threespires
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Ps: I’ve never seen Lord of the rings !
TLDR: Special Agent Oso saves the day.
Ps: I’ve never seen Lord of the rings !
Thats a really nice personal review mate. I don't mind Dylan's voice in the slightest (it wouldn't be Dylan without it) albeit Highway 61 remains my favourite after many years of listening. That would get a 9 from me whereas this gets an 8. If you had proposed Lord of the Rings, that would have got a 10 but of course thats not an album (well it is actually someone tried to compose some music to it in the 70's and then of course there is the soundtrack to the PJ trilogy but you know what I mean) :-)Well done Rob, easy peasy and you know me to well.
It is of course Big Bad Bob.
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I’ve waited long enough but finally it’s time to nominate my favorite Robert Allen Zimmerman Album and one of my favorite albums ever – Blonde On Blonde
I did weigh this up with Highway 61 revisited, Bringing It Back Home (What a ridiculous run of Albums from 65-66) or go for a later Dylan Album ‘Blood On The Tracks’, ‘Time Out Of Mind’ or even a 00's one, too many to choose from but for me ‘Blonde On Blonde’ is the perfect peak Dylan spot – I cant recall any other artist than can conjure up the imagery in lyrics like Dylan does and so many tracks on here just keep me engaged with the next line after the next, even after countless listens. There is a perfect mix on here, Rock, Blues, Folk, slow stuff and Dylan goofing around.
The production is perfect, rich and layered through out yet retains that 60’s folk sound – From the psychedelic opener ‘Rainy Day Women’ ..everybody must get stoned! To upbeat blues rock stuff ‘Pledging My Time/Absolutely Sweet Marie/Obviously Fiver Believers’ , slow lyrical classis ‘Visions Of Johanna’ & ‘Sad Eyed Lady’ it’s just a perfect mix. My favourite is probably ‘Temporary Like Achilles’ if only for that Harmonica Intro and the opening lyrics and also 'I Want You' is a sweet number, there's very little fillers here although i do confess to skipping 'Visions Of Johanna' and 'Sad Eyed Lady' at times, both classics of course but do drag on a bit.
It was actually my History teacher that played a Dylan song in the class-room once, I think it would have been Blowin’ In The Wind he played to a classroom full of 14/15 year old stoners, cap wearers and little shits like myself at the time – most of the class didn’t give much notice to Mr Little as he put this on and talked about war and oppression but I remember hearing something so unique and going up to Mr Little after class and asking what that was – the next day Mr Little bought in a cassette tape with some of Dylans best tracks. I played it through when I got home, remember Dylans voice grating and some tracks sounded horrendous so I didn’t really persist – however, around a year later and working my first job at the Co-Op , standing at the till, late at night in a empty shop – ‘Like A Rolling Stone’ blasted on, boom – that was it, I was hooked on Dylan.
The next few years I was obsessed, bought as many CDs as I could and nearly had the whole catalogue.
After that I was clubbing and too into girls and drugs and put Dylan back on the shelf – yet whenever I had some alone time and feeling the blues, I would always reach for one of his albums and it would take me away from the confusion and stresses in life.
Back to the Album and using a bit of Wiki - Blond On Blonde is the seventh studio album by the American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released as a double album on June 20, 1966.
Critics often rank Blonde on Blonde as one of the greatest albums of all time. Combining the expertise of Nashville session musicians with a modernist literary sensibility, the album's songs have been described as operating on a grand scale musically, while featuring lyrics one critic called "a unique mixture of the visionary and the colloquial".It was one of the first double albums in rock music.
The album peaked at number nine on the Billboard Top LPs chart in the US, where it eventually was certified double platinum, and it reached number three in the UK. Blonde on Blonde spawned two singles that were top-twenty hits in the US: "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" and "I Want You". Two additional songs—"Just Like a Woman" and "Visions of Johanna"—have been named as among Dylan's greatest compositions and were featured in Rolling Stone's "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time" list in 2003. In 1999, the album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, and was ranked number 38 in Rolling Stone's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" in 2020
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Now, I know many on here can’t stand Dylan and I will have my bingo card at the ready for how many will say ‘it’s just his voice is unbearable’ or something like that – but hopefully away from the endless discussion about his voice some will enjoy the music, the lyrics, the imagery and much more from this. Enjoy!
You really shouldn't have taken it out mate. It was very good.I actually took out a line that read
"If Dylan had written this review people would write dissertations discussing its meaning. But I wrote it so you can dismiss it as a rambling pile of garbage."
Dylan & LotR are great but it feels like homework
I actually took out a line that read
"If Dylan had written this review people would write dissertations discussing its meaning. But I wrote it so you can dismiss it as a rambling pile of garbage."
Dylan & LotR are great but it feels like homework
My dad had the Silmarillion but I don't think i have ever seen him read a book. He also had a collection of books based in the wild West. I remember in one a cowboy cut off someone's nipple. I dont Tolkien would have approved.You really shouldn't have taken it out mate. It was very good.
But as Tolkien once said,
To the sea, to the sea! The white gulls are crying,
The wind is blowing, and the white foam is flying.
West, west away, the round sun is falling,
Grey ship, grey ship, do you hear them calling,
The voices of my people that have gone before me?
I will leave, I will leave the woods that bore me;
For our days are ending and our years failing.
I will pass the wide waters lonely sailing.
Long are the waves on the Last Shore falling,
Sweet are the voices in the Lost Isle calling,
In Eressea, in Elvenhome that no man can discover,
Where the leaves fall not: land of my people forever!”
At least there were no 'ever and anon's' in that
Btw. The Silmarillion has even better prose :-)
No doubt the old rascal would have deflected that with talk of Frodo's tatters.My dad had the Silmarillion but I don't think i have ever seen him read a book. He also had a collection of books based in the wild West. I remember in one a cowboy cut off someone's nipple. I dont Tolkien would have approved.
I'd do the bacon without the sauce but otherwise thats perfect. Crisps wise it's no strong preference but probably salt and vinegar UNLESS I'm also putting beef paste on it in which case my crisp of choice would be cheese and onion.Of that run of three albums mentioned my preferences actually run in release order which I've been told by more than one Dylanista illustrates my crassness/laziness/stupidity, delete as appropriate. It's all slightly academic as I only ever listen to Dylan in bite size chunks anyway; nothing to do with his voice which over the years I've grown quite fond of.
I'm debating whether to listen to this album 3 times end to end without skipping but that seems a bit mad because, I've never felt compelled to do that before so why would I start now when it would probably only result in me knocking a point off what I'm likely to score it?
On the crisp butty and Vimto front, it's entirely dependent on flavour of crisp involved as to whether than makes Belfry an uncouth savage or not. I've eaten in some nice places over the years but having long considered what my final meal would be were I to face a firing squad I'm resolved it would be a bacon oven bottom with brown sauce.