Tag Archives: Like A Rolling Stone

Audio/Video: Bob Dylan Records The Song That Changed Everything – June 15 & 16, 1965

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Forty-nine years ago, on June 16, 1965, Bob Dylan and a handful of ace session musicians including the great blues guitarist Michael Bloomfield and a upstart organ player, Al Kooper, recorded the take of “Like A Rolling Stone” that established Bob Dylan as one of the great rock ‘n’ rollers of all time.

The session took place in Columbia Studio A in New York, where Dylan was comfortable working, and where he had recorded his previous albums.

Dylan had started recording the song the previous day but didn’t cut a killer take.

The musicians:

Michael Bloomfield, guitar, Joe Macho, Jr., bass, Bobby Gregg, drums. Al Kooper, organ; Paul Griffin, piano; Bruce Langhorne, tambourine.

Greil Marcus writing about the fourth take on June 16, 1965, the take with the magic:

Take 4 — 6.34

“Four,” Wilson says. As it happens, this will be the master take, and the only time the song is found.

“One two, one two three”: the bang that sets it off is not quite as big as in the take just before, but it somehow makes more space for itself, pushes the others away for the fraction of a second necessary to mark the act. Gregg, too, has found the song. He has a strategy, creating humps in the verses and then carrying everyone over them.

As big as the drums are, Griffin plays with light hands; you can imagine his keys loosening. At the very start, piano and bass seem the bedrock — but so much is happening, and with such gravity, you cannot as a listener stay in one place. You may have heard this performance thousands of times, but here, as it takes shape, the fact that it does take shape doesn’t seem quite real. The false starts have created a sense that there can be no finished version, and even if you know this is where it happens, as with all the takes before it you are waiting for it to stop short.

Bloomfield is playing with finesse, passion, and most of all modesty. He has a sense of what to leave out, of when to play and when not to. He waits for his moments, and then he leaps. And this is the only take where, for him, everything is clear.

There is a moment, just after the first “How does it feel?” when Kooper’s organ, Bloomfield’s guitar, and Gregg’s cymbals come together in a single waterspout, and you can feel the song running under its own power. You wonder: what are the musicians thinking, as this astonishing story, told with such a sensation of daring and jeopardy, unfolds in front of them for the first time?

Kooper holds down a stop at the fade, long after everyone else has quit playing. “Like wild thing, baby,” someone says, beside himself. “That sounds good to me,” Wilson says, happiness all over his voice.

You can read Marcus’ description of the entire June 16 session here.

The song that changed everything:

“Maggie’s Farm” into “Like A Rolling Stone” at Newport Folk Festival, July 25, 1965:

Like A Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Hollywood Bowl, Sept. 3, 1965:

Like A Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Liverpool, England, May 14, 1966:

The Royal Albert Hall, London, May 26, 1966:

Like A Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Not sure when or where this is from or who is playing the solo but it smokes:

Like A Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan & Neil Young on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan with Michael Bloomfield, Warfield Theater, San Francisco, November 15, 1980:

Like A Rolling Stone (San Francisco, Nov. 15, 1980) by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

— A Days Of The Crazy-Wild blog post —

Video: Bob Dylan, Neil Young Perform ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ & ‘Gates Of Eden’ & More – June 10, 1988

Neil Young and Bob Dylan, 1988.

On June 10, 1988, Bob Dylan and his band performed at the Greek Theater, University of California, Berkeley, California.

They were joined by Neil Young on wild electric guitar.

These two songs, “Like A Rolling Stone” and “Gates of Eden” are awesome.

The band consisted of: Bob Dylan (vocal & guitar), Neil Young (guitar), G. E. Smith (guitar), Kenny Aaronson (bass), Christopher Parker (drums).

“Like A Rolling Stone”:

“Gates Of Eden”:

“In The Garden”:

“It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry”:

“Maggie’s Farm”:

By the way you might want to check out the “True Love Scars” soundtrack playlist here. It’s the music that goes with the first two chapters of my novel.

–- A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Audio/Video: Bob Dylan/ Mick Taylor Play ‘Every Grain of Sand,’ Paris, 1984 + ‘All Along the Watchtower,’ ‘Like a Rolling Stone’ & More

Colin Allen, Ian McLagan, Greg Sutton, Bob Dylan & Mick Taylor, 1984.

Bob Dylan with Mick Taylor on lead guitar performing “Every Grain of Sand” at Parc de Sceaux, Paris, France on July 1, 1984.

And the solo on this next one is amazing!

“All Along The Watchtower,” Arena di Verona, Verona, Italy, May 29,1984:

This next sequence is beautifully filmed. It starts with an interview, then cuts to Dylan and band with Mick Taylor on stage at Arena di Verona on May 28 or 29, 1984 doing “Like A Rolling Stone” followed by an acoustic version of “Blowin’ in the Wind” with Mick Taylor on acoustic as well.

“Jokerman,” Arena di Verona, Verona, Italy, May 28, 1984 (audio is distorted):

By the way you might want to check out the “True Love Scars” soundtrack playlist here. It’s the music that goes with the first two chapters of my novel.

–- A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Video: 11 Minute Making of ‘Another Self Portrait’ Mini-Documentary Plus ‘When I Paint My Masterpiece,’ ‘Pretty Saro’ & All The Rest

Forty-four years ago, on June 8, 1970, Bob Dylan’s most controversial album, Self Portrait, was released.

At the time the album was almost universally disliked by rock critics.

The album found Dylan covering an eclectic group of songs. Most were covers. A few were live versions of older songs. And there were three new songs — surprisingly Dylan didn’t even sing on one of them.

I was 17 when I got the album. I loved it. This was Dylan doing something new and different.

My mind was open. Dylan was going through changes and this two-record set was how he chose to express himself.

I published a rock magazine, Hard Road, that summer of 1970, and I wrote a review of Self Portrait.

It began like this:

“All the tired horses in the sun, how am I supposed to get any writing done?”

That may well be the theme for the new Dylan album. An album of few new Dylan compositions but many new surprises anyway. Self Portrait is a cumulation of nine years of recording. From the simple structure of the first Dylan album through the complexities of Blonde On Blonde, and back to the country melodies of Nashville Skyline. It’s all documented here for your listening pleasure. It’s an album abut Bob Dlan, poet, folk singer, folk-rock originator and rock and roll star.

Last year saw the release of Another Self Portrait.

That album, which includes alternative takes and unreleased songs from Nashville Skyline, Self Portrait, and New Morning plus a few others, is a completely different album than Self Portrait. An even better album.

Below is a very cool 11 minute mini-documentary on the making of Another Self Portrait. If you haven’t yet seen it, now is the time.

Bob Dylan – Another Self Portrait Documentary Short from Columbia Records on Vimeo.

Here’s a Spotify sampling from Another Self Portrait:

Or listen to the entire deluxe version of the album including the Isle of Wight live tracks here.

And here’s the original Self Portrait:

By the way you might want to check out the “True Love Scars” soundtrack playlist here. It’s the music that goes with the first two chapters of my novel.

–- A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Video: Looking Back at Bob Dylan’s Video Clips on His Birthday – ‘Jokerman,’ ‘Pretty Saro,’ ‘I Threw It All Away’ & More

Bob Dylan on ‘The Johnny Cash Show,’ 1969.

In celebration of Robert Allen Zimmerman’s 73rd birthday, I thought it would be fun to take a look at some of Dylan’s live performances as captured on film or video, and a bunch of his music videos.

Enjoy!

“Pretty Saro”:

“Mr. Tambourine Man” (live at Newport Folk Festival 1964):

“Things Have Changed”:

“Cold Irons Bound”:

“Man of Constant Sorrow,” WBC-TV May 1963:

“Not Dark Yet”:

“Tangled Up In Blue”:

“Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I’ll Go Mine)”:

“I Threw It All Away,” “The Johnny Cash Show,” 1969:

“Series Of Dreams”:

“Jokerman”:

“Blowin’ in the Wind,” WBC-TV May 1963:

“Like A Rolling Stone,” 1966:


Bob Dylan – Like a Rolling Stone (1966) by alexnesic66

–- A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Audio: Was a Fan Calling Bob Dylan ‘Judas’ the Greatest Moment in Rock History? – May 17, 1966 – ‘Like A Rolling Stone’

Dylan, 1966.

In 1971, searching the record store bins, I came across a Bob Dylan bootleg album that claimed to be recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall in London in 1966.

I put that album on and my mind was blown.

What I heard was the moment when rock ‘n’ roll stares down all the lies, and speaks truth.

Bob Dylan stood on the stage in the Free Trade Hall in Manchester on May 17, 1966. He’d just played what already was the greatest live rock ‘n’ roll. A devastating set, the songs turned into huge bonfires, Robbie Robertson’s out-of-control guitar riffs shooting out of the flames.

But that moment.

A fan shouts out “Judas,” calling Dylan out for betraying all his folk music fans.

What that must have felt like if you were Bob Dylan, standing on that stage, putting everything on the line.

Dylan had already put up with abuse in the U.S., Australia and Europe. But this!

Imagine. Some idiot has the audacity to call Bob Dylan ‘Judas’!

But of course this was so much more. This was a scene that has been played out again and again through history. The old guard, the conservatives, the right wing Tea Party blind men who face a past that never existed and insist that we turn around and retreat back into it.

There’s laughter in the hall. But this is no laughing matter.

“I don’t believe you” Dylan says.

And the majestic sound that kicks off a song like no other, “Like A Rolling Stone,” begins and over it Dylan insists:

“You’re a liar!”

And then he sings his greatest song, delivering the best version of his career, a song that rips away the bullshit we put up with day after day. That insists we walk forward into the unknown no matter the danger.

The music, the words, the voice.

Dylan won’t settle for the world as it is. All the phonies.

Listen below and hear the song as it sounded that night.

Like A Rolling Stone (live at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester 1966) by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]

– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Audio: Bob Dylan & The Hawks Do “It Ain’t Me, Babe’ – Hollywood Bowl, 1965 Plus Full Concert

Bob Dylan and The Hawks, Hollywood Bowl, September 3, 1965.

Great performance!

Plus:

“She Belongs To Me”:

She Belongs To Me by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“To Ramona”:

To Ramona by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Gates Of Eden”:

“It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue”:

It's All Over Now, Baby Blue by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Desolation Row”:

Desolation Row by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Love Minus Zero/ No Limit”:

Love Minus Zero/No Limit by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Mr. Tambourine Man”:

Mr. Tambourine Man by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Tombstone Blues”:

//Tombstone Blues by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“I Don’t Believe You”:

I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Met) by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“From A Buick Six”:

From A Buick 6 by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues”:

Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Maggie’s Farm”:

Maggie's Farm by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Ballad of a Thin Man”:

Ballad Of A Thin Man by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Like a Rolling Stone”:

Like A Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Bob Dylan (Bob Dylan)
Robbie Robertson (guitar)
Levon Helm (drums)
Al Kooper (organ)
Harvey Brooks (bass)

[In August of this year I’ll be publishing my rock ‘n’ roll/ coming-of-age novel, “True Love Scars,” which features a narrator who is obsessed with Bob Dylan. To read the first chapter, head here.]

– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Secrets of ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ Revealed in Dylan’s Working Manuscript for the Song

First page of “Like A Rolling Stone” manuscript.

Oh to have been a fly on the wall as Bob Dylan wrote some of his now classic songs.

Until time travel becomes possible, the closest we may get to observing Dylan the songwriter in action are the four pages from the working manuscript for “Like A Rolling Stone” that Sotheby’s will auction on June 24, 2014 in New York.

On the pages, along with many of the lines that ended up in what some believe is Dylan’s greatest song, a song that certainly changed people’s ideas of what rock ‘n’ roll could be upon it’s release in July of 1965, are lyrics that Dylan clearly was considering for inclusion, but which didn’t make the cut.

The chorus, for instance, didn’t fully come together until page four of the manuscript. On page one there is a version of the chorus that reads:

“How does it feel
How does it feel
To be (or not to be) on your own
Direction (road back home)
Like a complete unknown, like a rolling stone.”

Right below the second “How does it feel,” Dylan has added “Is it ain’t quite real.”

And at the side of the page it says “Al Capone” with a line drawn to the word “direction” in the chorus.

Page two.

On the second page of the manuscript is a version of the chorus with “path unknown” as one of the lines.

At the top of page three is written: “How does it feel/ Behind the wheel.”

At the bottom of page three the chorus is again a work in progress:

How does it feel to be on your own
It feels real (dog-bone)
Does it feel real.”

Then he wrote “New direction home” but put a line through “new” and wrote “no” under it.

Then: “When the winds have (unreadable word that could be “flown”)
“Shut up and deal like a rolling stone
Raw deal
Get down and kneel.”

Page three.

By page four this is the chorus:

“How does it feel, how does it feel
To be on your own
Like a dog without a bone
Now you’re unknown
Forever complete unknown
New direction home
No direction home
Like a rolling stone.”

“If you look at these four pages, you can see that at this stage there are rhyme schemes that he didn’t pursue, and I suppose the chorus is the biggest surprise,” Richard Austin, Sotheby’s manuscript expert, told the New York Times. “Here you have a chorus that is such an iconic piece of history, but it clearly didn’t arrive fully formed. And you wonder, if he chose another rhyme, would it have had the same impact?”

Dylan has written names of songs and books on the pages, which may or may not relate to the song itself: “Pony Blues,” a song by Charley Patton; “Midnight Special” (and above it “Mavis”); “On the Road”; and “Butcher Boy,” which likely refers to “The Butcher Boy,” an old folk song that the Clancy Brothers recorded.

“It was ten pages long,” Dylan once said of the manuscript for “Like A Rolling Stone.” “It wasn’t called anything, just a rhythm thing on paper all about my steady hatred directed at some point that was honest. In the end it wasn’t hatred, it was telling someone something they didn’t know, telling them they were lucky.”

Page four.

There’s also a mostly discarded verse that reads:

“You never listened to the man who could (illegible) jive and wail
Never believed ‘m when he told you he had love for sale
You said you’d never compromise/ now he looks into your eyes
and says do you want make a deal.”

And what ended up being the third verse reads like this in part:

“You never turned around
To see the frowns
On the jugglers and the clowns
When they all came down
And did tricks for you to shake the money tree.”

There’s a line drawn through that entire last line.

The four manuscript pages for “Like A Rolling Stone” could sell for as much as $2 million.

Get the back story from the New York Times and Rolling Stone.

Dylan singing “Like A Rolling Stone”:

– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Bob Dylan Interactive Video Seen More Than 70 Million Times

Bob Dylan’s interactive video for “Like A Rolling Stone” has now been viewed more than 70 million times. according to The Telegraph in London.

That’s what we call a major hit.

The video was created by a company called Interlude.

Here’s an interview with Interlude’s co-founder and CEO Yoni Bloch. who discusses the technology behind the video.

And you can watch the interactive video here.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Michael Bloomfield Talks About How Bob Dylan Changed: ‘he had a wall around him and I couldn’t reach through it’

Photo via discosparaelrecuerdo.blogspot.com.

In Larry “Ratso” Sloman’s terrific book, “On the Road with Bob Dylan,” he interviews Michael Bloomfield on the phone in 1975. Bloomfield, of course, famously played on Highway 61 Revisited and was in the band when Dylan went electric at Newport in 1965.

Bloomfield recounts how in preparation for recording Blood on the Tracks, Dylan came to Bloomfield’s house in 1974 to play him the songs. Dylan was thinking about having Bloomfield play on the album.

Michael Bloomfield: The last time was atrocious, atrocious. He came over and there was a whole lot of secrecy involved, there couldn’t be anybody in the house. I wanted to tape the songs so I could learn them so I wouldn’t fuck ‘em up at the sessions…”

Larry Sloman: What songs?

“The ones that came out later on Blood on the Tracks. Anyway, he saw the tape recorder and he had this horrible look on his face like I was trying to put out a bootleg album or something and my little kid, who is like fantastically interested in anyone who plays music, never came into the room where Dylan was the entire several hours he was in the house. He started playing the goddamn songs from Blood on the Tracks and I couldn’t play, I couldn’t follow them, a friend of mine had come to the house and I had to chase him from the house. I’m telling you, the guy [Dylan] intimidated me, I don’t know what it was, it was like he had character armor or something, he was like a wall, he had a wall around him and I couldn’t reach through it. I used to know him a long time ago. He was sort of a normal guy or not a normal guy but knowable, but that last time I couldn’t get the knowable part of him out of him, and to try to get that part out of him would have been ass-kissing, it would have been being a sycophant, and it just isn’t worth kissing his ass, as a matter of fact, I don’t think he would have liked that anyway. It was one of the worst social and musical experiences of my life.

Sloman: What was he like?

Bloomfield: There was this frozen guy there. It was very disconcerting. It leads you to think, if I hadn’t spent some time in the last ten or eleven years with Bob that were extremely pleasant, where I got the hippie intuition that this was a very, very special and, in some ways, an extremely warm and perceptive human being, I would now say that this dude is a stone prick. Time has left him to be a shit, but I don’t see him that much, two isolated incidents over a period of ten years.

Sloman: What do you see as the cause of that?

Bloomfield: Character armor. It’s to keep his sanity, to keep away the people who are always wanting something from him. But if a lot of people relate to you as their concept of you, not your concept of you, you’re gonna have to do something to keep those people from driving you crazy, but if that is so strong that you can’t realize who is trying to fuck with you and who just wants to get along with the business, if you can’t tell the difference, it’s very difficult.

Sloman: How did you relate to him in the early days?

Bloomfield: When I first saw him he was playing in a night club, I had heard his first album, and Grossman got Dylan to play in a club in Chicago called The Bear and I went down there to cut Bob, to take my guitar and cut him, burn him, and he was a great guy, I mean we spent all day talking and jamming and hanging out and he was an incredibly appealing human being and any instincts I may have had in doing that was immediately stopped , and I was just charmed by the man.

That night, I saw him perform and if I had been charmed by just meeting him, me and my old lady were just bowled over watching him perform. I don’t’ know what, it was like this Little Richard song, ‘I don’t know what ou got but it moves me,’ man, this can sang this song called ‘Redwing’ about a boys’ prison and some funny talking blues about a picnic and he was fucking fantastic, not that it was the greatest playing or singing in the world, I don’t know what he had, man, but I’m telling you I just loved it, I mean I could have watched it nonstop forever and ever…

Michael Bloomfield (left) and Dylan at Newport, 1965.

Bloomfield goes on to talk about getting a call from Dylan and going up to Woodstock and Dylan teaching him all the songs for Highway 61 Revisited and then going to New York and recording them. And then Bloomfield talks about playing with Dylan at Newport.

Bloomfield: So after that we like drifted apart, what was there to drift apart, we weren’t that tight, but after that when I’d see him he was a changed guy, honest to God, Larry, he was. There was a time he was one of the most charming human beings I had ever met and I mean charming, not in like the sense of being very nice, but I mean someone who cold beguile you, man, with his personality. You just had to say, ‘Man, this little fucking guy’s got a bit of an angel in him,’ God touched him in a certain way. And he changed, like that guy was gone or it must not be gone, any man that has that many kids, he must be relating that way to his children, but I never related to him that way again.

Anytime that I would see him, I would see him consciously be that cruel, man, I didn’t’ understand that game they played, that constant insane sort of sadistic put-down game. Who’s king of the hill? Who’s on top? To me it seemed like much ado about nothing but to Dave Blue and Phil Ochs it was real serious. I don’t think Blue’s ever escaped that time, in some ways it seems like he’s still trying to prove himself to Bob. I know David’s one of Bob’s biggest champions. ..

I feel the cat’s Pavlovized, he’s Tofflerized, he’s future-shocked. It would take a huge amount of debriefing or something to get him back to normal again, to put that character armor down. But if he’s happy, who am I to say? I can’t judge if he’s happy, this might be his happiness.

“Like A Rolling Stone,” Michael Bloomfield on lead guitar:

Bob Dylan, Like a Rolling Stone (vinyl) from dispensable library on Vimeo.

– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –