-lifetime deal, and that was fine, because the master should be what the student grows beyond.
I am in tears listening to Bob dylan's sings.
Hello dear, how’re you doing today?
it’s nice meeting you on here
First song Bob ever wrote. He said he couldn't find anything more he wanted to cover, so he had to write this song to his hero, Woody Guthrie, who had opened up his eyes to a whole new world.
Man, I wish he would release the other Chronicles. The story where he visits Woody in the hospital...walks through a swamp and all kinds of crazy things to tell him what he meant to him...Amazing.
I've been thinking that too, and each time I see one of the two copies I have, I really think of it...
WOODY GUTHRIE ONCE SAID WHEN HE HEARD BOB SINGING:
"THERE ARE MANY FOLK MUSIC SINGERS , BUT BOB DYLAN...HE IS THE FOLK HIMSELF".✌😎
Cool, CAPTAINCAPSLOCK.
CAPS are for hat racks.
I'm out here, thousand miles from my home
Walkin' a road other men have gone down
I'm seein' your world of people and things
Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings
Hey, hey Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song
About a funny ol' world that's a-comin' along
Seems sick an' it's hungry, it's tired an' it's torn
It looks like it's a-dyin' an' it's hardly been born
Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know
All the things that I'm a-sayin' an' a-many times more
I'm a-singin' you this song, but I can't sing enough
'Cause there's not many men that done the things that you've done
Here's to Cisco and Sonny and Leadbelly too
An' to all the good people that traveled with you
Here's to the hearts and the hands of the men
That come with the dust and are gone with the wind
I'm a-leavin' tomorrow, but I could leave today
Somewhere down the road someday
The very last thing that I'd want to do
Is to say I've been hittin' some hard travelin' too
❤ and if I get pushed I pushed back that's just the way life is you do me I do you
*_"Here's to the hearts and the hands of the men_*
*_That come with the dust and are gone with the wind"_*
*_My best loved lines / lyrics of this beautiful song ..._*
Absolutely timeless right up.there with Dylans best.If there was a better poet or writer in the 20th century lve missed them
Omg. Such an evocative song. Poet of the century. A friend came back to London from the Village, NY in 65 with his 1st albums, yes vinyl. We abt wore them out. This was all while hanging with the Stones, Yardbirds etc, etc of the emerging innovative British music scene. Later ended up living up the road from him in Malibu. Pure coincidence. His artwork & metal sculpture is also masterful. He so deserved the Nobel prize. Even tho he was reluctant to accept it! A creative genius of our lifetime.
I’m leaving tomorrow but I could leave today.
just love that line
Sixty years ago (to the very day!), Bob recorded this song. My love and appreciation for this man's music continues unabated.
Fantastic debut album! It's incredible what a fellow can do with just his acoustic guitar.
This song really shows how much emotion he puts into his songs, it's truly palpable. I cried when I heard this.
Hey hey Bob Dylan.
one of the best songs ever.
Yes, and it's not just a work of genius, it also shows that Bobby is a great singer. That wasn't understood at the time. He had a tremendous range. He once compared himself to Caruso. People thought he was joking. No way. He's been the greatest influence in my long life.
This song is and will be forever emotional...💖💖
Here's to Cisco, Sonny, and Leadbelly too!!!!
Happy birthday, Bobby! Thank you for sharing your thoughts and bold spirit with us! May you always feel God's love for you and never give up. You are my shining star!
Hello dear, it’s nice meeting you on here.
Now it’s 60 years old, and it still young forever
Love this song..one genius singing about the other
One of my favorites by Bob. And one of his earliest.
My Grandson attended a Bob Dylan Concert a few years ago and said Bob Dylan couldn’t sing. I referred him to this song. P,us Don McClean’s “ American Pie” I identified the characters in the song, Buddy Hollie, Elvis, Janis Joplin, and the Jester who is Bob Dylan. And the lyrics “from a voice that came from you and me”. It’s the beauty of the lyrics with the voice of a common every day guy.
as the train roared
with woody on board
many people were frightened
as he played guitar
with his harmonica
a chorus rang out
thank you, my friend,
for doing kind things
a stature of you
is becoming
This is a letter of love, beautiful 💕
"Here's to hearts and the hands of the men"... I see a N. Rockwell painting every time... Sun-baked sinewy sharecropper, Tom Joad, soup lines, furrowed brows and worried faces...
I love that Allen Ginsberg's just hanging out on the side. It's amazing that alley didn't crack open from the weight of their talent.
Such a great song..brings back a lot of memories..
Deserved the Noble prize for sure, his poetry is beyond description...
声が大好き!今またディランを聴きまくっています!
this is one of my all time fave's_ its out there & forgotten as it ends always drag it to the begining at least 5 times.
this song by young bob dylan brings me to my knees
Woody sister Nora loved young Bob Dylan .can you blame her .probably brought soo much happiness to Woody in the end.what a talent loved Bob Dylan my whole live,
Try 7 curses from Bob Dylan bootleg sessions ❤️👍
What a man, what a most brilliant humbling Bob is, He wrote a song for dear Woody Guthrie, Bob wrote a song for everyone, he wrote songs that fit into everybody's life, he wrote a song for all the people of this world. This busy man Bob Dylan also wrote me a letter today, I am going to frame this then I will hang this high on the wall in my shack way out in the mountains of Connemara, I will let people look and ready but very few will be allowed to take down and touch this letter that I received the most blessed Bob who happens to be Gods prophet in this earth
How cool! Did you write Bob and he write you back or something? Just curious
What a gem.
Thanks always, Bob.
Bob Dylan, el mejor escritor de canciones del mundo.
Thanks for the song Bob.
Loved the whole album. The start of a phenomenon.
MAD MEN: "Guy walks into an advertising agency"
Music is the gift that keeps on giving ......
Thank you for your wonderful music
Hot Dang! I Love these Bootleg Series
I am sure M.r Woody Guthrie is extremely grateful for such a dear friend to take the time to care❤
Mad Men, you've changed my mind...
Special show
Was this in Mad Men? I don't remember it. But man is Bob Dylan amazing. The million different eras and styles.
@@Official_KC It plays at the end of an episode in season 2-3
My brother-in-law gave me this album for my birthday my 20th birthday when I was having a big party at my apartment and they said there you go build happy birthday I love that guy anyway
This song from his first album gave a hint of what was to come.
I'm a leavin tommorow, but I could today. I've been hittin some hard travellin too. He was so young, but so full of wisdom when he wrote it
Just precious! ❤️
Beautiful
Thanks Robert Allen Zimmerman, Mr Tambourine man.
I’m out here a thousand miles from my home
Walking a road other men have gone down
I’m seeing your world of people and things
Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings
Hey, hey, Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song
About a funny old world that’s a-coming along
Seems sick and it’s hungry, it’s tired and it’s torn
It looks like it’s a-dying and it’s hardly been born
Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know
All the things that I’m a-saying an a-many times more
I’m a-singing you the song, but I can’t sing enough
Because there’s not many men that done the things that you’ve done
Here’s to Cisco and Sonny and Leadbelly too
And to all the good people that traveled with you
Here’s to the hearts and the hands of the men
That come with the dust and are gone with the wind
I’m a-leaving tomorrow, but I could leave today
Somewhere down the road someday
The very last thing that I’d want to do
Is to say I’ve been hitting some hard traveling too
One of the greatest.
The future in song poor young Bob he looked through another's eyes and tried his best to make them shine in a world so dark 🎶
You have insight, Rachel!
Dylan wrote this song to express his admiration for his idol Woody Guthrie who influenced young Bob as a folk singer and a song writer. He used to sing this song to Guthrie in the hospital
@Esther Ruby :-)
Happy birthday😊
I am nobody in music. Just a hobby I just started to take more serious. But I wrote Song to Bob thinking about his life and how he wrote to Woody. People may like him more or less but he is a beacon for the XX Century popular culture, and that is a fact
I’m out here a thousand miles from my home
Walking a road other men have gone down
I’m seeing your world of people and things
Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings
Hey, hey, Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song
About a funny old world that’s a-coming along
Seems sick and it’s hungry, it’s tired and it’s torn
It looks like it’s a-dying and it’s hardly been born
Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know
All the things that I’m a-saying an a-many times more
I’m a-singing you the song, but I can’t sing enough
Because there’s not many men that done the things that you’ve done
Here’s to Cisco and Sonny and Leadbelly too
And to all the good people that traveled with you
Here’s to the hearts and the hands of the men
That come with the dust and are gone with the wind
I’m a-leaving tomorrow, but I could leave today
Somewhere down the road someday
The very last thing that I’d want to do
Is to say I’ve been hitting some hard traveling too
Thanks 🙏 for the lyrics. Johnny BikeSanooK. From THAILAND. Triumph Bonneville. Did Bob Dylan once ride a Bonneville? ua-cam.com/video/k-cEH4Peekg/v-deo.html
He is the best , no DOUBT about that, especially his stuff in 65 and 66 Bringing ......... and Blonde ......... No two better pop, rock, folk and love music on the planet. But that's not what Bob Dylan should be remebered for, as Jimi Hendrix, The Stones and Beatles COULD also lay claim to that. No, Dylan should be immortalised for not allowing BLACK MUSIC to dictate the origins of his music, like Elvis, Jagger/Richards, Clapton, Lennon and all the British bands of the 60s. Hey, nothing wrong with Black folks giving white folks their mojo, immitation is , after all, the BEST form of flattery, but maybe his Jewish background, and Americas flair for individuality and entertainmentality, gave Bob his form of mojo. What an amazing man.
makes me so happy to get a notification from this channel, I love you so much Bob, thank you :) I'll be listening to all these songs that were just posted the rest of the evening
Me too it's what I'm doin right now 😉
My brother-in-law has been there through thick and thin he's helped me through a lot of hard times my life and deduced me through a lot of music my sister has passed away almost 2 years now I got family that has been very good to me nephews nieces cousins and I've lost a lot of family members have a way out and I've lost so many friends and accidents and drugs and all kinds of stuff so I've been a lucky guy I feel like I've been to war even though I'm a civilian I tried to join the airforce I try to join the army but my education would let me in because I was in a lot of trouble and Leon days and I'm happy I'm here doing well today thank God Amen name of the Father the son and the holy Spirit amen
My best Friend introduced me to Cat Stevens, Bob Dylan, and I later discovered Neil Young. My three musical gods. lol
Love to you ,Bob
It'll be interesting to see how well Timothee Chalomet portrays Bob in the recently to be released film about Bob's early life and career. If anyone can do it, then Chalomet can.
I feel that this song will be an emotional part of the film. So excited to watch it come to life on the big screen.
@@Kool-AidKittenI've seen the short clip in the featurette where he plays it to him, (Scoot McNairy plays Woody Guthrie). Can't wait to see it.
Man Bob play❤
This boy maybe going places.
God I love this song
Kalau kita diindo ada bang iwan fals,doel sumbang
the weekend I crowded around Bob Dylan and first hearing this song, couldn't help think of the generation that led me here.
Una canción dedicada a su maestro Woody Guthrie 🎸🎶🎶
Toda la razón, y es agradable ver a alguien más que hable español, saludos en cualquier lugar donde estés.
Te amo Bob Dylan! Obrigada por existir! Nasci em 1959, desde então faz parte da minha vida e desejo isso por muitos anos ainda. És um presente de Deus para mim... Desejo que Jesus esteja cuidando sempre de ti. Beijão!
Tbm sou de 1959,,,julho...sou muito fã dele de todos os tempos!! abraço
love you bob..
❤️❤️❤️
"You can't be dead and walking around. Unless you, inless you die and it just takes it's sweet time cause you were bitter about anything for to or so long."
,dan'
Nobody knows my secrets nobody knows what I've done nobody knows what I've been through nobody has any idea who I am nobody really knows me only me and nobody knows you only you that's the way life is so here you go here is my song to you enjoy it
Good music taste brought me here
"When envy is did and dead and done then pride won't come before autumn no more." ,dan'
Mad Men, Season 3, Episode 6: "Guy Walks into an Advertising Agency", Don and Sally sitting in the dark, staring at baby Eugene, not knowing who is or what he's going to be and this plays...pretty cool
"Belief proceeds relief and I am trying to see what a delief is but it's hard to cause it's fainted everytime I try." ,dan'
Seems just as relevant now as it did then, in the early 1960's... I wonder if Bob will ever say he's hit some hard travelin' too.
I hope you live for ever we eill travel to heaven together.
Big Dylan and Guthrie fan. Hits close to home because my family is afflicted with the same illness that took Guthrie too soon. ❤️
Hello dear, how’re you doing today?
It’s nice meeting you on here
cure HD 💙💜
Timeless
I love this man
Cheers bob
Well, Years have gone by...more hard travelin’ too..?
Saying Singin’ and Dancin’ is all you did do..
Thanks for your ‘Song to Woody’, Dylan🌹❤️👌LYRICS: Song to Woody
WRITTEN BY: BOB DYLAN
I’m out here a thousand miles from my home
Walkin’ a road other men have gone down
I’m seein’ your world of people and things
Your paupers and peasants and princes and kings
Hey, hey, Woody Guthrie, I wrote you a song
’Bout a funny ol’ world that’s a-comin’ along
Seems sick an’ it’s hungry, it’s tired an’ it’s torn
It looks like it’s a-dyin’ an’ it’s hardly been born
Hey, Woody Guthrie, but I know that you know
All the things that I’m a-sayin’ an’ a-many times more
I’m a-singin’ you the song, but I can’t sing enough
’Cause there’s not many men that done the things that you’ve done
Here’s to Cisco an’ Sonny an’ Leadbelly too
An’ to all the good people that traveled with you
Here’s to the hearts and the hands of the men
That come with the dust and are gone with the wind
I’m a-leavin’ tomorrow, but I could leave today
Somewhere down the road someday
The very last thing that I’d want to do
Is to say I’ve been hittin’ some hard travelin’ too
Copyright © 1962, 1965 by Duchess Music Corporation; renewed 1990, 1993 by MCA
Super !
NO leadbelly means no woody Guthrie means no Bob Dylan mindblown!
"If I had to choose between kindness or money I'd take charity everytime." ,dan'
(goodwill towards all women too)
Amazing -Bob Dylan- love it! Thank you