So sloppy but so damn great! Listening to Bob Dylan live is like letting go of your inhibitions and what you think is structure and just go with the flow. And yes play it as loud as possible.
@jacksondemarre Pick up the DVD "No Direction Home" and watch everything on it. But take note of his condition when in or talking about Italy and being killed in a plane crash.
None of which takes anything away from these amazing performances.
@MichaelBallack91 I tend to believe his "motorcycle crash" was actually his putting his foot down against his manager putting booking him for "endless" touring. To "dry out" (amphetamine and reefer). As suggested above, watch the Scorcese documentary, and not Dylan's CONDITION when talking about being killed in a plane carsh. Note also, as example, his rocking back and forth.
@MichaelBallack91 I tend to believe his "motorcycle crash" was actually his putting his foot down against his manager putting booking him for "endless" touring. To "dry out" (amphetamine and reefer). As suggested above, watch the Scorcese documentary, and not Dylan's CONDITION when talking about being killed in a plane crash. Note also, as example, his rocking back and forth.
@lionsome Many rappers praise Dylan as being the first rapper. Others praise Gil Scott-Heron on those same grounds. Dylan would likely point to Woodie Guthrie and his talking blues.
Dylan made literate lyris, beyond boy-meets-girl acceptable in popular music. Listen to Billy Joel's "Piano Man" for an example.
@lionsome Dylan contributed measurelessly to the Civil Rights movement. I'm sure you oppose that too -- especially if you consider illiterate over-rhymed "Rap" to be a valid form of msic. OK: so Rappers can't be attacked on the grounds that they can't sing, because they don't sing; they self-righteously yell and harangue. The mature don't tolerate bellicosity and verbal abuse.
@lionsome Dylan wasn't a hippy. Nor were most of his fans.
You really should drop the use of a term you don't understand, especially as your use of it as a pejorative comes straight from the far-right FOX sewer, and hate-radio nuts such as Rush Limbaugh.
lionsom or w.e the fuck your name is, just die, not because you dont like dylan cus i dont give a shit about that, but because your just ignorant. i hope one day while ur in the midst of being an asshole someone just turns and shoots you in the foot so maybe youll think twice about what you say.
@lionsome your assumption that im a septic is based on what? listen to gates of eden or its all over now baby blue Dylan can sing (not brilliantly admittedly) but to just deny point blank his influence is ignorant or trolling but fuck it ill bite anyway. btw Mozart was a tiresome bore which is reflected in the drivel he wrote
@lionsome Naw man--Of course Dylan didn't invent underground rap. But, he did lay down the foundations for what would become rap. The lyrics, the freedom of self expression, the inventiveness, the mixing of genres. You're asking me to explain what Dylan did for music? Shit man I only have 200 characters left... go read a book. But in the mean time, and because you don't seem seem like the book readin' type, I'll make it real simple. He propelled it. He propelled it a lot and real fast
@lionsome if you have to ask what Dylan did for music then you really are in a dark place. Love or loath him if you cant see his influence everywhere then you need to address your ignorance
anybody ever heard the live version of this song from 1965? its incredible, definitely my favorite version. go to grooveshark and look up the album "electric black nite crash". youre welcome. oh and lionsome, FUCK YOU FUCKING BITCH.
@lionsome If it wasn't for Bob, you wouldn't have your underground rap man. You don't gotta like it, but if you really want to appreciate what you like, i suggest you learn to appreciate this. Educate yourself and learn what Bob did for music.
@lionsome this song was 45 years ago and if you think todays underground rap will be listened to in 45 years - you're crazy. Relevance in history, that's what you're watching here. You wont find me watching rap.
lmao - yeah, some people didn't like Dylan or Floyd out of my generation - generation E, drum & bass. techno etc. but you're wrong about Mozart - that's just music written to entertain the king, like Vivaldi...it's court music. It's very good for what it is, but don't confuse it with thinking-for-oneself. it isn't. and you really don't speak for everyone your age, even though that's clearly hard for you to come to terms with! XDDDDD @lionsome
@lionsome You must be 13 or something. Probably a wigger too. You completely missed the point I made in bringing up those other musicians. Not worth my time, kid.
@lionsome Sorry, troll. How old music is doesn't mean shit about the age of the listener. I'm 23 and mostly listen to 60's era music. (Dylan being my favorite musician) People today still listen to Mozart, Bach and the like. Nice try, though.
Innovative Dylan & always way ahead of his time! I really felt sorry for him during this time. Folk to Rock ....a major leap! Everyone has to move on as Dylan has proved time after time & that's why he's still around, famous, popular & still selling records! They don't call him the Master & Genius of writing for no reason. Keep on Keeping On, Bob!! We sstill love the music!
My favorite version from this tour is the one recorded in Liverpool. When he sings "I don't have the strength to take another Shaaaht. He sounds so wounded. Sad but, so powerful.
@Abrown465 The audience was definitely the hippest I can ever remember, just singing along like crazy and really got into it. Glad someone else can remember how good it was performed. Thanks.
Offa Highway 61 Revisited which is, (my humble opinion ) Bob Dylan's defining moment as a young writer, leading edge genre inventor, humorist , imaginator!! and world's lousiest harp player...I hear his road band behind him (The Band) it's enough to bring tears to my eyes.
Who knew shortly after Bob Dylan came close to death from that motorcycle wreck. I didn't have my "first look " until Rolling Thunder Revue in 1976, then in Germany with TP/Heartbreakers &McGuinn.(tux t-shirt and all)..jwf
@MeatTycoonDevious They surely will once Dylan dies... a musician's death is always a good way to rake in with unreleased material... but it will never happen because Bob is immortal.
This was recorded in Manchester at The Free Trade Hall on May 17, 1966 and was released on many bootlegs and the official Columbia album "The Royal Albert Hall Concert".
@MrDylanRecords.... i also think that this is not from albert hall because i heard john kennedy saying on bbc3 the other day that dylan was performing solo in albert hall,,,no band, no drums...is there any recording of this event? i bet they did not let him bring the band in...to cut him down to their size...lol...
@sexypoetry His concerts were of two sets: the first acoustic, the second electric. That's why the person in the audience called him, "Judas!"-- the audience had been silent during th acoustic set. And in response, Dylan turned to the band, stamped his foot, said, "Play fucking LOUD!!" then shoved his magnificent perforamnce of "Like a Rolling Stone" down the heckler's face.
@JNagarya thanks...this sound exciting indeed...going to watch it now....i could suggest you "leonard cohen against germans"...it seems to be something similar...
@lumpyloks I think I heard it on here once upon a time before they took down all the Dylan songs. I've been looking for it for months, so good luck finding it. I'm starting to think the only way to hear it is to track down the original 45".
I heard on KHSU on the eve before Dylan's 70th B-day that this concert was really recorded at Manchester Hall, where ever that is. I do know that it was released as a "B" side of "I Want You", in accordance with the bi-polar nature of Dylan's mecurial and Gem-in- I personality.
@tamarathms I like to imagine the guy, a rocker by nature.... being dragged by some chick to see this concert dreading it because the dude just isnt into that folksy shit... and then being blown away when they came out and did this. Him leaving the concert a new Dylan convert and the chick saying.. "i like the older stuff better".
This is an allegorical stream-of-conscious recollection (?) of perhaps a real experience in a Mexican border town, without a doubt misoginistic. Rue morgue avenue is definitely in reference to Edgar Allan Poe's short story. "The cops don't need you, and man they expect the same" is more or less a universal for individuals with Dylan's reputation.
Shut the fuck up. The song is not allegorical, it's certainly not "stream of conscious" and there is nothing misogynistic in the lyrics. There is no Poe reference-the Rue Morgue Avenue in Juarez has nothing to do with murders by an orangutan or detective work-and the imagery and narrative are straightforward.
The ONLY artist to break ground, OUTSIDE the studio...LIVE........and by the way, The Band fucking rules too.....Robbie is downright NASTY, and ABUSIVE on that Telecaster......play it boy!!!
@borski67 I like the version of "Like a Rolling Stone" from that same concert...espsecially at the beginning, when Bob yells to the Band (then known as the Hawks), "Play fucking loud!"
Everyday during the summer of 1967 I would go to the A&W Rootbeer and play this Dylan tune two or three times to recover from my job at the VA hospital. Pure medicene.
I love this version. I have this CD and I listened to this version so much, I think of it more than the studio version. The studio version is great, too, but this is just so raw and awesome.
@MckyMseNTarotCrds I don't know BD's songs made me so happy. I don't understand the lyrics very well, though. There is something mysterious about his music.
Or Juarez?
lovinkritzlife 3 days ago
Ever heard of El paso TX?
lovinkritzlife 3 days ago
I started out on burgundy but soon hit the harder stuff !
hoodlum66681 1 week ago
Bob Dylan is the best musical in the entire world, PERIOD!!!!
Freddeh74 2 weeks ago
he carries the note very well
tpheartbreaker441 1 month ago
i love this shit
tpheartbreaker441 1 month ago
So sloppy but so damn great! Listening to Bob Dylan live is like letting go of your inhibitions and what you think is structure and just go with the flow. And yes play it as loud as possible.
dannyapeshit 1 month ago
He's stoned.
jacksondemarre 1 month ago
@jacksondemarre Pick up the DVD "No Direction Home" and watch everything on it. But take note of his condition when in or talking about Italy and being killed in a plane crash.
None of which takes anything away from these amazing performances.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@JNagarya He wasn't killed in a plain crash.
jacksondemarre 1 month ago
Comment removed
MichaelBallack91 1 month ago
@jacksondemarre
You're right, he wasn't killed in just any old "plain" crash. His crash was extraordinary!
MichaelBallack91 1 month ago
@MichaelBallack91 I tend to believe his "motorcycle crash" was actually his putting his foot down against his manager putting booking him for "endless" touring. To "dry out" (amphetamine and reefer). As suggested above, watch the Scorcese documentary, and not Dylan's CONDITION when talking about being killed in a plane carsh. Note also, as example, his rocking back and forth.
JNagarya 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@MichaelBallack91 I tend to believe his "motorcycle crash" was actually his putting his foot down against his manager putting booking him for "endless" touring. To "dry out" (amphetamine and reefer). As suggested above, watch the Scorcese documentary, and not Dylan's CONDITION when talking about being killed in a plane crash. Note also, as example, his rocking back and forth.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@jacksondemarre I'm well aware of that. I didn't say he was. I said to take note of his CONDITION when talking about being killed in a plane crash.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@lionsome Many rappers praise Dylan as being the first rapper. Others praise Gil Scott-Heron on those same grounds. Dylan would likely point to Woodie Guthrie and his talking blues.
Dylan made literate lyris, beyond boy-meets-girl acceptable in popular music. Listen to Billy Joel's "Piano Man" for an example.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@lionsome Dylan contributed measurelessly to the Civil Rights movement. I'm sure you oppose that too -- especially if you consider illiterate over-rhymed "Rap" to be a valid form of msic. OK: so Rappers can't be attacked on the grounds that they can't sing, because they don't sing; they self-righteously yell and harangue. The mature don't tolerate bellicosity and verbal abuse.
.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@lionsome Dylan comes from Minnesota. In Minnesota the "nasal" quality is the norm.
If you believe he's off-pitch, fine; that points to the fact you haven't a clue what he's doing.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@lionsome Dylan wasn't a hippy. Nor were most of his fans.
You really should drop the use of a term you don't understand, especially as your use of it as a pejorative comes straight from the far-right FOX sewer, and hate-radio nuts such as Rush Limbaugh.
JNagarya 1 month ago
how could've people been pissed at him for coming out with this back when him and the hawks got together?
skuzeskinw 1 month ago
I first heard this song by Neil Young at the 1992 "Bobfest" at Madison Square Garden. He really changed some of the lyrics.
"They got some ugly women there... "
"Then she steals your voice, and leaves you out in the afternoon."
"And if you're looking to get lucky..."
And he left out the "ghost" verse entirely.
You gotta have balls to change the words to a Dylan song... and Neil's got titanium ones.
UncleMikeNJ 1 month ago
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i would like to join or start the pole shift survival group
sexypoetry 1 month ago
My God, people actually "booed" these performances. Pearls before swine!
smautomat 2 months ago 2
i had never heard this recording. that just blew my mind. oh my god. holy shit.
KingMoses3 2 months ago
lionsom or w.e the fuck your name is, just die, not because you dont like dylan cus i dont give a shit about that, but because your just ignorant. i hope one day while ur in the midst of being an asshole someone just turns and shoots you in the foot so maybe youll think twice about what you say.
rja4937 2 months ago
hmm, how does it feel to be the ONLY person who disliked this, mysterious hater? Forever Alone....
vansebastian 3 months ago
shut up
warren3427 3 months ago
@lionsome your assumption that im a septic is based on what? listen to gates of eden or its all over now baby blue Dylan can sing (not brilliantly admittedly) but to just deny point blank his influence is ignorant or trolling but fuck it ill bite anyway. btw Mozart was a tiresome bore which is reflected in the drivel he wrote
glovemonkey 3 months ago
@lionsome Naw man--Of course Dylan didn't invent underground rap. But, he did lay down the foundations for what would become rap. The lyrics, the freedom of self expression, the inventiveness, the mixing of genres. You're asking me to explain what Dylan did for music? Shit man I only have 200 characters left... go read a book. But in the mean time, and because you don't seem seem like the book readin' type, I'll make it real simple. He propelled it. He propelled it a lot and real fast
tma2290 3 months ago 2
@lionsome if you have to ask what Dylan did for music then you really are in a dark place. Love or loath him if you cant see his influence everywhere then you need to address your ignorance
glovemonkey 3 months ago
anybody ever heard the live version of this song from 1965? its incredible, definitely my favorite version. go to grooveshark and look up the album "electric black nite crash". youre welcome. oh and lionsome, FUCK YOU FUCKING BITCH.
TomThumbsBlues1965 3 months ago
Comment removed
TomThumbsBlues1965 3 months ago
@lionsome If it wasn't for Bob, you wouldn't have your underground rap man. You don't gotta like it, but if you really want to appreciate what you like, i suggest you learn to appreciate this. Educate yourself and learn what Bob did for music.
tma2290 3 months ago
i was there still havent recovered 45 years later still tripping love ya bob
zimmy582 3 months ago
@lionsome Hate to be rude but you're an idiot.
Pmitsou123 3 months ago
@lionsome Man, this is poerty. You don't get it.
Pmitsou123 3 months ago
@lionsome this song was 45 years ago and if you think todays underground rap will be listened to in 45 years - you're crazy. Relevance in history, that's what you're watching here. You wont find me watching rap.
grainofsand79 3 months ago
ディランはフリーメイソンじゃない。
MAOMI777 3 months ago
@lionsome dont criticise what you cant understand
grainofsand79 3 months ago 2
Comment removed
upadaria 3 months ago
I kid you not, when I FIRST heard this song I was LITERALLY lost in the rain in Juarez on easter sunday i like 1996....
upadaria 3 months ago 2
lmao - yeah, some people didn't like Dylan or Floyd out of my generation - generation E, drum & bass. techno etc. but you're wrong about Mozart - that's just music written to entertain the king, like Vivaldi...it's court music. It's very good for what it is, but don't confuse it with thinking-for-oneself. it isn't. and you really don't speak for everyone your age, even though that's clearly hard for you to come to terms with! XDDDDD @lionsome
CRIMINALSUICIDELTD 4 months ago
@lionsome i gotta say lionsome just from reading the publicly posted dialogue that you are coming off as quite ignorant.
biggoodness 4 months ago
@lionsome You must be 13 or something. Probably a wigger too. You completely missed the point I made in bringing up those other musicians. Not worth my time, kid.
minuszero815 4 months ago
@lionsome Sorry, troll. How old music is doesn't mean shit about the age of the listener. I'm 23 and mostly listen to 60's era music. (Dylan being my favorite musician) People today still listen to Mozart, Bach and the like. Nice try, though.
minuszero815 4 months ago
@lionsome
this is rated top 3 albums of all time and im pretty sure none of ur dubstep is top 500
rja4937 4 months ago
@lionsome
your an ignorant fuck
rja4937 4 months ago
@lionsome what is this, a master piece from bob dylan, from his best albom highway 61 revisited
cosmito6 4 months ago
This song and Shelter from the Storm are my two favorite tunes.
mrbobevans 4 months ago
Innovative Dylan & always way ahead of his time! I really felt sorry for him during this time. Folk to Rock ....a major leap! Everyone has to move on as Dylan has proved time after time & that's why he's still around, famous, popular & still selling records! They don't call him the Master & Genius of writing for no reason. Keep on Keeping On, Bob!! We sstill love the music!
ohiodixiechick2 4 months ago
The musicianship on this is just insane.
kariaudar 4 months ago 2
My favorite version from this tour is the one recorded in Liverpool. When he sings "I don't have the strength to take another Shaaaht. He sounds so wounded. Sad but, so powerful.
Abrown465 5 months ago
@Abrown465 The audience was definitely the hippest I can ever remember, just singing along like crazy and really got into it. Glad someone else can remember how good it was performed. Thanks.
percommode 1 month ago
this tune was first released in the UK, as a b/w to 'I want You...it was recorded live in Liverpool..so the credits tell ya :>))
MrJoncando 5 months ago
Offa Highway 61 Revisited which is, (my humble opinion ) Bob Dylan's defining moment as a young writer, leading edge genre inventor, humorist , imaginator!! and world's lousiest harp player...I hear his road band behind him (The Band) it's enough to bring tears to my eyes.
Who knew shortly after Bob Dylan came close to death from that motorcycle wreck. I didn't have my "first look " until Rolling Thunder Revue in 1976, then in Germany with TP/Heartbreakers &McGuinn.(tux t-shirt and all)..jwf
jdmfonte 6 months ago 2
@jdmfonte World's Best Harmonica Player you don't know what you're talkin about so STFU!!!!1
greendragn 4 months ago
go bobby&robby yeaha!
1uptospeed 6 months ago
Actually from Manchester, the night before if I am not mistaken
walkerpix 6 months ago 3
this is the last real rock n roll made.........
1022rebelreddog 6 months ago
best live rock n roll record of ALL TIME
scarredsky 6 months ago
"I'm goin' back to New York City, I do believe I've had enough."
tommyt1971 7 months ago 2
this live performance is great, but i wish i could find the one that appears at the beggining of the second part of no direction home
diegorock 7 months ago
Here's hoping that a complete concert video of Dylan playing live with The Hawks in 1966 is eventually released.
MeatTycoonDevious 7 months ago 15
@MeatTycoonDevious They surely will once Dylan dies... a musician's death is always a good way to rake in with unreleased material... but it will never happen because Bob is immortal.
ralfsu 3 months ago
@ralfsu because Bob is immortal.
Dylan taught to write music to the devil, in exchange he gave immortality, as always the devil won in their dealings
renaldoisis 2 months ago
This was recorded in Manchester at The Free Trade Hall on May 17, 1966 and was released on many bootlegs and the official Columbia album "The Royal Albert Hall Concert".
feloniousmunk 7 months ago 2
This song reminds me of college.
Gibson0918 7 months ago
this is form the London Royal Albert Hall in 1966...
stantonmiranda07 7 months ago
@stantonmiranda07
its often referred to as from Royal Albert Hall but is actually from Manchester Free Trade Hall
bonin919 7 months ago
@stantonmiranda07 Its actually the Manchester Free Trade hall 1966 :)
MrDylanRecords 7 months ago 10
@MrDylanRecords.... i also think that this is not from albert hall because i heard john kennedy saying on bbc3 the other day that dylan was performing solo in albert hall,,,no band, no drums...is there any recording of this event? i bet they did not let him bring the band in...to cut him down to their size...lol...
sexypoetry 1 month ago
@sexypoetry His concerts were of two sets: the first acoustic, the second electric. That's why the person in the audience called him, "Judas!"-- the audience had been silent during th acoustic set. And in response, Dylan turned to the band, stamped his foot, said, "Play fucking LOUD!!" then shoved his magnificent perforamnce of "Like a Rolling Stone" down the heckler's face.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@JNagarya thanks...this sound exciting indeed...going to watch it now....i could suggest you "leonard cohen against germans"...it seems to be something similar...
sexypoetry 1 month ago
@sexypoetry The version of "Like a Rolling Stone" from the 1966 tour (it's on youtube), with the Hawks, is beyond superlatives. A beautiful rant.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@sexypoetry See this:
Bob Dylan - Like a Rolling Stone (Live 1966)
But be certain you're wearing your seatbelt or he'll knock you to the floor.
It's bobby d at his most beautiful.
JNagarya 1 month ago
@stantonmiranda07 manchester free trade hall
jonathan1994ish1 4 months ago
@stantonmiranda07 This is Manchester Free Trade Hall
arru23 4 months ago
@stantonmiranda07 Yeah the album called "Albert Hall '66" that is. The tape is from fucking Manchester.
ElNicco1 2 months ago
@ElNicco1 Yeah I guess Columbia thought London was more glamorous at the time,
azzaboi93 1 month ago
Is this from the Royal Albert Hall or from Manchester?
Rossonero072213 7 months ago
This song always makes me so happy. I love Bob Dylan.
st1nee 7 months ago
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The best version of this song!Thanks :D!!
14Fabry 7 months ago
Comment removed
14Fabry 7 months ago
the b-side of I want you is the version from liverpool, not this one
thetherie 7 months ago
wow! p.s. nice vocal.
animascat 7 months ago
wow!
animascat 7 months ago
is this the version on the bside of i want you on the album blonde on blonde?
lumpyloks 7 months ago
@lumpyloks Nope - that was recorded in Sydney. Same tour, though!
lakemarkhamusic 7 months ago
@lakemarkhamusic do you know how to hear or buy that version? I heard it's great.
lumpyloks 7 months ago
@lumpyloks I think I heard it on here once upon a time before they took down all the Dylan songs. I've been looking for it for months, so good luck finding it. I'm starting to think the only way to hear it is to track down the original 45".
lakemarkhamusic 7 months ago
I heard on KHSU on the eve before Dylan's 70th B-day that this concert was really recorded at Manchester Hall, where ever that is. I do know that it was released as a "B" side of "I Want You", in accordance with the bi-polar nature of Dylan's mecurial and Gem-in- I personality.
anthonyjsanger 8 months ago
i wish i was at the1966 Royal Albert Hall concert
tamarathms 9 months ago
@tamarathms I like to imagine the guy, a rocker by nature.... being dragged by some chick to see this concert dreading it because the dude just isnt into that folksy shit... and then being blown away when they came out and did this. Him leaving the concert a new Dylan convert and the chick saying.. "i like the older stuff better".
wistoncap 9 months ago 2
This is an allegorical stream-of-conscious recollection (?) of perhaps a real experience in a Mexican border town, without a doubt misoginistic. Rue morgue avenue is definitely in reference to Edgar Allan Poe's short story. "The cops don't need you, and man they expect the same" is more or less a universal for individuals with Dylan's reputation.
anthonyjsanger 9 months ago
@anthonyjsanger
Shut the fuck up. The song is not allegorical, it's certainly not "stream of conscious" and there is nothing misogynistic in the lyrics. There is no Poe reference-the Rue Morgue Avenue in Juarez has nothing to do with murders by an orangutan or detective work-and the imagery and narrative are straightforward.
jblacktree 8 months ago
one badass tune
love the cover of dylan and robbie robertson on guitar
tiemyshoes92 11 months ago
The ONLY artist to break ground, OUTSIDE the studio...LIVE........and by the way, The Band fucking rules too.....Robbie is downright NASTY, and ABUSIVE on that Telecaster......play it boy!!!
borski67 11 months ago 6
@borski67 I like the version of "Like a Rolling Stone" from that same concert...espsecially at the beginning, when Bob yells to the Band (then known as the Hawks), "Play fucking loud!"
blackwelderadam 9 months ago 2
@borski67
I wouldn't go so far as to say he was the only artist to break ground live haha but he did a lot for music.
yooat 3 months ago
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definately,Perth Aussie..the Malcolm Street Crew....Those WERE the Days My Friends.Sunshine.xx Rue Malcolm
aminuts2 11 months ago
definately,Perth Aussie..the Malcolm Street Crew....Those WERE the Days My Friends.Sunshine.xx
aminuts2 11 months ago
"the goddess of gloom"... i remember her well, i was married to her for 12yrs
wistoncap 11 months ago 50
@wistoncap
i hear ya dude...i feel your pain
ChiroQuacker 4 months ago
Everyday during the summer of 1967 I would go to the A&W Rootbeer and play this Dylan tune two or three times to recover from my job at the VA hospital. Pure medicene.
anthonyjsanger 1 year ago 32
music for the gods!
rubbydub 1 year ago
@rubbydub Made and performed by one of them!!! :)
freewheelinQ 7 months ago
Rough morge ave. hungry women too...New orleans been there --the cops dont need you and man they expect the same.
razorsedge1916 1 year ago
1966 is my favorite!!!!
234peace 1 year ago
OMG I looooove this sooo much!! This is his Royal Bobness at his EPICNESS!! Just can't stop listening...
larannar123 1 year ago 2
nice... :)
zoeruls 1 year ago
The booing, the slow hand claps, the rawness of the song... incredible.
ahamburger111 1 year ago
I love this version. I have this CD and I listened to this version so much, I think of it more than the studio version. The studio version is great, too, but this is just so raw and awesome.
MckyMseNTarotCrds 1 year ago
@MckyMseNTarotCrds OK, I will also buy the CD! THANKS.
justAnotherJapanese 11 months ago
@justAnotherJapanese You're welcome. I'm sure you'll enjoy it.
MckyMseNTarotCrds 11 months ago
@MckyMseNTarotCrds I don't know BD's songs made me so happy. I don't understand the lyrics very well, though. There is something mysterious about his music.
Ain't that close to love?
justAnotherJapanese 11 months ago
I think this live album would be held in much higher regard had it been released back in the 60s.
MegaBigA2 1 year ago