The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7: No Direction Home ¿¿¿ The Soundtrack

The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7: No Direction Home ¿¿¿ The Soundtrack

by Bob Dylan
The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7: No Direction Home ¿¿¿ The Soundtrack

The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7: No Direction Home ¿¿¿ The Soundtrack

by Bob Dylan

CD(Dutch Import)

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Overview

The seventh volume of Bob Dylan's Bootleg Series doubles as the soundtrack to No Direction Home, Martin Scorsese's feature-length documentary covering Dylan's career from its beginnings to 1966 (it was aired in two parts on PBS in September 2005 and released in expanded form on DVD that same month). Unlike the previous three installments of The Bootleg Series, which focused exclusively on live concerts, No Direction Home is assembled from a variety of sources, including home recordings, publishing demos, alternate studio takes, and live recordings, with the first disc devoted to early acoustic recordings and the second to electric music. In fact, No Direction Home proceeds chronologically, filling in gaps between the proper albums or, more often, providing a parallel history of the most productive era of Dylan's career. All of this material -- with the exception of "Song to Woody," taken from his debut, and a cataclysmic version of "Like a Rolling Stone" taken from the Royal Albert Hall show that was released as The Bootleg Series, Vol. 4 -- is previously unreleased, and much of it has not been widely bootlegged (and the cuts that have been bootlegged, such as "Dink's Song," have never been heard in such crystal-clear fidelity). Where the inaugural edition of The Bootleg Series had many previously unreleased Dylan originals, there is only one here, the tentative opener, "When I Got Troubles," a sweet, simple 1959 song that finds Dylan in his formative stage. In place of unheard songs are a slew of alternate versions of familiar tunes. On the first disc, these are largely live versions of such warhorses as "Blowin' in the Wind," "Masters of War," and "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall," recorded when the songs were still fresh. These live performances have an immediacy and intimacy that not only illustrate what a powerful folksinger Dylan was, but also suggest how the songs might have sounded when they were new tunes. Toward the end of the first disc, alternate versions that are significantly different from the final versions begin to surface with an early take on "Mr. Tambourine Man" recorded at the Another Side of Bob Dylan sessions with Ramblin' Jack Elliott on second guitar and backing vocals. The second disc has several alternates that are similarly notably different, highlighted by a lively, careening "It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry" with a different final verse, a "Desolation Row" with electric guitar, "Highway 61 Revisited" without the siren whistle, a slower, heavier, blusier take on "Leopard-Skin Pill Box Hat," a relaxed version of "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" that lacks the carnivalesque swirl of sound from the Blonde on Blonde version, and a lean, insistent "Visions of Johanna." As different as some of these versions are, there are no great revelations here, apart from the realization that the best takes really did make the finished records. But looking for revelations on this seventh edition of The Bootleg Series may be setting the bar too high, particularly because even if few things here are earth-shaking (a rampaging "Maggie's Farm" from Dylan's legendary electric set at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 could qualify, thanks in great deal to an incendiary Mike Bloomfield), everything here is uniformly excellent and worth hearing well more than once. That alone, of course, would make this yet another worthwhile addition to any serious Dylan collection, but what makes No Direction Home noteworthy as an album is that it is the first Dylan record to offer an aural biography of Dylan. This does a superb job of tracing the development of Dylan as a musician, taking him from a young folkie singing standards, through the rush of his early standards, and to the visionary music he made once he went electric. Put in this context, the electric music on disc two sounds as bracing and brilliant and surprising as it did in the '60s, while the acoustic folk on disc one sounds vibrant, pure, and alive. After all these years, that's a hard accomplishment to pull off, and to the credit of everybody involved in this terrific release, they've been able to make even the most familiar Dylan tunes feel new again. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Product Details

Release Date: 12/21/2010
Label: Columbia
UPC: 0886977329425
Rank: 139937

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. When I Got Troubles
  2. Rambler Gambler
  3. This Land Is Your Land
  4. Song To Woody
  5. Dink's Song
  6. I Was Young When I Left Home
  7. Sally Gal
  8. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right
  9. Man Of Constant Sorrow
  10. Blowin' In The Wind
  11. Masters Of War
  12. Hard Rain's A Gonna Fall
  13. When The Ship Comes In
  14. Mr. Tambourine Man
  15. Chimes Of Freedom
  16. It's All Over Now Baby Blue

Disc 2

  1. She Belongs To Me
  2. Maggie's Farm
  3. It Takes A Lot To Laugh It Takes A Train To Cry
  4. Tombstone Blues
  5. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
  6. Desolation Row
  7. Highway 61 Revisited
  8. Leopard Skin Pill Box Hat
  9. Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again
  10. Visions Of Johanna
  11. Ballad Of A Thin Man
  12. Like A Rolling Stone

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Bob Dylan   Primary Artist,Piano,Guitar,Vocals,Harmonica,Guitar (Acoustic),Guitar (Electric)
Ramblin' Jack Elliott   Primary Artist
Rick Danko   Guitar (Bass),Bass
Henry Strzelecki   Guitar (Bass),Bass
Charlie McCoy   Guitar
Harvey Brooks   Guitar (Bass),Bass
Joseph Macho, Jr.   Guitar (Bass),Bass
Jerome Arnold   Guitar (Bass),Bass
Michael Bloomfield   Guitar,Guitar (Electric)
William E. Lee   Guitar (Bass)
Joe South   Guitar
Garth Hudson   Organ
Wayne Moss   Guitar
Robbie Robertson   Guitar
Bobby Gregg   Drums
Frank Owens   Piano
Richard Manuel   Piano
Mickey Jones   Drums
Al Kooper   Organ
Al Gorgoni   Guitar
Bruce Langhorne   Guitar
Paul Griffin   Piano
Hargus "Pig" Robbins   Piano
Levon Helm   Drums
Sam Lay   Drums
Kenny Buttrey   Drums
Barry Goldberg   Organ

Technical Credits

John Hammond, Sr.   Audio Production
Bob Johnston   Audio Production,Producer
Tom Wilson   Audio Production,Producer
Martin Scorsese   Compilation Producer,Producer
Bruce Dickinson   Compilation Producer
Steven Berkowitz   Compilation Producer,Mixing,Producer
Jeff Rosen   Compilation Producer,Producer
Frank Bruno   Engineer
John Cohen   Photography
Tony Glover   Engineer
Traditional   Composer
Andrew Loog Oldham   Liner Notes
Bob Dylan   Arranger,Composer
Captain Jeff Zaraya   Engineer
Mark Wilder   Mixing,Mastering
Michael Brauer   Mixing
Al Kooper   Liner Notes
Woody Guthrie   Composer
Chris Shaw   Mixing
Eddie Gorodetsky   Liner Notes
Joe Alper   Photography
George Knuerr   Engineer
Barry Feinstein   Photography
Geoff Gans   Design,Art Direction
Jerry Schatzberg   Photography
Daniel Kramer   Photography
John F. Hammond   Producer
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