All these documentaries and biographies have to keep updating, and updating, and updating. No one can catch up with Dylan, he's always miles ahead of anyone else. Still going strong. And he won the freaking Nobel Prize!
My very first memory of Dylan: I was about nine years old. My family was spending the summer in a cottage in Muskoka, Ontario.. We were all out on the porch at the very edge of the lake, it was late in the evening and we could hear the lapping of waves and the loons calling. My brother Walt was home from university, and he was carrying a guitar. It was the mid-'60s, and everyone was learning folk songs off records and singing them, well or badly. I was used to Walt singing Cape Breton Mines and other rough, tough folk songs, when all of a sudden he sang something that held me in a trance. The song began, "Where have you been, my blue-eyed son?" The lyrics rolled out of him, image upon image, magical, incandescent, and even though I was just a kid, it went straight to my heart. And then - for years - nothing. I barely knew who Bob Dylan was, except to hear people claiming he was a terrible singer. Then I was over at my friend Carmen's house and I heard an album playing behind a closed door - it was Carmen's brother, home from university, and he had to play his records in his bedroom with the door shut because no one could stand to hear them. But I heard, through the closed door, "Where have you been, my blue-eyed son?" And finally, I made the connection. It took us all quite a while to catch up to his early albums - we were listening to Freewheelin' in about 1968. And then he went back to his folk roots just as everyone else was going psychedelic, but when he came out with Nashville Skyline (yet another rebirth, yet another genre), we were all enraptured. Being true to his genius, as always. I began to hear him on the radio as well, and was thrilled at Like a Rolling Stone and (especially) Positively Fourth Street. I could write a whole book about this, but my favorite of all (so far) is Rough and Rowdy Ways, the album he released during the most dire, hopeless depths of the pandemic. As great as anything he has ever done. Still lightning in a bottle, still full of surprises. Still touring at well over 80 years old. Still on that road.
He is a great artist and person.i feel so blessed to have seen him live a few times and I appreciate his music more and more as I get older. He doesn't deserve the unfair criticism.
That’s what they say about Mozart. The conductor Richter was asked who he thought was the greatest composer of all time. He quickly said, "Beethoven". The interviewer then said, "You answered very quickly. I thought you might have considered Mozart." Richter said, "Oh, him? I thought you were asking about the rest."
There are many wonderful facets to this doc, but it really bothers me when music critics make sweeping generalizations. For example, I was an activist protesting the Viet Nam war along with so many others. No one I knew was shocked by and didn't like Nashville Skyline. I had no expectations for Bob and have always loved the album and most everything he's done. Being with Bob is a journey. There is much to see, hear, feel, experience and think & learn about.
My friends and I were a little shocked. His voice was completely different from anything he had ever done before. But did we like it? Hell yes!!! I remember like it was yesterday when my friend and I put Nashville Skyline on the turntable for the first time in the dorm room.
@@johnmcguire1792 John, much appreciated! I can write a good sentence, lol. Actually, I do like to write and have had a few small things published locally. Thanks!
When NS was released I was appalled by the vocals. I was a big Dylan fan, before and after NS. Equally “shocking” according to the documentary, was John Wesley Harding, an absolute masterpiece. Then Planet Waves…WOW!!!! Robbie Robinson’s guitar alone exaults this to one of his top albums. The Love it communicates…a very deep and meaningful album that these critics savage… “Perfunctory…disappointing…not great art”…total BS.
Dylan had me from 'Blowin' in the wind'...you never had to love everything he did, or understand it. But I, for one, always had to keep listening and unravelling his riddles. Maestro....and much underestimated for his sly, dry wit. Bear Mountain picnic and 115th dream spring to mind for that vein. The Tracks kept me on the rails.
I don’t think every song is about Sara… of course , she was in his life..his wife..but to me it is more a brilliant summary of the 60’s ..& the 60’s failed.. Idiot wind is like “ like a Rolling Stone “ & “ Shot of Love “ distillations of an artist who, like his friend, Tom petty, won’t back down . Like every other record of Bob’s, he left the best songs off it , like “ Up to Me “
It's fun to speculate, but it's pretty annoying when the people doing it are so public with it and SO wrong. Bob Dylan didn't vanish; he acted in a movie with a soundtrack full of his music; he performed concerts with his generational comrades at the Woody Guthrie tribute; he worked on songs for a theater piece that was eventually abandoned, (but the songs stayed). There's no lull in creativity either. Nobody much but rock writers like these "hated" the records; they were big hits, sold millions, contained singles that were popular and stayed on the radio. They were different from his previous records, but that's true in every temporal direction. And they weren't "bad" because he was happy either; unless you think John Wesley Harding, Nashville Skyline, New Morning, and Planet Waves were "bad" - with some of his biggest hits, some songs that were covered in massively popular versions, songs that are still sung at weddings and memorials and in living rooms all over. They contain a whole lot of creative self-reinvention. The way these men fuse biographical wild guesses with the songs of that period betrays a very genuine failure of imagination and a failure to enter into the imaginative worlds of the songs. There are other themes and other possible ways you can derive meaning; and it's not necessary to overdo that either. Finally, it's not that Bob Dylan needs praise for his work; there's way too much of that anyway. But this is just kind of a travesty in the real sense of the word: a misrepresentation.
Someone who is saying what I’ve been thinking for a long time! I loved John Wesley Harding, Nashville Skyline, New Morning and Planet Waves. There are some great songs on all these albums, such as; Dear Landlord, I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight, Lay Lady Lay, Peggy Day, Went to See the Gypsy, Day of the Locust, Forever Young and On a Night Like This, and many others are as you said, still sung at weddings and even regularly by people busking on city centre streets, still being heard and still in the public psyche. These critics have the same sort of mindset as those folk purists in the 60’s, who would form their little cliques and think that they could decide what songs could be sung by Dylan and that he couldn’t play electric instruments etc, they being a sort of musical Sanhedrin, whom were the self appointed guardians of all good taste and decency. Some of them are like the Pharisees of old; full of pretension and hypocrisy. And like you said, people still bought the records so it shows that the record buying people didn’t take any notice. And what’s more, Dylan’s contemporaries still covered these songs and gave him a regular income as a song writer. Who needs their praise when an artist has validation like that!?!
Except for Robert Hilburn the former LA Times music critic who mentioned Dylan's name in all of his articles. even those articles not remotely connected to Dylan.
The uncanny thing about Clinton Heylin's quote of Michael Gray that with "Blood on the Tracks" Dylan delivered one of his best works 10 years after being written off is that Dylan did that AGAIN with "Time Out of Mind" in 1997.
And what about Rough and Rowdy Ways? Still writing and performing excellent songs, as good as anything he ever produced, at well over 80 years old. This album helped me survive the pandemic.
that performance of hard rain is probably the pinnacle of Dylan's vocals, writing, and performance in the 70's!! it totally blow my mind about 20 years ago and still does today. Incredible to see the band rocking out so loose and tight. Can't imagine not digging this. I never fully understood that mr tambourine man had a cameraman right by his crotch and mrs tambourine man standing right across from him looking angry! bob's always got a great, appropriate song, that's why we love him!
I am really sick of this. “They got upset because he did this, or he did that”. Leave him alone. He just plays what he wants, does what he wants and explores the genre’s he wants to. If you like it listen, if you don’t like it don’t listen.
While I'd heard the pop songs on the radio, and knew about the fuss when he "went electric"", Blood On the Tracks was where I fell in love with Dylan, and I learned more about the early stuff from there. Never been w/o a version (LP, cassette, CD, digital) of Blood On the Tracks since the week it was released.
there's nobody that comes close to Dylan - the essence is. Dylan is so unique no other artist can be compared to him; there's Dylan and there's everybody else.
These people know zero about Bob Dylan. Before the Flood is an incredible record, he puts so much effort into the performances and it shows. The best version Of “All Along the Watchtower” I have ever heard, Like a Rolling Stone, it is a great record
I was at this concert, the first tour he'd done in years and the first time he'd played with the band since he "went electric." It was great being there and hearing him rework his old songs for the first time was a revelation, but I was really disappointed when I bought the album. It just didn't convey the excitement of the live performance. Dylan has said of the tour that he was just going through the motions, and both he and the band were down on their fortunes at the time, so the main impulse of this tour was most likely to make some money. It's been years since I heard the album, so I'll have to break it out and see how I feel about it now. In any case, music is subjective and everyone has their own response to it. If you haven't heard them, I would suggest listening to The Bootleg Series, Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live, 1966: The "Royal Albert Hall Concert" and Rock Of Ages. Those are two great live albums.
I thank the heavens for being lucky enough to have Bob's music in my life ❤️and the music critics/journalists! Who do they all think they are, so full of themselves that they think they can second guess by what Bob's intentions were when he did something or other! I love Bob more than any other artist, I love shows made about him, but I can't stand this one and all the others like it,! Bunch of "experts" who seem to know more about Bob, than he knows about himself! 🤣
I feel like Blood on the Tracks. Begins as an audio illusion. Tangled up in Blue is chosen to be the first song on the album. And, you think to yourself. It can only go downhill from here. That’s how great I feel that song is. However, as you move on. You realize, every song on the album, is that great. This is a great documentary. I’m enjoying it immensely.
John Wesley Harding is on of the best psychedelic Albums ever In fact after and including Bringing it all back home, they were all one of the best psychedelic's albums ever :)
Sometimes it's no wonder Dylan hates critic's attempt to over analyze a purely personal artform filtered through their own biases, instead of allowing Dylan the freedom of his own filter.
the alternate version is even better than the company release so find it and listen an if your a dylan fan then you will hear what i mean...thanks for this docu...great job
I agree, Idiot Wind outake #4, is so different and so haunting compared to the album release, and by the time thr harmonica hits at the end i just lose it everytime, its like the harmonica is crying, totally should have been the one used on album
I would be very much interested in a similar documentary on Rough and Rowdy Ways - a masterpiece of an album on the same level as Blood on the Tracks...
For me, where the rubber meets the road with his writing being comfortable in its own skin is ‘Blonde on Blonde’. I had listened to Dylan for several years or I thought I had because I had his first couple of albums and one day a friend of mine who smoked a lot of weed and was a music scholar of sorts(you know the type when you are in your early 20s) he mentioned that he thought I would enjoy Dylan’s stuff that had drums and he said he actually had a copy of blonde on blonde in his bag. I was shocked because I thought, at that time, that Dylan was strictly acoustic folk type music and when I put on B.on.B and listened from start to finish I was thoroughly floored and felt like almost cheated and unsure of everything because I had no idea that Dylan got down like that and the lyrics were like the slap of a monks staff when the younger monks stray from their meditation to a young writer such as myself. Visions of Johanna had me ready to pack it in, quit my foolish ideas about writing and start selling vacuum cleaners or something, anything because I doubted I could dig as deep into whatever it was he dug into and exorcize it into song. Then discovered his other albums and had the John Wesley Harding album on repeat for a year or more. I enjoyed discovering each album and each one I can relate to different moments of time in my life but when the album that I think captured the spirit of the eternal is ‘Modern Times’. Such a masterpiece that hangs on that wall of eternity. After an apocalyptic event, a whole new civilization can be started with nothing else but that album. Time Out Of Mind is right there with it as well as Oh Mercy. I heard Dylan say in an interview that he can’t tap into that magic he did on certain earlier songs(I didn’t hear the entire interview but only a clip so there could be more to what was said and I don’t won’t to take it out of context) but I think I’m songs such as ‘Nettie Moore’ he taps into it deeper
Others on here have already addressed this eloquently and I agree. These "journalists" just go too far trying to interpret Bob's work. I learned a long time ago...to just take it as it is. He's not an entertainer in the traditional sense, but an artist.
yup ,, if i could only pick one dylan album ,, and there is so many gems to pick from ,, it would have to be blood ont the tracks , awesome album ,, awesome artist ,love ya bob .
44:20 the 'critics' do not understand christianity or spirituality...this is not dylan making a joke or likening himself to jesus...this is dylan referring the suffering and the burden borne by every living being....
Some people say that I´m the #1 Dylan´s mexican fan (of course I´m not). But he´s my bigger influence and Tangled up in Blue my #1 song ever. Nice Documental...
Would have been refreshing to include some female critics on here. Also Nashville Skyline has some incredible songwriting, which many critics just gloss over... supposedly 'lightweight' songs that actually mean so much to thousands of people, and with endless emotional universes inside them.
65 years of Dylan and his puzzle. We are still trying to figure out the clues. The truth is there is no plot, only the eternal journey. And the journey is strictly personal.
Blood on the Tracks: "This is the album you will play to people to explain Dylan". Well... Freewheelin´, The times.., Highway 61, Blonde on Blonde, Desire, Slow Train, Time out of Mind,.. I love the album, but there is soo much more to Dylan
1:41 "Pulling out pin"? What a DOLT! When will you lymie self exalted in mind realize you vibrate with the frequency of a broke leg horse... To be silenced
Cool! Reasoned comments, no particular axes to grind - excellent! One thing, though - the guy who waves his hands so much should control that. It distracts the viewer.
At the time of Dylan's motorcycle accident my best friend was dating a young woman whose father was one of the physicians who treated Dylan at the time of the accident. His daughter said to my friend, quoting her father, "I shovelled his brains back into his head." As a former neuroscientist, I'm not surprised his writing and voice changed. As a Dylan fan, it was very noticeable to me at the time.
1:41 "Pulling out pin"? What a DOLT! When will you lymie self exalted in mind realize you vibrate with the frequency of a broke leg horse... To be silenced
What the guy said about Nashville skyline not being liked or even “brutally attacked“ is complete horseshit Everybody. I knew in our mid teens didn’t blink an eye When Nashville skyline came out we accepted it as just another New Way,. Dylan was making great music. It was very welcomed by most
1:41 "Pulling out pin"? What a DOLT! When will you lymie self exalted in mind realize you vibrate with the frequency of a broke leg horse... To be silenced
BALDERDASH....so many people explaining Dylan in the comments as if they know how he thinks. if any good music was being released you wouldn't have to exercise your MASSIVE INTELLECTS to tell me what he was thinking...i been listening since 1965 and the selfserving intellectualism never stops.
ŁATWO KOCHAĆ BOBA DYLANA GENIUSZ GENIUSZ GENIUSZ nad GENIUSZAMI KOSMOS KOCHANI na zawsze dziękuję BOGU za wszystko dziękuję BARDZO i już MIŁOŚĆ ☮️ POKÓJ MUZYKA na zawsze
around 16;50 talking about dirge i believe he was refering to a passage in the bible where God almost destroyed mankind as we became evil in his sight as lucifer reminded him constantly and note it was our choice to be evil with no devil to blame in reality but he repented..dylan knew so much so young Im amazed he's still with us.
He'll always be famous for the early period Blowin in the Wind folkie songs. But after many changes and some crappy albums, Planet Waves comes to mind....there was Blood. And then Desire. For me that period and those two albums with a PBS viewed live Hurricane were both personal and very powerful. Though that Clara movie totally bombed it out, overly ambitious as the complimentary angle, those two albums said a lifetime of vantage points from a established yet not over the hill, jaded perspective.
Paul Simon Bridge Over Troubled Waters album 1970. Graceland 1987. Robbie Robertson/Band Big Pink 1969. Robertson's first solo record 1987. DAvid Bowie Let's Dance 1983. Dark Star 2016. Bob Dylan wasn't the only one who produced an album equal to his earlier works "10 years after he's been written off". Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash also come to mind
Are you trying to say "Lets Dance" was a benchmark for Bowie? It was absolutely disowned by Bowie and most of his original fans. Cash in comes to mind . IMHO.
Dylan was always an impressionable guy. His vocal sound on Nashville Skyline may have just come from hanging around Johnny Cash during that time period.
So many people analyze Dylan and his songs. I haven't heard Dylan analyzing Dylan or his songs much. It's sometimes John Lennon would say what his songs mean. Dylan stays away from it. I prefer same. He does hint at things but thats it. He is a private man.
I gave up on this documentary because the critics annoyed the crap out of me. Dylan is Dylan; he is the soundtrack of my life. I'm not sure that I always like the person that he is, but do I like the music? Always I loved Nashville Skyline, I loved John Wesley Harding; what the heck are these guys on about?
Great doc. But I kinda wish that certain documentarians (including these guys) would decrease the volume of the back-ground music when a commentator / analyst is explaining or elucidating. There are too many instances in which the music either drowns out the commentary or makes words and phrases unintelligible.
Before The Flood album is one of the best!! Who the H€ll was the idiot that said it sounded like thump thump thump I just want the chance to rearranges his face 😂
That Record and that time is well great. This so called documentary though is NOT. The usual assortment of talking heads expounding their expert insight on the subject and the usual tired performance clips make a good sleep aid here.😴😴
No one really likes to talk about this certain song. It's kinda TABOO. because. After this girl met BOB D , she was ,,, a big girl now,, and it's not about sara
All these documentaries and biographies have to keep updating, and updating, and updating. No one can catch up with Dylan, he's always miles ahead of anyone else. Still going strong. And he won the freaking Nobel Prize!
My very first memory of Dylan: I was about nine years old. My family was spending the summer in a cottage in Muskoka, Ontario.. We were all out on the porch at the very edge of the lake, it was late in the evening and we could hear the lapping of waves and the loons calling. My brother Walt was home from university, and he was carrying a guitar. It was the mid-'60s, and everyone was learning folk songs off records and singing them, well or badly. I was used to Walt singing Cape Breton Mines and other rough, tough folk songs, when all of a sudden he sang something that held me in a trance. The song began, "Where have you been, my blue-eyed son?" The lyrics rolled out of him, image upon image, magical, incandescent, and even though I was just a kid, it went straight to my heart. And then - for years - nothing. I barely knew who Bob Dylan was, except to hear people claiming he was a terrible singer. Then I was over at my friend Carmen's house and I heard an album playing behind a closed door - it was Carmen's brother, home from university, and he had to play his records in his bedroom with the door shut because no one could stand to hear them. But I heard, through the closed door, "Where have you been, my blue-eyed son?" And finally, I made the connection. It took us all quite a while to catch up to his early albums - we were listening to Freewheelin' in about 1968. And then he went back to his folk roots just as everyone else was going psychedelic, but when he came out with Nashville Skyline (yet another rebirth, yet another genre), we were all enraptured. Being true to his genius, as always. I began to hear him on the radio as well, and was thrilled at Like a Rolling Stone and (especially) Positively Fourth Street. I could write a whole book about this, but my favorite of all (so far) is Rough and Rowdy Ways, the album he released during the most dire, hopeless depths of the pandemic. As great as anything he has ever done. Still lightning in a bottle, still full of surprises. Still touring at well over 80 years old. Still on that road.
He is a great artist and person.i feel so blessed to have seen him live a few times and I appreciate his music more and more as I get older. He doesn't deserve the unfair criticism.
The best line was the last line "There's Dylan. And then there's everyone else."
It’s so true.
That’s what they say about Mozart. The conductor Richter was asked who he thought was the greatest composer of all time. He quickly said, "Beethoven". The interviewer then said, "You answered very quickly. I thought you might have considered Mozart." Richter said, "Oh, him? I thought you were asking about the rest."
@@swazifiction ... but you can say the same about Bach ...
Yep
Blood on the tracks has been my favourite album of music since the very first time I heard it and still is. For me its like Van Goghs starry night.
Absolutely!
Fantastic documentary. Bob Dylan is the greatest songwriter of all time!
Followed by Neil Young, Lennon & McCartney, Paul Simon, David Bowie, Brian Wilson.
Absolutely
Listening to Al Stewart, past president future, the second best lyric writer in the world.
Oh for sure. I challenge anyone who disagrees
Only a few are reading a hillbilly dictionary when wrighting their moo....sic. please get me a vomet bag... 👎
There are many wonderful facets to this doc, but it really bothers me when music critics make sweeping generalizations. For example, I was an activist protesting the Viet Nam war along with so many others. No one I knew was shocked by and didn't like Nashville Skyline. I had no expectations for Bob and have always loved the album and most everything he's done. Being with Bob is a journey. There is much to see, hear, feel, experience and think & learn about.
My friends and I were a little shocked. His voice was completely different from anything he had ever done before. But did we like it? Hell yes!!! I remember like it was yesterday when my friend and I put Nashville Skyline on the turntable for the first time in the dorm room.
fancy yourself a writer Debs? Well put.
Nashvile Skyline is a 20 odd minute masterpiece.
@@johnmcguire1792 John, much appreciated! I can write a good sentence, lol. Actually, I do like to write and have had a few small things published locally. Thanks!
Thank you, Debra. I liked this doc, but I get annoyed by rock critics for similar reasons.
When NS was released I was appalled by the vocals. I was a big Dylan fan, before and after NS.
Equally “shocking” according to the documentary, was John Wesley Harding, an absolute masterpiece.
Then Planet Waves…WOW!!!! Robbie Robinson’s guitar alone exaults this to one of his top albums. The
Love it communicates…a very deep and meaningful album that these critics savage…
“Perfunctory…disappointing…not great art”…total BS.
Dylan had me from 'Blowin' in the wind'...you never had to love everything he did, or understand it. But I, for one, always had to keep listening and unravelling his riddles.
Maestro....and much underestimated for his sly, dry wit.
Bear Mountain picnic and 115th dream spring to mind for that vein. The Tracks kept me on the rails.
Undoubtedly BLOOD ON THE TRACKS is a masterpiece, the work of an genius poet/lyricist. SENIOR, VISIONS OF JOHANNA can't be forgotten.
Genius of idiocy.
I don’t think every song is about Sara… of course , she was in his life..his wife..but to me it is more a brilliant summary of the 60’s ..& the 60’s failed.. Idiot wind is like “ like a Rolling Stone “ & “ Shot of Love “ distillations of an artist who, like his friend, Tom petty, won’t back down . Like every other record of Bob’s, he left the best songs off it , like “ Up to Me “
@@peterjohnson1761 not one song on ,, BLOOD, was about her , that album was about something completely different,
Ha ha they weren't even on the album! And Dylan didn't write songs for sara he loved big black women and they were his muse
It's fun to speculate, but it's pretty annoying when the people doing it are so public with it and SO wrong. Bob Dylan didn't vanish; he acted in a movie with a soundtrack full of his music; he performed concerts with his generational comrades at the Woody Guthrie tribute; he worked on songs for a theater piece that was eventually abandoned, (but the songs stayed). There's no lull in creativity either. Nobody much but rock writers like these "hated" the records; they were big hits, sold millions, contained singles that were popular and stayed on the radio. They were different from his previous records, but that's true in every temporal direction. And they weren't "bad" because he was happy either; unless you think John Wesley Harding, Nashville Skyline, New Morning, and Planet Waves were "bad" - with some of his biggest hits, some songs that were covered in massively popular versions, songs that are still sung at weddings and memorials and in living rooms all over. They contain a whole lot of creative self-reinvention. The way these men fuse biographical wild guesses with the songs of that period betrays a very genuine failure of imagination and a failure to enter into the imaginative worlds of the songs. There are other themes and other possible ways you can derive meaning; and it's not necessary to overdo that either. Finally, it's not that Bob Dylan needs praise for his work; there's way too much of that anyway. But this is just kind of a travesty in the real sense of the word: a misrepresentation.
Someone who is saying what I’ve been thinking for a long time!
I loved John Wesley Harding, Nashville Skyline, New Morning and Planet Waves. There are some great songs on all these albums, such as; Dear Landlord, I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight, Lay Lady Lay, Peggy Day, Went to See the Gypsy, Day of the Locust, Forever Young and On a Night Like This, and many others are as you said, still sung at weddings and even regularly by people busking on city centre streets, still being heard and still in the public psyche.
These critics have the same sort of mindset as those folk purists in the 60’s, who would form their little cliques and think that they could decide what songs could be sung by Dylan and that he couldn’t play electric instruments etc, they being a sort of musical Sanhedrin, whom were the self appointed guardians of all good taste and decency.
Some of them are like the Pharisees of old; full of pretension and hypocrisy. And like you said, people still bought the records so it shows that the record buying people didn’t take any notice. And what’s more, Dylan’s contemporaries still covered these songs and gave him a regular income as a song writer. Who needs their praise when an artist has validation like that!?!
So glad I have lived in the times of Dylan's music, Bless you Bob 🙏
I'M PROUD , AS WELL,AND ADMIRE HIS BIG GENIUS❤
Love Nashville skyline! First Dylan album I ever heard!
No wonder Bob loathes music critics and rock journalists. Hacks all.
Except for Robert Hilburn the former LA Times music critic who mentioned Dylan's name in all of his articles. even those articles not remotely connected to Dylan.
The uncanny thing about Clinton Heylin's quote of Michael Gray that with "Blood on the Tracks" Dylan delivered one of his best works 10 years after being written off is that Dylan did that AGAIN with "Time Out of Mind" in 1997.
Great point--Dylan had even written HIMSELF off before Time Out of Mind!
''Oh Mercy'' - is quite a nice stop in between those two , IMO
@@ronreynolds1610 I think infidels is a very good album, a very underrated album.
And what about Rough and Rowdy Ways? Still writing and performing excellent songs, as good as anything he ever produced, at well over 80 years old. This album helped me survive the pandemic.
i love to bits at least 8 Bob Dylan albums plus the bootleg series, Bob is the soundtrack of my days
that performance of hard rain is probably the pinnacle of Dylan's vocals, writing, and performance in the 70's!! it totally blow my mind about 20 years ago and still does today. Incredible to see the band rocking out so loose and tight. Can't imagine not digging this.
I never fully understood that mr tambourine man had a cameraman right by his crotch and mrs tambourine man standing right across from him looking angry! bob's always got a great, appropriate song, that's why we love him!
I am really sick of this. “They got upset because he did this, or he did that”.
Leave him alone. He just plays what he wants, does what he wants and explores the genre’s he wants to.
If you like it listen, if you don’t like it don’t listen.
Bob Dylan only wanted to play his music and share it with others, Elizabeth ❤️🎧🎵🌹🎩🎸🎶🎹
Dylan set his self apart early. Still to this day, there’s Dylan, and there’s everyone else. I hope to achieve 1/100th of his magic in my own career.
He revolutionized all forms of music in five years, and he did it all by himself. Alone. That's what's so astonishing.
Bob’s music is a journey. And a destination. Down on highway 61
Nashville Skyline was our little crew's favorite album that year. Our little group included Jackson Browne and Peter Peckar and other musical legends
26.40 MINUTES..A JOKE..an album should be 30-40 minutes. an instrumental, a re recording to fill it.
@@kevinjoseph517 Kevin has spoken.
While I'd heard the pop songs on the radio, and knew about the fuss when he "went electric"", Blood On the Tracks was where I fell in love with Dylan, and I learned more about the early stuff from there. Never been w/o a version (LP, cassette, CD, digital) of Blood On the Tracks since the week it was released.
there's nobody that comes close to Dylan - the essence is. Dylan is so unique no other artist can be compared to him; there's Dylan and there's everybody else.
Keep on keeping on Bob we love you ♥
These people know zero about Bob Dylan. Before the Flood is an incredible record, he puts so much effort into the performances and it shows. The best version Of “All Along the Watchtower” I have ever heard, Like a Rolling Stone, it is a great record
Yes, one of my favourite live albums, some great versions. Not "going through the motions".
I was at this concert, the first tour he'd done in years and the first time he'd played with the band since he "went electric." It was great being there and hearing him rework his old songs for the first time was a revelation, but I was really disappointed when I bought the album. It just didn't convey the excitement of the live performance. Dylan has said of the tour that he was just going through the motions, and both he and the band were down on their fortunes at the time, so the main impulse of this tour was most likely to make some money. It's been years since I heard the album, so I'll have to break it out and see how I feel about it now. In any case, music is subjective and everyone has their own response to it. If you haven't heard them, I would suggest listening to The Bootleg Series, Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live, 1966: The "Royal Albert Hall Concert" and Rock Of Ages. Those are two great live albums.
It's a great live album. Dylan sounds fantastic. It's just before Rolling Thunder & the songs rock.
Thank the musical gods for Mr. Bob Dylan every day. Great music, mute 90% of the critics. Thank you for sharing.
I thank the heavens for being lucky enough to have Bob's music in my life ❤️and the music critics/journalists! Who do they all think they are, so full of themselves that they think they can second guess by what Bob's intentions were when he did something or other! I love Bob more than any other artist, I love shows made about him, but I can't stand this one and all the others like it,! Bunch of "experts" who seem to know more about Bob, than he knows about himself! 🤣
I saw him recently and it really was a great show. I can’t imagine for the rest of I’ll see a show that will be more meaningful to me.
this is my new favorite documentary. wow. that end rant is fire.
Street Legal was brutally attacked. But 1 of my Favorites.
Mine too. So many amazing songs on there!
Michael Gray’s chapter on Street Legal in his Song and Dance Man puts the record straight. It’s a very important ;and great) Dylan album.
Love “Changing of the Guards”
Especially Changing of the Guards and No Time to Think.
@@oleggorky906 my two favourite songs on the album. :)
I feel like Blood on the Tracks. Begins as an audio illusion. Tangled up in Blue is chosen to be the first song on the album. And, you think to yourself. It can only go downhill from here. That’s how great I feel that song is. However, as you move on. You realize, every song on the album, is that great. This is a great documentary. I’m enjoying it immensely.
Thanks for watching!
❤❤The Great, Legendary Bob Dylan ❤❤❤❤
Some songs grow on you, others you like at first then get fed up with them quickly. Bob's are like fine wine, they get better with age.
John Wesley Harding is on of the best psychedelic Albums ever
In fact after and including Bringing it all back home, they were all one of the best psychedelic's albums ever :)
I think New Morning is psychedelic. Maybe because I was on acid when it came out
Sometimes it's no wonder Dylan hates critic's attempt to over analyze a purely personal artform filtered through their own biases, instead of allowing Dylan the freedom of his own filter.
the alternate version is even better than the company release so find it and listen an if your a dylan fan then you will hear what i mean...thanks for this docu...great job
I agree, Idiot Wind outake #4, is so different and so haunting compared to the album release, and by the time thr harmonica hits at the end i just lose it everytime, its like the harmonica is crying, totally should have been the one used on album
Great overview with thoughtful commentary. Thank you! 🙌
"There is Dylan,
and there is everybody else."
I would be very much interested in a similar documentary on Rough and Rowdy Ways - a masterpiece of an album on the same level as Blood on the Tracks...
Dylan is one artist who doesn't people to tell us what it's all about.
For me, where the rubber meets the road with his writing being comfortable in its own skin is ‘Blonde on Blonde’. I had listened to Dylan for several years or I thought I had because I had his first couple of albums and one day a friend of mine who smoked a lot of weed and was a music scholar of sorts(you know the type when you are in your early 20s) he mentioned that he thought I would enjoy Dylan’s stuff that had drums and he said he actually had a copy of blonde on blonde in his bag. I was shocked because I thought, at that time, that Dylan was strictly acoustic folk type music and when I put on B.on.B and listened from start to finish I was thoroughly floored and felt like almost cheated and unsure of everything because I had no idea that Dylan got down like that and the lyrics were like the slap of a monks staff when the younger monks stray from their meditation to a young writer such as myself. Visions of Johanna had me ready to pack it in, quit my foolish ideas about writing and start selling vacuum cleaners or something, anything because I doubted I could dig as deep into whatever it was he dug into and exorcize it into song. Then discovered his other albums and had the John Wesley Harding album on repeat for a year or more. I enjoyed discovering each album and each one I can relate to different moments of time in my life but when the album that I think captured the spirit of the eternal is ‘Modern Times’. Such a masterpiece that hangs on that wall of eternity. After an apocalyptic event, a whole new civilization can be started with nothing else but that album. Time Out Of Mind is right there with it as well as Oh Mercy. I heard Dylan say in an interview that he can’t tap into that magic he did on certain earlier songs(I didn’t hear the entire interview but only a clip so there could be more to what was said and I don’t won’t to take it out of context) but I think I’m songs such as ‘Nettie Moore’ he taps into it deeper
Brilliantly done, hosts are fantastic.
Agree!
Others on here have already addressed this eloquently and I agree. These "journalists" just go too far trying to interpret Bob's work. I learned a long time ago...to just take it as it is. He's not an entertainer in the traditional sense, but an artist.
He's painting his masterpiece
yup ,, if i could only pick one dylan album ,, and there is so many gems to pick from ,, it would have to be blood ont the tracks , awesome album ,, awesome artist ,love ya bob .
Dylan is a gift from Minnesota
44:20 the 'critics' do not understand christianity or spirituality...this is not dylan making a joke or likening himself to jesus...this is dylan referring the suffering and the burden borne by every living being....
simply brilliant!
Thank you! Cheers!
Some people say that I´m the #1 Dylan´s mexican fan (of course I´m not). But he´s my bigger influence and Tangled up in Blue my #1 song ever. Nice Documental...
Would have been refreshing to include some female critics on here. Also Nashville Skyline has some incredible songwriting, which many critics just gloss over... supposedly 'lightweight' songs that actually mean so much to thousands of people, and with endless emotional universes inside them.
Thank you. I too would like to hear from female critics.
@@rossosbornfamilyfoundation3536 Why?
65 years of Dylan and his puzzle. We are still trying to figure out the clues. The truth is there is no plot, only the eternal journey. And the journey is strictly personal.
Much loved album
Still love my Album 🌟👍🎵
SLOW TRAIN COMING WAS REALLY GOOD..
Blood on the Tracks: "This is the album you will play to people to explain Dylan". Well... Freewheelin´, The times.., Highway 61, Blonde on Blonde, Desire, Slow Train, Time out of Mind,.. I love the album, but there is soo much more to Dylan
1:41
"Pulling out pin"?
What a DOLT!
When will you lymie self exalted in mind realize you vibrate with the frequency of a broke leg horse...
To be silenced
Cool! Reasoned comments, no particular axes to grind - excellent! One thing, though - the guy who waves his hands so much should control that. It distracts the viewer.
At the time of Dylan's motorcycle accident my best friend was dating a young woman whose father was one of the physicians who treated Dylan at the time of the accident. His daughter said to my friend, quoting her father, "I shovelled his brains back into his head." As a former neuroscientist, I'm not surprised his writing and voice changed. As a Dylan fan, it was very noticeable to me at the time.
1:41
"Pulling out pin"?
What a DOLT!
When will you lymie self exalted in mind realize you vibrate with the frequency of a broke leg horse...
To be silenced
What the guy said about Nashville skyline not being liked or even “brutally attacked“ is complete horseshit Everybody. I knew in our mid teens didn’t blink an eye When Nashville skyline came out we accepted it as just another New Way,. Dylan was making great music. It was very welcomed by most
1:41
"Pulling out pin"?
What a DOLT!
When will you lymie self exalted in mind realize you vibrate with the frequency of a broke leg horse...
To be silenced
BALDERDASH....so many people explaining Dylan in the comments as if they know how he thinks. if any good music was being released you wouldn't have to exercise your MASSIVE INTELLECTS to tell me what he was thinking...i been listening since 1965 and the selfserving intellectualism never stops.
Dylan takes each of us on a different journey.
ŁATWO KOCHAĆ BOBA DYLANA GENIUSZ GENIUSZ GENIUSZ nad GENIUSZAMI KOSMOS KOCHANI na zawsze dziękuję BOGU za wszystko dziękuję BARDZO i już MIŁOŚĆ ☮️ POKÓJ MUZYKA na zawsze
And now let's discuss Desires and Street Legal. Exceptional albums.
At 23:20 l feel that about so many of his from this time, 1974, forth.
The One and Only!
The thing is Dylan always doing his own thing. He played punk rock 1966. When everybody else did psychedelic rock he wanted to play folk and country
around 16;50 talking about dirge i believe he was refering to a passage in the bible where God almost destroyed mankind as we became evil in his sight as lucifer reminded him constantly and note it was our choice to be evil with no devil to blame in reality but he repented..dylan knew so much so young Im amazed he's still with us.
Don't you just love the Dylan 'experts'??? Answer: Nope!
Some great footage though. Dylan burning it on the Hard Rain tour.
He'll always be famous for the early period Blowin in the Wind folkie songs. But after many changes and some crappy albums, Planet Waves comes to mind....there was Blood. And then Desire. For me that period and those two albums with a PBS viewed live Hurricane were both personal and very powerful. Though that Clara movie totally bombed it out, overly ambitious as the complimentary angle, those two albums said a lifetime of vantage points from a established yet not over the hill, jaded perspective.
Blood on the Tracks was the top of the mountain for Dylan. Everything he's done since, has been "muh"
Paul Simon Bridge Over Troubled Waters album 1970. Graceland 1987. Robbie Robertson/Band Big Pink 1969. Robertson's first solo record 1987. DAvid Bowie Let's Dance 1983. Dark Star 2016. Bob Dylan wasn't the only one who produced an album equal to his earlier works "10 years after he's been written off". Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash also come to mind
But none of them brought out 7 brilliant albums in a row like Dylan did. And then the many other fabulous albums he's since
Are you trying to say "Lets Dance" was a benchmark for Bowie? It was absolutely disowned by Bowie and most of his original fans. Cash in comes to mind . IMHO.
Dylan was always an impressionable guy. His vocal sound on Nashville Skyline may have just come from hanging around Johnny Cash during that time period.
who ARE these people who sound SO authorative about Dylan?! where are the youth...where are his REAL fans instead of all these Professor types. ?!!
I wouldn’t take Blood over Freewheelin, Highway 61, Bringing it all back home
Anytime Dylan performed back then, he was "leading" people.
Planet Waves is an excellent album, from start to finish. Try not to say things just to hear yourself talk!
Love and Theft. Oh Mercy
Alex Jones claims that Ballad of a Thin Man was written about him!
He wasn't alive yet
The man was a prophet!
I personally think the New York sessions for Blood on the Tracks far outshine the Minnesota sessions.
Rough n Rowdy way. Good as i been to you...World gone wrong. DESIRE.
I'm surprised they don't bring up Mick Ronson he was on that tour.
So many people analyze Dylan and his songs. I haven't heard Dylan analyzing Dylan or his songs much. It's sometimes John Lennon would say what his songs mean. Dylan stays away from it. I prefer same. He does hint at things but thats it. He is a private man.
He made folk music political? Excuse me! Woody.
I gave up on this documentary because the critics annoyed the crap out of me. Dylan is Dylan; he is the soundtrack of my life. I'm not sure that I always like the person that he is, but do I like the music? Always I loved Nashville Skyline, I loved John Wesley Harding; what the heck are these guys on about?
it seems like THE CRITICS , never actually, got anything right about DYLANS , music or his private life.
@Fidela Romo how would you know? Are you a creepy stalker?
Irony is blood on the tapes is imo so much better version-aka blood on tie tracks ny session. Agree- as an album my favorite, nothing close.
Great doc. But I kinda wish that certain documentarians (including these guys) would decrease the volume of the back-ground music when a commentator / analyst is explaining or elucidating. There are too many instances in which the music either drowns out the commentary or makes words and phrases unintelligible.
Before The Flood album is one of the best!! Who the H€ll was the idiot that said it sounded like thump thump thump I just want the chance to rearranges his face 😂
Isn't amazing that Bob managed to stay away from main stream politics?
Dylan said that he is in awe of Paul McCartney. He can do it all and he never slowed down.
Dylan went electric because all the New York folkies moved to LA and formed updated country, etc
Any of these ‘critics’ ever hang out with Bob or had a conversation with him?
NO !!!!!
@@fidelaromo6705 how would you know🤣
@@Bob_Cats even if THEY DID ,they would still be as clueless 🙄
@Fidela Romo I don't debate Dylan. You trapped me. Boo
Critics have been dumbfounded by Zimmy for decades..😊
Tangled up in blue with the band
That Record and that time is well great.
This so called documentary though is NOT.
The usual assortment of talking heads expounding their expert insight on the subject and the usual tired performance clips make a good sleep aid here.😴😴
New Morning 👍 THE BASEMENT TAPES.
I honestly can’t pick just one.
What about Big Girl?
No one really likes to talk about this certain song. It's kinda TABOO. because. After this girl met BOB D , she was ,,, a big girl now,, and it's not about sara
Barry manalow wrote the songs ,, the IU baby blood songs ,, me not name Barry's blood 👶👑🎤🙏🎸👶👑🎤🙏🎻🖼️🩸🩸🩸🩸👨🎤🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🌏
Are you serious?? The 74 tour was excellent!!
Hard Rain. Live at the Buddakan
Ah, the rehashed myth of the motorcycle crash ...
It was hugely exaggerated so he could get out of his contractual obligations and stop touring. That's the common story anyway.
Bob is a genius.. And a contrarian.
I've argued with Bob many times over this.
Love the doc but what a bad lesson to teach new artists: if you're happy you won't create good art. Such bull.
Super rare footage of Bob . Talked over by bland producers and hangers on . Oh joy .